An interesting trend is taking hold within the traditionally conservative and
closed African mining industry: They’re discovering renewable energy. While reducing electricity costs has become a major strategic goal for the Africa’s mines, most have not traditionally been considered sympathetic to renewable energy.
closed African mining industry: They’re discovering renewable energy. While reducing electricity costs has become a major strategic goal for the Africa’s mines, most have not traditionally been considered sympathetic to renewable energy.
“They’re
all very conservative, so when mines hear about solar or wind, their
first reaction is ‘that’s variable that sounds risky, so if my existing
system works why should I change,’” Peter Asmus, principal research
analyst with Navigant Research told AFKInsider. “But that’s changing and
there is a lot of interest now in mines, but it’s just starting to
happen.”
Since mining
operations depend on steady electricity supply – in some cases running
24 hours, some experts see a boom in joining the two industries ahead
for 2015.
Renewable investment by African mines expected to be between $600 million and $1.1 billion by 2016.
A
Dec. 3 study from Munich-based consulting firm THEnergy indicates that
solar-diesel hybrid systems are a big part of that boom, as are the
“distributed energy” mini-grid systems used to dispense the electricity
from diesel generators throughout the mining sites.
According
to figures released Dec. 22 from Navigant Research, worldwide
investment in microgrid enabling technologies is expected to total more
than $155 billion through 2023.
In
fact, the role of renewables in solving mining energy challenges is
gaining traction at major annual mining conferences in Senegal, DRC,
Zimbabwe, Zambia, Rwanda, Cote d’Ivoire and Mauritanian, which are
including more and more sessions related to renewable energy.
To
support this move towards renewables, the online platform Renewables
and Mining launched a database in October that helps mining companies to
hook up with renewable energy players already experienced in such
projects. For renewable energy companies, the platform is a source of
who the progressive thinkers are in the mining industry.
The
irony is that the renewable energy industry depends heavily on many of
the metals and minerals miners extract, including copper and silver.
An Evolution
As
demand for mineral resources rises, mining companies are under
increasing pressure from governments and stakeholders to operate in a
sustainable manner.
“Commodity
prices are low, and when commodity prices are low mines don’t want to
invest in anything new,” Peter Asmus told AFKInsider.
But
according to a Dec.15 report from Ernst and Young, price volatility,
productivity and access to capital are weighing heavily on mining
executives going into 2015. From Jan. 1 through Dec. 1, commodity prices
have fallen dramatically, with iron ore down 47 percent, thermal coal
down 25 percent and copper down 12 percent.
Nevertheless,
as solar and wind prices have fallen dramatically in recent years,
mining companies like Barrick Gold, Rio Tinto and Glencore have
recognized renewable energy as an economically attractive respond to
increasing energy costs, especially at remote mining sites.
Diesel
electric generators has always been the power source of choice in
remote mining regions, but increase costs of fuel and transportation of
the fuel has impacted the bottom line of these mining sites where energy
amounts to an estimated 30 percent of operational costs.
Replacing
or supplementing those costly generators with renewable power is
attractive since it is estimated that wind and solar energy is roughly
70 percent less expensive than electricity from diesel – even though the
precise amount of diesel fuel consumed is not often disclosed.
“It’s
very difficult to get data,” Asmus told AFKInsider. “Mines don’t like
to talk to anybody; they’re worried about someone scrutinizing how
they’re treating their employees, their pollution levels.”
Even
African mining operations with power grid-connections are dealing with
the uncertain energy supplies due to regulatory changes and price
increases and are looking to lock in long-term fixed electricity prices
and supplies. This is especially true in countries where the state-owned
electric utility is a monopoly and mining firms don’t have any
competitive options. The mining industry’s dependence on large amounts
of energy can also be a significant drain on the fragile grid
infrastructure in countries where mining represents the bulk of their
gross domestic product, increasing the risk of power blackouts.
Untapped Market
Remote
mines are well suited for renewable power because they already enjoy
the crucial land for small solar and wind turbine farms. But one holdup
to financing is that the investment for solar or wind projects are
normally made when a mine is being developed, which can take years
before it is actually operation and needs the electricity.
One
way around that large upfront expenditures on solar or wind is to do
what residential and small businesses do: seek out developers that are
willing to invest through rental or power purchase agreements that allow
miners to pay for power over time.
Today,
a growing number of solar companies and investors see the mining
industry as an untapped market for new renewable rental and power
purchase agreements.
And
the rental model works nicely with the latest trend in the African
market of solar-diesel-hybrid power plants, which combines the
technologies of the existing diesel generators with “added-on” solar or
wind power systems.
“And once you add solar to diesel, you’d probably need a more sophisticated control system,” Asmus told AFKInsider.
The
Dec. 3 report, Solar-diesel-hybrid power plants at mines: Opportunities
for external investors from Munich-based renewable industry consulting
firm THEnergy lays out several solutions of mitigating the risk to
external investors, including mounting solar panels on sub-structures to
reduce the costs of dismantling the panels and reinstalling them at a
different location.
An
earlier March 2014 report, Sunshine for Mines: Implementing Renewable
Energy for Off-Grid Operations, from Carbon War Room and the Johns
Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies notes the
use of solar-diesel hybrid systems should be a key focus for “various
industries where such systems can be used, and the solar industry
itself, as these systems show the greatest potential for developing the
market for solar energy technologies” and “generally increasing solar’s
economic competitiveness in a global market.”
While
deploying solar hybrid systems to supplement existing power sources can
help mining companies tackle their power challenges during the day,
combining solar with wind power at the same site can also decrease the
power “intermittency” problem at night while extending the life and
decreasing the maintenance costs of diesel generators even further.
“So,
it’s a promising market, but most mines are sort of waiting for someone
to go first and prove that you can integrate the solar and wind with
diesel,” Asmus told AFKInsider.
Several mining companies in Africa have initiated pilot projects to assess the practicality of renewable energy.
“If
you look at IAMGold, they have put solar panels in South America and
they’re looking at putting solar panels in Bukino Faso,” Benoit La
Salle, Canadian-based Windiga Energy’s President and CEO told
AFKInsider.
Toronto-based
IAMGOLD is currently assessing solar options to help power their
Essakane mine in Burkina Faso where energy represents nearly 25 percent
of their costs and African Barrick Gold, which has three gold mines in
Tanzania, is exploring the possibility of using solar energy for its
Bulyanhulu mine and
Australia-based
has been experimenting with solar and wind in other countries and is
considering deploying renewable energy at its African locations as well.
“Rio
Tinto is trying to be as green as possible in the mining sector,”
Alexander Ochs, director of the Climate and Energy Program at Worldwatch
Institute told AFKInsider.
Canadian-based
Windiga Energy announced Oct. 22 it signed a 25-year “power purchase
agreement” with the National Electricity Company of Burkina Faso
(SONABEL) for a 20 megawatt solar power plant in Zina located in the
Province of Mouhoun.
“The
solar project we have in Burkina Faso goes to the grid, but we know some
of the energy is going to be sold right back to the Mana mine,” Windiga
Energy’s President and CEO La Salle told AFKInsider.
The Mana gold mine is operated by Canadian-based mining company SEMAFO.
“When
we originally put the solar project together, I worked as CEO of SEMAFO
and that’s why we put this project together, so it could service the
local community and also the mine could buy some of the energy,” La
Salle told AFKInsider.
Some
noteworthy pilot projects have also popped up in South Africa,
including a solar-diesel hybrid electric plant that supplies 60 percent
of the energy for Cronimet Mining Power Solutions’ chromium ore mine in
Thabazimbi, and the Anglo American Mines PV Project in Mpumalanga.
In
fact, when the mining sector and the global renewable energy industry
met in South Africa during the June 2014 Renewables and Mining Summit,
the conference drew AngloGold Ashanti, African Rainbow Minerals, Gold
Fields, Anglo Platinum, ArcelorMittal South Africa, Anglo American,
Cronimet Power Solutions, PPC Ltd., and REVINSAMB Mineral Mining
Holding.
While renewable energy may be strictly an economic decision for mine operators, it has its environmental and social perks.
According
to the THEnergy, though renewable energy can be an important part of
improving energy costs at mines, it also “sends a strong signal of
forward orientation, progressive management and corporate governance.”
It
is also about legacy: When the mine runs dry, the mining company could
leave the renewable energy infrastructure in place as a “thank you” to
the local community.
AFKI Original
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