Pylons carry power from South Africa's Koeberg nuclear power plant near Cape Town August 13, 2015. Fears are growing in South Africa that agreements to build nuclear power plants that could be the most expensive procurement in the country's history will be made behind closed doors, without the necessary public scrutiny. Construction on the first plant is due to start next year, breakneck speed compared with the years of regulatory and environmental checks for nuclear projects in countries such as Britain and the United States. Picture taken August 13, 2015.  REUTERS/Mike Hutchings
Pylons carry power from South Africa's Koeberg nuclear power plant near Cape Town August 13, 2015. Fears are growing in South Africa that agreements to build nuclear power plants that could be the most expensive procurement in the country's history will be made behind closed doors, without the necessary public scrutiny. Construction on the first plant is due to start next year, breakneck speed compared with the years of regulatory and environmental checks for nuclear projects in countries such as Britain and the United States. Picture taken August 13, 2015. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings

Glitch at Eskom’s sole nuclear plant behind double dose of loadshedding

SA’s struggling state power utility doubled severity of nationwide power cuts after its sole nuclear plant experienced problems with one of its turbines.
Published on

By Paul Burkhardt

(Bloomberg) – South Africa's struggling state power utility doubled the severity of nationwide power cuts on Tuesday after its sole nuclear plant, which it considers its most reliable generation facility, experienced problems with one of its turbines.

Eskom implemented Stage 4 outages, which entails removing 4,000 megawatts from the grid, after disconnecting its Koeberg Unit 1, the utility said in a statement. The additional loss of about 930 megawatts of generating capacity forced it to increase earlier cuts caused by delays in returning other faulty units to service.

The indebted utility has started a new strategy under Chief Executive Officer Andre de Ruyter known as "philosophy maintenance," which involves shutting down mainly coal-fired stations that generate the bulk of its power for as long as needed to make overdue repairs. Eskom is also fixing defects at two new plants, which are still under construction.Koeberg, located 27 kilometres north of Cape Town, is among the safest reactors of its kind in the world, according to Eskom.

Related Stories

No stories found.
BizNews
www.biznews.com