‘Sustainable power’ and ‘renewable sources’ are appealing buzzwords often used in captivating phrases related to energy stability in South Africa. But the fact remains that these would be impossible to efficiently implement without first achieving energy efficiency, which is regarded as the ‘world’s first fuel’ by the International Energy Agency (IEA).
Ndivhuho Raphulu, director at the National Cleaner Production Centre, South Africa (NCPC-SA), delves deeper into the concept of energy efficiency and its impact on the local economy.
Many homes in SA still have zero or very limited access to electricity, and energy efficiency is the most cost-effective means to reduce the need for capital investments in new power supply, thereby increasing grid reliability while achieving universal energy access more speedily. In slow economic times, this is the ideal opportunity for Eskom to capitalise to ensure greater return on investment.
Without dedicated research and development (R&D) facilities that consistently advance better and more efficient technologies that adapt with the times, as well as sufficient suitably skilled professionals, even the most well-planned theoretical energy efficiency initiatives will fall flat.
For SA to improve its specialised skills offerings, a professional body should be established, and should be backed up by improved policy framework – where there is better co-ordination from government to include a new energy mix.
Broadly speaking, SCP is a holistic approach to minimising negative environmental impacts from production and consumption. SCP is relevant to SA – a country with a resource-intensive manufacturing industry that relies predominantly on coal for power. SCP is only possible through education and understanding, and energy efficiency awareness initiatives speak to the SCP goals of measurably changing a country’s unsustainable consumption and production patterns.
By strategically identifying regional business opportunities, government and the private sector can work in partnership to incubate and grow new energy efficient businesses. This in turn results in downstream benefits that lead to infrastructural development and socio-economic upliftment.
SA undoubtedly has the potential to become an energy-efficient nation. To achieve this, our collective efforts as government, businesses and citizens should start today.