“We need bankable projects that have gone through due diligence processes and there’s a shortage,” Leslie Maasdorp, chief financial officer at the NDB, said in an interview in Johannesburg. “That is the constraint that we face.”
South African power producer Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd. has intensified rolling blackouts since 2008 to reduce reliance on its ailing coal-fired plants. The outages, which sometimes last as long as 12 hours a day, have hurt business productivity and economic growth. The central bank in July said sustained reduction in the power cuts locally known as loadshedding, or greater energy supply from alternative sources, would significantly boost growth.
Energy is the single-biggest focus for the NDB in South Africa as it poses the greatest threat to growth in the country, according Maasdorp. “We want to be part of the solution,” he said. “We need to do more project preparation, more capacity building to ensure that the projects that might be in concept make a lot of sense, but it needs to have that commercial viability element embedded.”