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Meet the driving force behind Kusile's unique desulphurisation plant

The Kusile Power Station is just east of Pretoria, amid a maze of cranes and concrete, a high-efficiency, reduced-emissions coal-fired power plant that will provide electricity to three million South African homes when it is up and running. This is where GE's Nthabiseng Kubheka runs the construction of a critical piece of the power plant.
Source: GE Steam Power Systems
Source: GE Steam Power Systems

Though a coal-fired plant may seem like an anachronism at a time when the world is focused on renewables, in South Africa, coal still accounts for 77% of energy — and the world will rely on coal-fired plants for much of its electricity for decades to come.

South Africa has 16 coal-fired plants, 12 of which are in the Mpumalanga province — the country's coal capital. South Africa has abundant coal reserves, so the key to the future of coal-fired power plants lies in making these plants as clean as possible.

Kubheka works for GE Steam Power Systems and her role as the project director is to lead the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) of Kusile's unique desulphurisation plant — the first of its kind in Africa and the star of the project — and to make sure all processes perform as planned.

Known as the wet flue gas desulphurisation plant, it sends flue gas through scrubbers, which transform sulfur dioxide from a harmful gas into a synthetic form of the mineral gypsum by spraying limestone slurry into the flue gas. Mist eliminators then remove the moisture from the treated flue gas before it's released into the environment as water vapour. The leftover gypsum can be recycled and moved to a landfill or sold.

The plant, which is still under construction, also will include six 800MW steam turbines, a generator, an air-cooled condenser and all the necessary piping and auxiliaries. The plant has a supercritical boiler and turbine set, meaning that it has higher steam pressures and temperatures are much higher — and is more efficient — than the other plants in the area. In addition, the plant uses a fraction of the water used by many other plants, thanks to the use of air-cooled condensers instead of a wet-cooled power plant.

Source: allAfrica

AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa - aggregating, producing and distributing 2000 news and information items daily from over 130 African news organisations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Lagos, Monrovia, Nairobi and Washington DC.

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