https://www.engineeringnews.co.za

Development banks seek to revive world’s biggest power project

The existing Inga hydropower project in the DRC

The existing Inga hydropower project in the DRC

Photo by Bloomberg

16th July 2024

By: Bloomberg

  

Font size: - +

Five development finance institutions have banded together to find a way to develop the world’s biggest electricity-generation project, the planned Grand Inga hydropower complex in the Democratic Republic of Congo that’s been stalled for decades.

The Development Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA) and the Industrial Development Corporation, both South African State banks, are working with pan-African institutions — the African Development Bank and African Export-Import Bank — as well as the New Development Bank, the finance arm of the BRICS groups of nations.

“These five parties have taken the initiative to say ‘let’s come together, let’s look at what we can do in terms of getting this goal off the ground’,” Mpho Kubelo, the DBSA’s chief risk officer, said in an interview. “How do we get it going and who do we need to bring in in terms of actual development?”

If built to full capacity of as much as 40 GW, the complex on the Congo river, the world’s third-biggest river by volume, would supplant China’s Three Gorges Dam as the world’s largest electricity plant.

Still, a history of government corruption scandals and the expected cost of the multiphase project — with some estimates topping $80-billion — have so far limited it to two dams with about 1.8 GW of installed capacity that were built more than 40 years ago. Most of that electricity is transmitted 1 000 miles across the country to power Congo’s copper and cobalt mines, which are run by the likes of CMOC, China Railway Group and Glencore.

Kubelo said the banks have been working together since a global summit in Paris last June and are backed by the president of both South Africa and Congo. He said South Africa would agree to buy some of the power produced.

Only two months ago, Congo’s government announced that it had signed a preliminary deal with Nigeria’s Natural Oilfield Services Ltd. to build a 7 GW plant at the site. That supplanted an agreement with Fortescue, a company owned by Australian mining billionaire Andrew Forrest to develop a 40 GW complex.

Fortescue itself had replaced a group of Spanish and Chinese companies that failed to develop a $14-billion, 11 GW version of the project known as Inga III. South Africa had agreed to buy power from that version of the facility too.

It’s unclear how much progress the deal with Natural Oilfield has made.

Congo’s agency charged with developing Inga declined to comment in a response to questions from Bloomberg.

The development finance institutions will need to attract private investment to the project, Kubelo said.

“The reality of the matter is that this is not just going to be done by DFIs,” he said. “The DFIs are really looking at the preparation of the project,” he said, adding that it will ultimately need to be managed by private companies.

Edited by Bloomberg

Comments

Showroom

VEGA Controls SA (Pty) Ltd
VEGA Controls SA (Pty) Ltd

For over 60 years, VEGA has provided industry-leading products for the measurement of level, density, weight and pressure. As the inventor of the...

VISIT SHOWROOM 
SAIMC (Society for Automation, Instrumentation, Mechatronics and Control)
SAIMC (Society for Automation, Instrumentation, Mechatronics and Control)

Education: Consulting with member companies to obtain the optimal benefits from their B-BBEE spending, skills resources as well as B-BBEE points

VISIT SHOWROOM 

Latest Multimedia

sponsored by

Photo of Martin Creamer
On-The-Air (12/07/2024)
12th July 2024 By: Martin Creamer
Magazine image
Magazine round up | 12 July 2024
12th July 2024

Option 1 (equivalent of R125 a month):

Receive a weekly copy of Creamer Media's Engineering News & Mining Weekly magazine
(print copy for those in South Africa and e-magazine for those outside of South Africa)
Receive daily email newsletters
Access to full search results
Access archive of magazine back copies
Access to Projects in Progress
Access to ONE Research Report of your choice in PDF format

Option 2 (equivalent of R375 a month):

All benefits from Option 1
PLUS
Access to Creamer Media's Research Channel Africa for ALL Research Reports, in PDF format, on various industrial and mining sectors including Electricity; Water; Energy Transition; Hydrogen; Roads, Rail and Ports; Coal; Gold; Platinum; Battery Metals; etc.

Already a subscriber?

Forgotten your password?

MAGAZINE & ONLINE

SUBSCRIBE

RESEARCH CHANNEL AFRICA

SUBSCRIBE

CORPORATE PACKAGES

CLICK FOR A QUOTATION







sq:0.308 0.368s - 207pq - 2rq
Subscribe Now