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The Climate Litigation Database

The City of Cape Town v. National Energy Regulator of South Africa and Minister of Energy

Geography
Year
2017
Document Type
Litigation

About this case

Filing year
2017
Status
Pending
Court/admin entity
South AfricaHigh Court
Case category
Suits against governments (Global)Environmental assessment and permitting (Global)Utilities (Global)
Principal law
South AfricaConstitutionSouth AfricaElectricity Regulations Act
At issue
Whether the City of Cape Town needs consent from the Minister of Energy to approve the purchase of solar and wind power from an IPP.
Topics
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Documents

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Document
Type
Topics 
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Summary

With the goal of diversifying its electricity consumption with less reliance on the existing sources of energy, the City of Cape Town decided to purchase more renewable energy from independent power producers (IPPs). Despite following the required steps to seek consent from the Minister of Energy to approve the purchase of solar and wind power from an IPP, the Minister failed to respond for over two years. The Minister eventually communicated that all applications were on hold for an indefinite period. The city asks the court to issue an order declaring that the Minister of Energy’s consent is not required for an IPP to establish a new power plant and supply electricity to the City. Alternatively, the City requests an order declaring section 34 of the Electricity Regulations Act 4 of 2006 (ERA) unconstitutional and invalid because it impermissibly imbeds upon the constitutional powers and functions of local government. The City argues that it has a constitutional right to procure energy in the manner it deems best. On August 11, 2020, the court postponed the application since it considered the issue an intergovernmental dispute that should be settled outside the court, and referred the dispute back to the parties. The application is postponed indefinitely.

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Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Just transition
Renewable energy
Fossil fuel
Economic sector
Finance