{"title":"25RENEWABLE ENERGY: THE CATALYST FOR A SUSTAINABLE ENERGY DISTRIBUTION SECTOR IN SOUTH AFRICA","authors":"M. Bukula, B. Botha, D. Els, Willem de Beer","doi":"10.53974/unza.jonas.5.1.712","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The purpose of this article, with practical focus, is to analyse the potential of Renewable Energy (RE) as the catalyst for a sustainable energy distribution sector in South Africa (SA) and promote collaboration between the manufacturers, government, and all relevant stakeholders. The research design was a systematic literature review. It used a qualitative research method, through a questionnaire, to evaluate the knowledge and views of professionals from the energy distribution sector, managers or leaders in the energy sector, and energy sector experts. The sample size selected was between 350 and 400 participants. The literature reviewed noted that photovoltaic (PV) energy was one of the primary RE sources for sustainable energy generation. Furthermore, installing capacity and investment continued to grow throughout SA. Of note was the value-added through distributed RE systems in respect of electricity provision. The energy poverty in SA was high, and the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic further contributed to the challenges experienced. The general conclusions were that due to global warming and increased large-scale pollution, the use of RE for power generation had become evident. The article offered the potential opportunities of RE as the catalyst for the sustainable energy distribution sector in SA. Criteria was developed to include or exclude relevant scientific literature, by identifying subject relevance, type of technology, geographic scope, intervention scale, and data type. Keywords: Photovoltaic, Poverty, Renewable Energy, Sustainable Energy, reduction INTRODUCTIONDue to advances in information and communication technologies, the world faces a strong evolution, placing knowledge technology based on productivity, competition and power. The world is more interconnected than ever (Vezzoli et al., 2019). Renewable energy sources, such as solar energy (photovoltaic and solar thermal), hydroelectric","PeriodicalId":16473,"journal":{"name":"Journal of natural sciences, life and applied sciences","volume":"4 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-03-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of natural sciences, life and applied sciences","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.53974/unza.jonas.5.1.712","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract
The purpose of this article, with practical focus, is to analyse the potential of Renewable Energy (RE) as the catalyst for a sustainable energy distribution sector in South Africa (SA) and promote collaboration between the manufacturers, government, and all relevant stakeholders. The research design was a systematic literature review. It used a qualitative research method, through a questionnaire, to evaluate the knowledge and views of professionals from the energy distribution sector, managers or leaders in the energy sector, and energy sector experts. The sample size selected was between 350 and 400 participants. The literature reviewed noted that photovoltaic (PV) energy was one of the primary RE sources for sustainable energy generation. Furthermore, installing capacity and investment continued to grow throughout SA. Of note was the value-added through distributed RE systems in respect of electricity provision. The energy poverty in SA was high, and the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic further contributed to the challenges experienced. The general conclusions were that due to global warming and increased large-scale pollution, the use of RE for power generation had become evident. The article offered the potential opportunities of RE as the catalyst for the sustainable energy distribution sector in SA. Criteria was developed to include or exclude relevant scientific literature, by identifying subject relevance, type of technology, geographic scope, intervention scale, and data type. Keywords: Photovoltaic, Poverty, Renewable Energy, Sustainable Energy, reduction INTRODUCTIONDue to advances in information and communication technologies, the world faces a strong evolution, placing knowledge technology based on productivity, competition and power. The world is more interconnected than ever (Vezzoli et al., 2019). Renewable energy sources, such as solar energy (photovoltaic and solar thermal), hydroelectric
本文的目的是分析可再生能源(RE)作为南非(SA)可持续能源分配部门催化剂的潜力,并促进制造商、政府和所有相关利益相关者之间的合作。本研究设计为系统文献综述。它采用定性研究方法,通过问卷调查,评估来自能源分配部门的专业人士,能源部门的管理人员或领导者,以及能源部门专家的知识和观点。选择的样本量在350到400名参与者之间。文献综述指出,光伏能源是可持续能源生产的主要资源之一。此外,整个南非的装机容量和投资持续增长。值得注意的是分布式可再生能源系统在电力供应方面的增值。南非的能源贫困率很高,Covid-19大流行的影响进一步加剧了所面临的挑战。总的结论是,由于全球变暖和大规模污染的增加,利用可再生能源发电已经变得明显。文章提出了可再生能源作为南非可持续能源分配部门催化剂的潜在机会。通过确定主题相关性、技术类型、地理范围、干预规模和数据类型,制定了纳入或排除相关科学文献的标准。引言由于信息和通信技术的进步,世界面临着一场强大的变革,将知识技术置于生产力、竞争和权力的基础上。世界比以往任何时候都更加相互联系(Vezzoli et al., 2019)。可再生能源,如太阳能(光伏和光热)、水力发电