Karpowership races to make South African bid deadline

  • : Natural gas
  • 21/07/23

Turkish firm Karpowership is pulling out all the stops to meet a tight deadline for its three proposed offshore gas-fired power projects in South Africa to reach financial close, but it seems unlikely to succeed.

Karpowership was selected in March as one of the preferred bidders to provide emergency power under a government scheme that will fast-track 2GW to alleviate South Africa's electricity crisis.

The Department of Mineral Resources and Energy (DMRE) set 31 July 2021 as the deadline for all projects under its Risk Mitigation Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme (RMIPPPP) to reach financial close.

The DMRE has confirmed to Argus that this deadline still stands, despite hints from DMRE minister Gwede Mantashe earlier this month that the previously non-negotiable timeline could be eased. "If it is emergency procurement, we should deal with as if it's an emergency," he said.

But according to the DMRE, "all preferred bidders are [still] expected to meet the deadline" and Karpowership told Argus that it was still working towards achieving this.

The firm was appointed to provide 1.22GW — nearly two thirds of the overall tender — over 20 years using gas-fired power ships berthed at Richards Bay in Kwazulu-Natal, Coega in Eastern Cape and Saldanha in Western Cape.

But last month the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE) refused to grant it the necessary environmental permission, having earlier suspended the firm's application. On 13 July, Karpowership lodged an appeal against the DFFE's decision based on multiple grounds.

It argues that its projects are "vital" for easing South Africa's load-shedding crisis by offering the country access to the "cleaner, more reliable electricity needed to… create a more inclusive economy."

Karpowership refutes the claim that it did not conduct a proper public participation process, and says the fact that nearly 48 local organisations came out in support of its projects is testament to this.

It further dismisses the DFFE's complaint that it did not conduct a thorough study of the impact of its ships' underwater noise on the marine environment. Karpowership says it is impossible to study the impact of a vessel that is not yet in place and, instead it submitted a "rigorous study" of an identical ship in a similar fishing environment in Ghana, on which it then modelled its South African project proposals.

Karpowership's selection as preferred bidder has been heavily criticised by environmental campaigners and other groups.

Apart from Karpowership's plea, the DFFE is currently also considering appeals from other interested and affected parties, who had until 19 July to submit their petitions. Once this has been done, the DFFE has 20 days to respond to appellants. After this, the appeal administrator will draft recommendations to the minister of forestry, fisheries and the environment, Barbara Creecy.

Given that the DFFE could decide Karpowership's appeal as late as September, the firm is unlikely to make the deadline for its projects to reach financial closure.

Nevertheless, the DMRE declined to explicitly say if Karpowership would be disqualified as preferred bidder if it missed the crucial deadline, saying that "the matter is still in court and as such it would be sub-judice".

The DMRE, alongside Karpowership, is currently fighting a lawsuit that was launched by South African LNG importer DNG Energy, which claims that the bid process was rigged in favour of the Turkish firm. DNG is seeking an urgent court interdict to have the appointment reviewed and set aside.

At the same time, Karpowership is facing a probe by the national prosecution agency.

The DFFE's environmental management inspectors known as the Green Scorpions on 15 June referred Karpowership to the Director of Public Prosecutions North Gauteng after investigating the circumstances that led to the authorisation of the firm's project last year. The department revoked its permission after it transpired that Karpowership used Covid-19 emergency provisions to bypass environmental assessment requirements.

The Green Scorpions' referral of the matter to the national prosecution agency indicates that they uncovered prima facie evidence of an offence by Karpowership.

Despite all these challenges, Karpowership still appears determined to win a share of the RMIPPPP tender. "We have confidence in South Africa's institutions, look forward to the next steps, and are eager to get to work generating cleaner, reliable electricity for South Africa," it told Argus.


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24/04/26

Azerbaijan wants certainty from EU on gas needs

Azerbaijan wants certainty from EU on gas needs

London, 26 April (Argus) — Azerbaijan needs long-term guarantees and available financial instruments to invest in gas production growth, its president Ilham Aliyev said earlier this week. Azerbaijan and the EU signed a strategic partnership agreement in 2022, in which Azerbaijan committed to increasing its supply to the EU to 20bn m³/yr by 2027 from 8bn m³ in 2021. This is a "target that we are moving towards" and exports to Europe will be around 12bn m³ this year, Aliyev said on 23 April at the Cop 29 and Green Vision for Azerbaijan forum ( see Azeri gas production graph ). But Azerbaijan needs investments to reach this export target, and restrictions from financing institutions on fossil fuel projects make them harder to realise, Alyiev said. The European Investment Bank has removed fossil fuel projects from its portfolio and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development has only a small share of such projects, Aliyev said. Corporations tend to finance 30pc of gas production or infrastructure projects on their own and the remainder through loans, he said. The other issue is a need to receive long-term guarantees for Azeri gas supply, as "Azerbaijan cannot invest billions only for 5-10 years and not be able to recover the costs", Aliyev said. Azerbaijan is still paying back loans for the Southern Gas Corridor and Shah Deniz Stage 2 projects, he said. A long-proposed Ionian-Adriatic pipeline that could provide the Balkan region with Azeri gas is yet to materialise because it lacks EU funding support and gas consumption in the countries involved is low, particularly considering the challenges involved with building a pipeline in a mountainous region, Aliyev said. But Azeri gas can already reach Croatia, Bosnia Herzegovina and Montenegro through Hungary, while it can flow to Serbia through Bulgaria, he said. Aliyev said he believes that the Croatian and Azeri governments are already in consultation about this. Referring to a long-mooted project to build a pipeline across the Caspian Sea to deliver Turkmen gas to Europe, Aliyev said that Azerbaijan has "received no messages from Turkmenistan". Azerbaijan as a transit country cannot become the initiator or co-ordinator of a trans-Caspian pipeline project, Aliyev said. The Southern Gas Corridor is fully booked, meaning that infrastructure developments are needed to transport more gas to Europe, which is "under discussion", Aliyev said. Azerbaijan plans renewables build-out Azerbaijan is targeting 5GW of additional renewable generation capacity, which it aims to substitute for gas, releasing this supply for export to Europe, Aliyev said. Azerbaijan's first 240MW solar plant was inaugurated in 2023. It plans to add four new 1.3GW solar and wind projects this year and is considering some offshore and onshore wind projects as well as solar and hydropower plants. Azeri gas consumption for power generation and heating needs increased to 6.6bn m³ in 2022 from 6.1bn m³ in 2020, and made up almost half of domestic consumption in 2022 ( see data and download ). Azerbaijan is in the last phase of a feasibility study for a green energy cable from the Caspian Sea to the Black Sea and then further down to Europe. The project aims to initially connect the Georgian Black Sea to the Romanian coast, and plans to expand it further down to the eastern Caspian and Kazakhstan, according to Aliyev. The state plans to keep investing to strengthen the energy grid to allow it to cope with the renewables build-out. Foreign investors are mainly involved with renewables projects. Oil and gas makes up less than half of Azerbaijan's GDP today, but 95pc of its exports, Aliyev said. By Victoria Dovgal Azeri gas production bn m³ Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US M&A deals dip after record 1Q: Enverus


24/04/26
24/04/26

US M&A deals dip after record 1Q: Enverus

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Start-ups to help Total keep output stable in 2Q


24/04/26
24/04/26

Start-ups to help Total keep output stable in 2Q

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Japanese gas utilities to sell more city gas in 2024-25


24/04/26
24/04/26

Japanese gas utilities to sell more city gas in 2024-25

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LNG Energy eyes sanctions-hit Venezuela oil blocks


24/04/25
24/04/25

LNG Energy eyes sanctions-hit Venezuela oil blocks

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