Feature
posted 14 Mar 2006 in Volume 8 Issue 9
Alternative energy sources
By Kieran Whyte, director, Public Sector & Utilities, Edward Nathan
Higher prices and possible supply shortages are critical issues driving the need for
Unlike many other such international contracts, the viability of any agreement for Sasol to transport the natural gas had to be based on the final delivered price at Secunda. The more conventional method used elsewhere is to determine the final delivered price based on inter alia, the cost of the whole exploration and development, construction of the transmission pipeline and attendant infrastructure and required investor return.
Transporting natural gas at less than market-related prices would likely have left the transmission pipeline owner with an uneconomic project. The transportation agreement was premised on an agreed take or pay methodology. This allowed the integrated cross-border project to proceed on a sound economic footing.
Sasol acquired access to the Temane and Pande gasfields in
ENH and iGas each had the right to acquire a 25 per cent equity stake in the transmission pipeline company, leaving Sasol with a 50 per cent shareholding. iGas’ rights to acquire equity in the transmission pipeline company was triggered once specifically identified completion risks were mitigated. Provision was made for black economic empowerment as well as for possible privatisation initiatives to be instituted by the government of
The economics of the project depended on a complex financing structure for the pipeline based on equity and debt financing taking account of the inter-dependent agreements governing the transmission pipeline, namely the petroleum production agreement, the gas sales agreement, the engineering procurement and construction contract, the shareholders agreement, the transportation agreement, the terms and conditions for an operation and maintenance agreement, and the financing agreement.
The next few years are likely to see several major gas supply projects within the national and regional arenas as exploitation of natural gas reserves uncovered off
The South African government supports the development of natural gas projects as a means of diversifying the country’s energy portfolio, which is overwhelmingly based on electricity from coal-fired power stations deep in the heart of the country. Natural gas is often regarded as the fuel of choice in energy-intensive industries, and
With due regard to the environment, opportunities using renewable energy projects will need to be more thoroughly explored. The development of power generating plant utilising flared furnace off-gases is likely, subject to the economics of each project, to become a reality in the future especially with the introduction of Independent Power Producers in South Africa.
The advent of new generation projects in
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