Tackling Energy Crisis: Mossel Bay Municipality’s Efforts

1 min read
energy crisis local government

Local governments play a crucial role in addressing the energy crisis by providing solutions and collaborating with the Western Cape Government (WCG). Municipalities are responsible for service delivery, which is severely impacted during power blackouts. To combat the crisis, provinces must focus on protecting essential services and seeking alternative sources of energy.

Mossel Bay Municipality’s Measures

In the 19th Energy Digicon hosted by Premier Alan Winde, Executive Mayor of Mossel Bay, Alderman Dirk Kotze, shared the municipality’s efforts to maintain critical services for residents amid load-shedding. Short and long-term measures include:

Newsletter

Stay Informed • Cape Town

Get breaking news, events, and local stories delivered to your inbox daily. All the news that matters in under 5 minutes.

Join 10,000+ readers
No spam, unsubscribe anytime
  • Replacing streetlights with energy-efficient LED bulbs and installing solar lighting at public ablution facilities
  • Incorporating solar geysers in new housing projects
  • Equipping traffic lights at some intersections with uninterrupted power supply (UPS) systems
  • Utilizing emergency generators to safeguard services like sanitation and water treatment
  • Establishing the Groot Brak River hydropower project
  • Implementing a rooftop solar strategy
  • Planning for a 30 MW solar plant

Gas-to-power projects are also under consideration, as the municipality engages in discussions with PetsoSA. Generating about 180 MW of gas-produced energy could be a quick solution to the current crisis.

Emergency Funding and Load-Shedding Kits

Mossel Bay is installing three generators to ensure continuous service delivery during load-shedding, with emergency funding from the WCG. The municipality is also investing in the development of mini-grids located near municipal infrastructure, such as waterworks. These hybrid solar photovoltaic (PV) systems can produce 1 MW of power.

Premier Winde emphasized the importance of supporting municipalities with the necessary resources and guidance to make daily life more manageable for residents during blackouts. One intervention by the WCG is the rollout of load-shedding kits designed to help indigent households. In the coming days, the WCG plans to distribute over 400,000 load-shedding kits to indigent households across the province.

Mossel Bay Municipality’s efforts demonstrate the importance of collaboration between local governments and the WCG in tackling the energy crisis and ensuring essential services remain unaffected during blackouts. By investing in alternative energy sources and reducing reliance on Eskom, the province can work towards a more sustainable future. To watch a recording of the 19th Energy Digicon, visit the following links:

  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KGFRi3KiUrI
  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mjMaUG16PqM&t=3s

Michael Jameson is a Cape Town-born journalist whose reporting on food culture traces the city’s flavours from Bo-Kaap kitchens to township braai spots. When he isn’t tracing spice routes for his weekly column, you’ll find him surfing the chilly Atlantic off Muizenberg with the same ease he navigates parliamentary press briefings.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Previous Story

Unveiling the Diverse and Vibrant Cape Town

Next Story

Cape Town Taxi Strike Continues with No Resolution in Sight

Latest from Blog

From Bottle to Breakthrough: How Three Cape Town Schools Turned Trash into a Movement

Three Cape Town schools started a cool recycling project called “From Bottle to Breakthrough.” They turned plastic trash into a big community effort, using fun digital scoreboards to show how much everyone collected. Kids and parents worked together, learning about recycling in class and even making money from their efforts. This awesome idea is now inspiring others, showing how old bottles can become new, useful things for everyone.

Western Cape’s €97 500 Digital Twin Spark: From Tallinn Code to Cape Town Concrete

{“summary”: “The Western Cape is building a \”digital twin\” of its public buildings and roads. This means creating a live, digital copy that uses sensors and data to predict problems and help with planning. It all started with a small grant of €97,500, showing how even a little money can kickstart big changes. This project will help the province manage its infrastructure better, making things last longer and run more smoothly.”}

The Quiet Calculus Behind a Familiar Face

Modern women are taking charge of their beauty and aging journey! They mix fancy treatments like Botox and lasers with good habits like sunscreen, healthy food, and chilling out. It’s all about feeling good and confident, not being ashamed of growing older. It’s like a secret math problem they solve to look and feel their best, often inspired by powerful women like Charlize Theron.

A Karoo Christmas Unlike Any Other: How One Secret Donor Rewrote Aberdeen’s December Story

A kind stranger secretly paid off 260 laybys at a PEP store in Aberdeen, South Africa, just before Christmas. This amazing act freed families to collect their muchneeded items, from school clothes to baby blankets, bringing immense joy and relief to the small, struggling town. The secret donor’s generosity, totaling R132,500, turned a difficult December into a festive celebration for many, sparking a wave of happiness and inspiring local businesses.