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Solar water heating for homes

2009-11-05 16:01

Johannesburg - A solar water heating framework has been put together by government, the Minister of Energy Dipuo Peters announced on Thursday.

She was addressing about 500 delegates who had gathered for a solar water heating conference at a hotel in Fourways, Johannesburg.

Peters said the framework would be used by her department in its quest to install one million solar water heaters in households and commercial buildings over a period of five years.

Peters said a detailed framework would be presented to delegates to give their input. The draft would then be updated with the delegates' input so that the framework could be implemented soon.

Peters pointed out that big strides had been made in the development of Renewable Energy Feed-in Tariffs (Refit) to offer incentives to the renewable energy industry to generate electricity.

Action plan

She said focus would be given to the non-grid side, where water heating falls.

Quoting from her budget speech, she said interest parties in the solar energy industry would be meeting sometime this year to develop an action plan in this regard.

The stakeholders have since met at a concentrated solar power workshop which led to a memorandum of understanding with the Clinton Climate Initiative programme of the William J Clinton Foundation.

"We expect that the Foundation through their expertise will assist us to assess opportunity in renewable energy, more especially in the field on concentrated solar power," Peters said.

She said her department's intentions, together with the Clinton Foundation was to explore the possibility of building solar parks.

"We may need to explore the concept of solar parks for industrial or commercial parks application in respect of water heating."

Job creation

Peters said the programme to install solar water heaters in households had the potential to create up to 100 000 jobs across the value chain that included manufacturing, installation and maintenance.

"A typical residential solar water heating system reduces the need for conventional water heating by approximately two-fifths".

"It minimises the expense of electricity of fossil fuel to heat the water and reduces the associated environmental impact," Peters said.

She, however, acknowledged that though solar heating systems saved money, the upfront costs discouraged many households from installing them.

Peters said appropriate policy and incentives could, however, increase public uptake awareness.

- SAPA

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Read more on:    environment  |  dipuo peters

Comment on this story


Concerned Party 11/5/2009 4:30:59 PM
I would love to install a solar heating system but the price is absurd especially in the times we live in. Good luck!!

Joule 11/5/2009 4:35:56 PM
Who's picking up the tab for this one? Consumer - (Eskom increase) - (Municipal increase) - (Solar heating cost) - (higher food cost) = mmmmhhhhh. Lets se if the idiots in charge can make calculate this.

Bitterbal 11/5/2009 4:35:56 PM
A fine suggestion . Let the fat cats in govt set the example by installing govt houses first . Us plebs will follow .

Jenny 11/5/2009 4:36:08 PM
Next year

Auzzie 11/5/2009 4:37:38 PM
I hope for GOD-SAKE that those in this industry is NOT going to make a killing out of the poor with their exuberant prices(upfront costs ) once it take effect...we need a watchdog over these probable unscrupolous dealers too.

old man 11/5/2009 4:45:34 PM
I would like to see more detail of the plan . Also can information be given about the savings to be achieved in installing Escom capacity compared to the cost of installing solar waterheaters ? Would there really be a need for such massive new capacity if say 1 million solar waterheaters were installed ?
Also what woulod the savings in capital cost and reduction in ordinary Escom running losses be if the export of electricity at below cost - paid for by residential users - was to be stopped ? The number of paying residential is rather limited in view of the substantial numbers of free users who are subsidised by the paying users .
Also would it not be advisab;le to charge realistic full running and capacity installation costs to smelter users - why must they be subsided - they provide a very limited number of jobs and the raw material is imported and the finished product exported - i.e electricity is currently also here exported at a loss . Does not make sense to me . Why does Escom not provide the relevant figutres ?

Apollo 11/5/2009 4:48:22 PM
I'm willing to pay 25% of the price to have one as well instead of just giving it away. If you sold 4 at 25%, you could, without increasing the budget, give 1 away.

Rev 11/5/2009 5:15:17 PM
This is about time. In Germany (not the sunniest country in the world) The amount of energy that is produced by houses and then sold to the energy company is the same as five Koburg power stations and it's clean. Let's get ESKOM to pay us for the energy that is used in the refinares or is the profit margin not good enough for their fat salaries??????

Matthys 11/5/2009 5:18:03 PM
Good , BUT lets get it going, affordable, attractive and without Government red tape.

dere 11/5/2009 5:18:59 PM
Our Gov should take a leaf from other nations. A personal friend in the USA installed a solar system for electricity generation which cost him $28000. Of this the US gov paid him back +- $10K and they buy back his excess electricity.

wald 11/5/2009 5:20:36 PM
All good and well, but I have had a look at converting, and the payback on the 25 - 30 k investment does not make it an attractive option, even with the Eskom incentive. May it will be different if all the Eskom hikes have come into effect

Carl Muller 11/5/2009 5:23:29 PM
To import a solar heating system from overseas is presently about 25 % of the costs to install a local one. Somewhere something is not right. Some people a ripping the market off. And they get a kickback from Eskom.

emma 11/5/2009 5:25:36 PM
I will be the first to support this. The only reason why I haven't gone the solar way is because of the cost. If it is affordable- why not? We are after all living in sunny South Africa

sun seeker 11/5/2009 5:28:13 PM
Talk Talk Talk. How about some action? We need real incentives for going renewable and we need it today. I am starting to build an new home in January, why am I forced to opt for solar without real backing from policy makers? How many others would do this just because it is the right thing to do? We need to make it really attractive for the average guy in the street in order to make a difference. Come on guys, you are in seats of power in order to make a difference! Move dammit!

Engerywise 11/5/2009 5:31:57 PM
I noted when in Australia that a 150 l solar water heating system cost as little as under A$900. Then there are sunsidies as well. Why on eart do we pay around ZAR 15 000 for the cheapest system ?.

yvonne 11/5/2009 6:02:30 PM
All sounds very good and it is the way to go.
BUT WHO WILL BE ABLE TO AFFORD IT WHEN THE GRAVY TRAIN HAVE ALL GOT THEIR CUT!!!

Francois 11/5/2009 7:30:49 PM
Al is well, but the cost of a solar heating system will still be the deciding factor. One can only consider installing it if the Return on Investment (ROI) can be in a reasonable sort time (cost of electricity at the moment vs cost of solar system = length of time to obtain ROI)

Richard 11/5/2009 8:11:38 PM
So they are still talking about it, as they were 10 years ago. Every building should by law have a solar water heater, as in Israel. But as usual, the Government and Eskom can't get it right - too busy counting their money.

mole 11/5/2009 9:06:12 PM
FINALLY!!!! Well done Minister on your foresite. We have so many sunny days in SA, lets put them to work for us, lower your electricity bill for free, hopefully lower ESKOM rates.
This should be standard on each new RDP house.

Jude 11/5/2009 9:08:07 PM
Upfront costs indeed ... 20K to install a solar geyser so the 4 of us can save on our electricity bill. At approximately R 200pm saving, I should have had a return on my 'investment' by 2022. Wonder what sort of interest 20K would make over a similar time frame if invested in the money market??

Solar Brommer 11/5/2009 9:14:16 PM
Solar and wind power is the answer to break the ESCOM choke chain around our necks. Guess the cost will prevent the majority of people obtaining it! Consideration will have to be given by suppliers to make the units theft proof!

Lucy 11/6/2009 10:42:10 AM
A little too late, I'd say. Europe has has incentives in place for years, this should have been put into policy a long time ago, that all new houses/buildings must be built with a solar geysers.I suppose this is yet another government incentive for kickbacks.
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