Companies and governments have been urged to embrace disruptive technology, as it can contribute to decarbonising energy and make it cleaner, greener and more accessible.
Executives and experts attending the Africa Energy Indaba, in Cape Town, this week, outlined huge advances in electric vehicles, hydrogen production, processed heat and energy storage which could create new business models and opportunities.
“In ten years' time, most of us will have at least one form of battery and rooftop solar photovoltaic [system], which we will at times be consuming and at other times selling [electricity from],” Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) Energy Centre head Clinton Carter-Brown told delegates.
He said entrepreneurs would drive markets and create opportunities.
“Millions of entities will have to be conducted in an orchestra, and digitisation will be key.”
Carter-Brown said the world had turned on its head over the past seven years, as renewable energy and its reduction in costs had become a game-changer.
Change was difficult but necessary.
He said renewable energy and digitisation was “not going to transform coal miners into data analysts, but we can provide a different future for their children.”
Carter-Brown said an option would be to turn Mpumalanga into a renewable manufacturing smart-hub that can leverage digitisation elements, but this required incentives and a government-level strategy to make it happen.
Sasol Chemicals digital lead Oratile Sematle commented that digitisation would also open up more opportunities for young people.
“We have been bringing matriculants into our digital studio and giving them experience. Some of these kids are super-smart. We must take this forward as organisations in South Africa. Digitisation is gaining a wrong connotation that it takes jobs away from people, but we can start to shift thinking to give opportunities to communities to generate value.”
Schneider Electric Anglophone Africa VP for the information technology division Jonathan Duncan told delegates that the rewards far outweighed the risks for companies to adopt Artificial Intelligence and machine learning capabilities.
“The majority of outages at data centres are derived from human error. Don’t be afraid of moving to machines. They are a lot smarter than we are 90% of the time, because there are no emotions involved.”
He said digitisation would contribute to greater efficiency by enabling the real-time monitoring of electrical networks.
ENERGY STORAGE
Further, Eaton Africa director Seydou Kane highlighted that the current energy model would shift radically towards decentralisation, with minigrid and offgrid opportunities, using storage.
Eaton, which produces power management solutions for the commercial and industrial sectors, has successfully installed a microgrid system at its Wadeville facility, in Gauteng, South Africa, where it employs 400 people. The microgrid system uses solar panels and Eaton’s energy storage system with second-life electric vehicle batteries.
Kane said this had lowered energy costs and added resilience, by avoiding total reliance on grid energy.
He said trends pointed towards a significant increase in energy. He used the example of data centres, where "power use is absolutely phenomenal" and said far more investment would be needed in Africa to achieve its energy goals.
World Energy Council innovation director Marzia Zafar, meanwhile, suggested that more research and development was needed as the energy system transitioned.
The council had released an Energy Storage brief, which contains insights covering 17 countries, based on a series of 39 interviews with key leaders from across the energy sector.
Zafar said an array of available technologies had to be recognised – beyond batteries – to embrace the full potential of storage for the energy transition. This included hydrogen storage, flywheels as storage and compressed air energy storage.
The ideas were outlined during panels on energy storage and the evolution of digitisation in the African energy sector at the Africa Energy Indaba.
Edited by: Creamer Media Reporter
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