CENTRALIZED UTILITIES – CONSTRAINING ECONOMIC GROWTH
South Africa’s power sector faces significant challenges due to ageing and poorly maintained generation and transmission assets, leading to low electricity availability and a compromised security of supply, often resulting in widespread load-shedding. This is compounded by a bloated cost base, driving up power production expenses with a substantial fixed cost component, and a high level of debt with considerable servicing costs. The sector’s almost complete reliance on fossil fuels contributes to high carbon emissions and other harmful gases. Furthermore, many citizens lack adequate access to electricity, and the energy demand consistently outstrips the available supply, a problem worsened by economic and population growth. The local financial and commercial banking sectors are unable to fully support the necessary energy infrastructure expansion, and ironically, resource-rich areas and new growth projects often find themselves isolated from the primary electricity grid.

The Inevitable Drive to Decentralization
Just as miniaturization of processing power fueled the drive to decentralization in the IT and Telecommunication industries so too is the miniaturization of power generation plants fundamentally changing the energy industry.
It is now possible for small scale embedded generation plants to produce power at a rate that is cheaper then large scale utility plants.
Research and development expenditure in new generation technology is focussed primarily on decentralized power production, further strengthening the role of decentralization over grid based utility power.
For businesses and governments, the choice is clear, distributed power generation provides the most flexible, cost effective and future proof path to energy independence.
