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Implementing the South African Free Basic Alternative Energy Policy

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Presentation on theme: "Implementing the South African Free Basic Alternative Energy Policy"— Presentation transcript:

1 Implementing the South African Free Basic Alternative Energy Policy
Nthabi Mohlakoana

2 Map of SA provinces and location of the OR Tambo District

3 Map of local municipalities under OR Tambo District Total area: 11 064 km2

4 Remote, rural and difficult to reach

5 No access to grid electricity
15% of the population have no access to grid electricity, live mostly in the remote rural areas and use traditional energy sources AND, they are the poorest; Most households in these areas depend on govt. social grants and subsidies

6 Percentage of households using different energy sources for lighting

7 Percentage of households using different energy sources for cooking

8 What is Free Basic Alternative Energy (FBAE) policy?
FBAE is a policy developed and published in 2007 by the Department of Energy Why?: To alleviate energy poverty in low-income remote rural and urban households without grid electricity How?: Provision of alternative energy services: Paraffin, LPG, plant-based gel fuel, SHS maintenance, coal, efficient wood stoves Implementation is partly funded by national government Local government is responsible for implementation (delivery of alternative energy sources to households)

9 Main Actors Public: Government: 3 spheres – National (policy making); Provincial (monitoring and capacity building); local (policy implementation) Public: Communities and Households – energy consumers Private: Energy distributors – Kerosene and RETs companies

10 Research questions Main question: How do actors influence the FBAE policy implementation process in the local municipal areas under the OR Tambo District? Secondary question: How do contextual factors influence the implementation of the FBAE policy?

11 Using the Contextual Interaction Theory for analysis Source: Bressers (2009)

12 An example of using CIT on the Noqhekwana case Source: Bressers (2009)

13 Adding the 3rd Actor Most significant outcome – showing the importance of the linking actor in a policy process.

14 Study conclusions Actors influence the FBAE policy implementation process in a complex manner depending on specific circumstances Actor motivations, cognitions and resources influence the implementation process Contextual factors such as the geographical location, multi-level governance and politics Using CIT has enabled an out-of-the-box approach to show that policy implementation failure should not be attributed only to lack of funds or the presence of corruption

15 THANK YOU CSTM


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