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Sibanye’s South African solar site achieves commercial operations
MINING.COM· 2025-10-07 22:24
Core Insights - Sibanye-Stillwater has achieved commercial operation at the Springbok solar photovoltaic project, marking a significant step in its decarbonization journey [1][4] - The Springbok project is part of Sibanye's broader strategy to develop renewable energy sources to support its mining operations and reduce carbon emissions [4][5] Group 1: Project Details - The Springbok solar project has a capacity of 150 megawatts alternating current (195 MWp peak direct current) and is developed by the SOLA Group [2] - Sibanye will procure 75MW (50%) of the plant's capacity for a 10-year period, with an option to extend the agreement [2] Group 2: Financial and Environmental Impact - The project is expected to generate yearly cost savings of more than R60 million across Sibanye's South African operations compared to Eskom utility rates [3] - It is anticipated that the Springbok project will provide approximately 4% of Sibanye's annual energy requirements in South Africa and reduce carbon dioxide equivalent emissions by 229,000 tonnes annually, which is 3.6% of the company's Scope 1 and 2 emissions [4] Group 3: Future Goals - The Springbok project is the second renewable energy project to achieve commercial operation in Sibanye's 407MW portfolio, contributing to the company's goal of carbon neutrality by 2040 [5] - In addition to Springbok, Sibanye also commenced operations at the 89MW Castle wind farm, bringing a total of 164MW of renewable energy projects online in 2025 [5]