KfW loan for South Africa
April 8, 2015Commissioned by the German Development Ministry, state-owned KfW bank granted a 4-billion-rand (300-million-euro, $326-million) loan to South Africa's power supplier ESKOM, the lender reported on its website on Wednesday.
Although most loans are paid out in euros or dollars, this one was disbursed in rand, making it the biggest single credit ever granted by the German bank in a local currency to any developing or emerging nation.
The financial assistance is meant to help South Africa make a quantum leap towards more sustainable and reliable energy supplies in a nation where power outages are a still a common phenomenon.
Good for the environment
The money is to go primarily towards hooking up a number of green power stations to the national energy grid, enabling the country to lower its harmful CO2 emissions by 5.5 million tons annually.
KfW indicated the focus would be on integrating the Kiwano solar thermal power station in Upington and the Ingula Pumped Storage Scheme in Braamhoek.
"South Africa's energy-policy reorientation is a big step away from being dependent on coal, and a big step towards sustainable power generation," KfW board member Norbert Kloppenburg said in a statement.