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Majuba Power Station between Volksrust and Amersfoort in Mpumalanga, South Africa, is a coal-fired power plant operated by Eskom. Majuba is Eskom's only power station that is not linked to a specific mine and it receives its coal from various sources. This was due to an error in geotechnical engineering core drilling which did not identify that the proposed local coal mine was under solid bedrock.

Majuba Power Station
Map
Location of Majuba Power Station in South Africa
CountrySouth Africa
LocationMpumalanga
Coordinates27°6′2″S 29°46′17″E / 27.10056°S 29.77139°E / -27.10056; 29.77139
StatusOperational
Construction began1983
Commission date1996
OperatorEskom
Thermal power station
Primary fuelCoal
Secondary fuelSyngas
Power generation
Units operational3 X 665 MW
3 X 716 MW
Nameplate capacity4,110 MW

History

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Construction started in September 1983 and by April 1996 the first unit was connected to the grid. The last unit was commissioned in April 2001.[1]

Power generation

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Majuba has three 665 MW dry-cooled units and three 716 MW wet-cooled units with a total installed capacity of 4,110MW with a turbine Maximum Continuous Rating of 35.3% on the dry-cooled turbines and 37.7% on the wet-cooled units.[2]

Underground coal gasification

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In addition to coal, the Majuba Power Station is fired by syngas produced by underground coal gasification at the nearby Majuba demonstration facility on the Majuba coalfield. The 3,000–5,000 cubic metres per hour (110,000–180,000 cu ft/h) pilot plant was commissioned in January 2007 and the first electricity was generated from the underground coal gasification gas on 31 May 2007. Produced syngas is transported from the facility to the power station by 7-kilometre (4.3 mi) pipeline with a diameter of 600 millimetres (24 in). There is a plan to build a 1,200 MW commercial generation facility.[3][4][5]

Silo Collapse

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On 1 November 2014, the plant was running under normal load when a visible crack was reported on Silo 20 by a member of the operating staff at approximately 12:30. Personnel in the area were subsequently evacuated. At 13:20, the silo collapsed and the plant's output was immediately reduced from 3600MW to 1800MW. Shortly after, the output was reduced further to 600MW.[6]

Coal Supplying

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Majuba requires 14 million tonnes (14 Mtpa) of coal per annum which were originally supposed to come from a colliery built and operated by Rand Mines but that mine was decommissioned in 1993. An 8 Mtpa rail link branch from Palmfort was commissioned and, by 1996, was sufficient for the power plant owing to the delayed construction schedule. From 2003 Eskom implemented a policy of procuring coal from new emerging sources which resulted in delivery by road, since the location of the mines precluded their use of the Palmfort line, despite the fact that it was sufficient for Majuba's needs.[7]

In early 2000 Majuba started increasing its coal consumption by 2.2 Mtpa to a target of 14 Mtpa by 2010, based on forecasts of electricity demand growth. To accommodate this a 68 km rail line from Ermelo to Majuba was planned which would link up to the heavy haul export rail line from Mpumalanga to Richards Bay. The project was approved by the Eskom board in December 2004 with a cost-to-completion of R1,5-billion. The project ran several years late and was expected to be completed by March 2021 at a cost-to-completion of R8-billion.[7]

In addition, in December 2019 a coal tippler takeout conveyor caught fire at Majuba and since then all coal deliveries by rail had ceased.[7]

Crime

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Mid-December 2022, at the request of the Minister of Public Enterprises, Pravin Gordhan, and President Cyril Ramaphosa, Minister of Defence Thandi Modise deployed a small contingent of SANDF troops at the station (besides at Camden, Grootvlei and Tutuka) due to a growing threat of sabotage, theft, vandalism and corruption.[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Yelland, Chris (31 August 2020). "Eskom's Majuba power station rail project debacle". EE Business Intelligence (Pty) Ltd. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  2. ^ "MAJUBA POWER STATION". Eskom. Retrieved 2 November 2014.
  3. ^ "ESKOM's underground coal gasification project" (PDF). European Commission. 2008-05-05. Retrieved 2011-09-04.[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ Venter, Irma (2007-02-12). "Coal experts search for ways to cut emissions". Mining Weekly. Creamer Media. Retrieved 2011-09-04.
  5. ^ Hannah, Jessica (2011-08-12). "Coal gasification demo plant design study under way". Mining Weekly. Creamer Media. Retrieved 2011-09-04.
  6. ^ "Media Briefing - Damage to Majuba power station coal storage silo" (PDF). Eskom.co.za. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  7. ^ a b c Yelland, Chris (31 August 2020). "OP-ED: Eskom's Majuba power station rail project is a debacle". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  8. ^ Evans, Julia (4 January 2023). "A country 'ungovernable' — how Eskom plans to tackle the scourge of sabotage, fraud and corruption in 2023". Defend Truth. www.dailymaverick.co.za. Daily Maverick. Retrieved 6 January 2023.
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