1. Introduction
Zimbabwe’s electricity system is both carbon intensive and highly rainfall dependent. In 2017, the International Energy Agency (IEA) estimated production was 46% coal and 54% hydropower [
1]. Considerably more electricity generation will be needed in the future to meet the needs of a growing population and planned economic expansion. There is potential for the system to meet increasing demand with the continued use of coal. Coal is reliable, low cost, locally available and increasing local coal mining provides local jobs. However, this electricity development trajectory directly conflicts with meeting the country’s Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC), in which Zimbabwe aims to reduce emissions by 33% per capita by 2030, compared to a coal-based future [
2].
The electricity sector and hydropower are a central focus of the country’s NDCs: approximately 88% of the emissions reduction is expected to come from increased production of hydroelectricity (
Table 1; [
2]). This is consistent with the country’s most recent System Development Plan (SDP; [
3]), which was issued in 2017 and then carried through as a nationally determined contributor to lower emissions.
However, hydropower is highly dependent upon climate conditions. Were those conditions to become systematically drier under climate change, achieving the NDCs would be at risk. The devastating droughts Zimbabwe has been experiencing over the last five years—and the resulting electricity shortages due to production shortfalls at Kariba and elsewhere—appear to be occurring more frequently, and this trend of larger extremes is likely to continue based on climate change projections.
In this paper, we seek to evaluate the level of risk to the NDCs from climate change, and to evaluate options to enhance the resilience of the NDCs to ensure that emissions targets are met.
2. Background: Zimbabwe’s Energy Sector and Climate Change
Zimbabwe is heavily reliant on its coal and water resources to produce electricity. The bulk of supply is produced at the Kariba Dam Hydroelectric Power Station (750 MW), at the Hwange Thermal Power Station (920 MW) and at three smaller coal-fired power stations, all of which are managed by the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority (ZESA) subsidiary, the Zimbabwe Power Company [
4,
5]. However, these coal power plants are old with low dependable capacities. Just under half of the thermal power capacity of 1378 MW is operationally dependable [
3]. Total and dependable capacities are provided in
Table 2.
2.1. Future Electricity Generation Options
The average solar insolation in Zimbabwe is 5.7 kWh/m
2/day. There is an enormous potential for the use of solar photo voltaic (PV) and solar water heaters that has not yet been exploited; at present, only 1% of the technical potential for solar water heaters has been harnessed [
6]. There are significant wind potentials with 12.137 TWh, 1000 TWh and 47.3 TWh potential per year at load factors of more than 20%, 30% and 40%, respectively [
7].
However, without batteries, large quantities of wind and solar produce electricity intermittently. This is in a manner that can be difficult for the power system to absorb. It can result in a mismatch between when electricity is needed, such as in continuous mining operations, and when it is produced or unavailable, such as on a wind-still summer night. Despite this, there exists significant deployment potential.
One option to overcome this challenge is to store water in reservoirs, rather than electricity in batteries. When intermittent renewables are producing pulses of energy, production from hydro power plants is ramped down. When this happens, reservoirs are filled and water stored. When there are shortages from intermittent generation, hydro power plants are run, drawing on the stored water. This strategy also requires far less water than using hydropower continuously to supply baseload power. Similarly, coal might be stored or stockpiled to do the same.
If the rest of the system can be set up to balance deficits and curtail or eject the excess power through interconnectors, relatively large proportions of intermittent renewables might be incorporated. However, care must be taken to ensure that traditional power plants can ramp up production output fast enough to maintain a stable system.
Another option is energy imports. Zimbabwe is a core member of the Southern African Power Pool [
8], and is a net power importer. SAPP generation is dominated by coal from South Africa, and by hydropower from elsewhere [
9]. Zimbabwe’s hydropower generation is dependent on the Zambezi River basin, as is hydropower generation from its neighbors to the north. Consequently, when there is a regional water shortage, there is a regional reduction in generation [
10].
Further, coal-fired generation is a cornerstone of SAPP production. Zimbabwe has coal reserves and could develop both mines and power plants. Mines would be developed in a manner to reduce their development and running risk. To mitigate risks, long-term coal purchase–production agreements are often put in place. The same holds for the development of the power plant. Fixed quantities of power are often agreed to be purchased at a fixed price. (Under typical market rules, coal and coal-fired power production, would produce firm baseload power.)
There is also significant potential for the introduction of energy efficient policies and measures (PAMs) to reduce the quantity of electricity required per unit of economic output. In neighboring South Africa, between 10–20% of electricity use reductions are economically feasible [
11]; this is in a setting where the cost of power production is relatively low. In Zimbabwe, at higher production costs, larger savings may well be possible. Furthermore, improved demand side management is a fast-moving area with innovation, technological and business models being developed rapidly. There has been relatively little energy efficiency progress in Zimbabwe, and much technical stock is old. Thus, techno-economic potentials for deep energy efficiency are, thus, likely to be very high.
2.2. Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) Submissions and Resilience
Under the Paris Agreement, nations have agreed to national mitigation actions to contain temperatures to within 2 °C above pre-industrial levels while aiming for a limit of 1.5 °C [
12]. These contributions vary [
13] with criticism leveled against ambition [
14], their incremental tightening [
15] and relative responsibility [
13]. Against this setting, Zimbabwe’s NDC, given the constraints within low and middle income countries (LMIC) is laudable.
Furthermore, Zimbabwe has the extra challenge of improving the reliability of its power system [
16]. Unreliability causes power demand to be unserved [
17], incurring economic cost [
18,
19] and economic damage [
20]. Energy accounts for over 70% of global emissions [
21]. Energy mitigation is a priority, but so is ensuring its secure supply.
Coal has dominated power supply in Southern Africa [
22]. It provides employment [
23], secure power [
24], is CO
2 intensive [
25], and there are local reserves [
26]. Where no effective coal spot market exists, contracts are put in place for the long-term purchase of coal and the power from the plant [
27] as this can ‘de-risk’ investments and reduce costs. Coal is normally used to provide baseload power [
28]. However, it can be reworked to balance intermittent renewable energy [
29].
As a direct replacement for the use of coal, hydropower can provide both baseload [
30] supplies and balancing services [
31] to increase the share of intermittent renewables [
32]. If hydro is used primarily for balancing, it requires lower overall water throughput [
33] and does this with lower emissions [
34]. However, hydro can be subject to climate impacts [
35].
Thus, care must be taken to effectively mitigate emissions, ensure power system reliability and consider the role of coal, hydro, intermittent renewables and climate change resilience. If coal is used, markets should be secured, and, though the literature is growing, there are relatively few analyses of the resilience of NDCs and their associated power systems to climate change [
36]. Such analysis is needed in order to illustrate how achieving planned emissions reductions, and therefore meeting NDC targets, might fare under a changed climate.
5. Climate Change Risks to NDCs
The NDC future creates vulnerability to Zimbabwe’s economy under climate change, and climate change threatens achievement of the NDCs.
The Zimbabwean electricity system is vulnerable to a changing climate. Power plants that use coal require water for cooling. In times of drought, water is scarce and cooling difficult. Hydropower exposes the system to high levels of risk—as in times of drought there is little water to pass through the turbines. In this analysis, we investigate aspects of these risks and how to overcome them. Zimbabwe’s neighbors in the Southern African Power Pool generate electricity from hydropower derived from the Zambezi basin. If there are regional water shortages, Zimbabwe will be unable to import to meet its own shortfalls—domestically or via imports. Furthermore, households rely on biomass for cooking, but biomass demand is outstripping supply. During times of drought biomass growth slows or stops, and this is reflected in slower supplies, which in turn accelerates deforestation. Thus, this too is vulnerable to climate change. (Deforestation rates are high. According to the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), Zimbabwe lost an annual average of 327,000 hectares of forests between 1990 and 2010 [
49]. Much of this was due to tobacco curing.) If cooking were undertaken with electricity, it would be independent of biomass constraints. However, it would be subject to the vulnerabilities associated with the choice of power generation.
At present, low rainfall is causing havoc in the region and Zimbabwe in particular. Zimbabwe is currently facing food shortages and power cuts resulting from drought, and further food shortages are expected during 2020 [
50]. Electricity supply to mines, farms and other key economic sectors is being cut due to extremely low elevations in the Kariba reservoir and elsewhere. This cripples the economy [
51].
However, of interest is how the NDC infrastructure, if built out, will fare under future climates. We chose three futures from the publicly available climate projections used in the World Bank study, Enhancing the Climate Resilience of Africa’s Infrastructure ECRAI [
52]. (The ECRAI work, apart from passing peer-review, developed estimates of potential annual hydropower availability for a set of climate futures. It did so by using downscaled rainfall data to calculate projected runoff, which was then allocated to different uses across the Zambezi basin. Hydropower production data from the water systems model are fed into an energy systems model of Zimbabwe, which then runs an optimization routine to estimate an electric energy price trajectory for the reference case infrastructure.) The three selected futures present a relatively dry set of futures from among the 65 Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) scenarios [
53], in order to focus on risks to achieving the NDCs. (CMIP5 is the fifth phase of the Combined Model Intercomparison Project, which includes the suite of climate model runs used in the fifth IPCC assessment).
Table 4 provides characteristics of the three scenarios, including the projected change in precipitation, temperature and potential evapotranspiration (PET) from the 1950 to 1999 baseline through to the 2030s. In that table, RCP refers to the Representative Climate Pathway [
54]. Note that the specific model run codes are quoted directly from Cervigni et al. [
10].
Figure 2 presents the electricity production in the NDC scenario under selected future climates. In all cases the country would experience significant economic damage. We see that, due to projected long-term droughts under the first two scenarios, variable generation from hydropower, in blue, would fall dramatically, resulting in a large share of electricity not being served to the economy. That is illustrated by the red areas in the graphic. As almost all formal economic activity requires electricity, unserved energy retards recovery and growth in an already fragile economy. To avoid these dire outcomes, it is likely that Zimbabwe would rely on coal-based generation or SAPP imports, thus increasing emissions and missing NDC targets.
There are several options for responding to climate change. Two of these are not positive: one results in high economic damage and another in high emissions. A third option is possible that is both economically sensible and has low carbon emissions, but it will require aggressive policy action.
6. Responses to Climate Change
Depending on how the country responds to that climate risk, there may be significant economic damage. There may be complete reversal of any emissions saved, or, by rapid adoption of clean options, there may be improved economic outcomes, reduced emissions and enhanced climate resilience.
Assuming that the NDC investments will be pursued, we consider three actions that might be taken to build resilience to climate change.
6.1. Option 1: Inaction
The first option is to simply do nothing. While extreme, there may be circumstances that lead to this outcome. If the power system cannot meet demand with the investment as laid out in the NDC, it is assumed that any shortfall in generation will simply go unmet, or fossil-based resources from within or outside of Zimbabwe would be deployed. This case will be used to contrast how the system might actively respond to a climate changed future, while keeping the NDC investments.
6.2. Option 2: Coal Reinforcement
In the next option, we assume that planners foresee that electricity demand might go unmet unless new capacity is installed. They do not change the NDC investments but supplement them. In this case, coal-fired power plants are constructed and operated. It is a convenient, conventional and safe option. Coal is inexpensive, there are local reserves and supply chains as well as operating procedures that are well known. This proactive investment pathway would mean not meeting Zimbabwe’s NDC targets.
6.3. Option 3: Clean Adaptation
In the clean adaptation scenario, it is assumed that there is a system transformation. All NDC investments are kept. However, larger quantities of solar and wind power are allowed into the system generating a combined maximum of 50% of the alternative supplies for any one year. Deep energy efficiency cuts allow up to 20% of the energy to be reduced and any extra requirements to meet demand are allowed to be met by new coal investment, as a last resort. Note that a 20% efficiency improvement is well within the range of international studies, and might be exceeded as modernization allows for a significant overhaul of energy-using infrastructure [
55].
There are other options that require stronger political ambition. They include enhanced electricity trade between power pools and hydro systems in different basins. An important example is the development of Grand Inga. This mega project in the Democratic republic of Congo requires deep coordination. However, rainfall in the basins are independent (as are dry periods) and the Congo River basin does not show a general drying. A general drying is a characteristic of the Zambezi river basin.
Figure 3 indicates future capacities, power generation and emissions from the electricity system based on NDC investments under the GISS-E2-H climate future with adaptive action. As can be seen in the bottom left hand side of the graphic, inaction results in high economic damage. In fact, the damage of inaction is more than double the cost to the economy of action. High levels of hydropower investments in the NDC scenario expose the system to water shortages that result from a drying climate. Sufficient electricity is not generated. The NDC investments result in national economic calamity, as they were not planned considering these possible climate futures.
In
Figure 4, adaptive futures are considered. In both the coal reinforcement and clean adaptation options, there is a reduction in energy-not-served as new power plants are built and operated into the future. This reduces economic damage and results in the supply of reliable electricity. Note, however, that in the short term there are power shortages, indicted by the red areas of the graphics between now and the early 2020s. This occurs, in part, due to an over dependence on hydropower generation; with low rainfall, there is little corrective action can be taken. (New plant simply cannot be built in time). In the medium term, however, this is overcome with new investment.
In the second column of the graphic are the results for the coal reinforcement case. Of importance is the fact that emissions, shown in the middle bottom graphic, skyrocket. The dashed line indicates the NDC target, where the climate is anticipated to be favorable. The solid line indicates a more than quadrupling of emissions by the end of the analysis period. This is almost as high as the Fossil Future scenario with no NDC investment, and almost all NDC environmental gains are lost. However, as shown in the graphic on the bottom left, the avoidance of economic damage avoided, and the total cost of the system to the economy is less than half of that when there is inaction.
The clean adaptation case is critically different. It takes advantage of renewables, high energy efficiency updates and balances the system with hydropower and coal. (In so doing it requires less hydropower and coal). Its emissions are lower than coal reinforcement and lower than the original NDC targets. Furthermore, the extra renewable energy capacity costs are offset by lower fuel costs and reductions in demand due to energy efficiency. However, while the benefits are strong, so too is the level of institutional requirements, new market structures and supporting measures, such as coal stockpiling. This allows coal plants to be re-worked to provide balancing and flexibility, rather than baseload needs. Interestingly very little new coal is needed during most of the clean adaptation case.
In
Figure 5, we summarize critical differences between the NDC–no adaptation future and coal adaptation versus clean adaptation. Noted in
Figure 5a, in both cases costs are lower. With the clean adaptation case being of marginally lower cost than the coal adaptation case. The costs included are direct costs, including capital, operating and maintenance, fuel and unserved energy costs. There are other costs associated with clean adaptation that are not accounted for. Those costs include market and institutional restructuring required to expand and manage a structurally different power system, and these should be further investigated.
In
Figure 5b, under ‘Clean Adaptation’, we see (noted in green) that there are significant additional investments in renewable energy technologies. This apparent ‘over investment’ is required to overcome relatively low ‘capacity factors’ of the renewables considered. On the other hand, in
Figure 5c, we see that comparable quantities of energy are generated from coal in the ‘Coal Adaptation’ and renewables (and displaced by efficiency measures) in the ‘Clean Adaptation’ future.
Importantly, as noted in
Figure 5d, emissions are lower than the NDC–‘No Adaptation’ future. They are significantly lower than the ‘Coal Adaptation’.
Beyond the scope of this analysis, but critical to highlight, is the role that regional power trade might play. As noted earlier, with political will, imports from other basins will allow for burden sharing when supplies are limited from hydropower in some basins compared to others with more reliable or independent supply. To give an example of the potential, consider the analysis of Taliotis et al. [
22] and
Figure 6. That focuses on potential trade across Africa. While Taliotis does not consider the impact of climatic change, the inference that trade might be a critical arrow in the quiver to tackle climate change, while exploiting electricity megaprojects, is clear.
The key message is that clean adaptation with NDC’s requires proactive action. At a national level, this is lower cost and lower emitting—securing all of the NDC mitigation and more. Inaction is dangerous and will continue to damage the economy. A fossil future is secure and achievable but is highly emitting.
8. Summary and Recommendations
Without aggressive action Zimbabwe’s NDC gains may be lost at high economic and environmental costs.
The NDCs and Zimbabwe’s climate compatible growth can be made resilient. A key feature of the clean adaptation path required to get there is the combination of new renewables with hydropower. The model assumes a perfect market is adopted to this new investment and that changes in operation occur. In reality, the market is not perfect and will need to be restructured. The model indicates that deep and achievable changes in the operation of hydropower will need to occur. Those too, while demonstrably achievable, will require a change in the traditional operation of hydropower as baseload generation only. Equally important is the aggressive adoption of deep energy efficiency.
While the clean adaptation path promises strong benefits, it requires strong commitment, political will and restructuring of the power sector. To get there, a pragmatic policy pathway and milestone approach is recommended [
56].
A roadmap and milestone approach to the implementation of clean adaptation policies and measures (PAMs) is critical. This begins with clear appraisal of specific PAMs, including the regulatory framework and market rules required for successful deployment (both in terms of investment and, thereafter, operation). It then moves to assess and identify the support required for implementation. That support is delineated with specific target milestones to be reached and is aimed at providing actionable, contextual intelligence.
Appraisal, testing, evaluation and implementation of clean adaptation policies and measures (PAMs). The efficacy of the PAMs are to be assessed. That includes understanding their cost and benefit. The costs and benefits are to be pragmatically assessed ensuring that climate resilience and policy coherence (within and across sectors) is accounted for.
Regulatory framework and market rules will be required for successful investment in and running of the PAMs identified. Note that these PAMs can include sharp departures from existing rules. An example is moving from an energy only to a balancing market.
Supporting measures and decision making are then evaluated. Moving beyond regulations and market rules required, the national context and institutional ability to assimilate the PAMs are assessed. That national context will influence freedom to operate, market absorption, consumer behavior and societal acceptance of the technologies and business models associated with the PAM [
57].
Specific milestones are then developed to see through the delivery of the clean adaptation PAMs. These include appropriate: national positioning and allegiances, safety culture development, business management structures, legal framework, regulatory framework, power system stability, institutional mandates, institutional resourcing and human capacity requirements, etc.
A characteristic of planning in Zimbabwe should now include a step change in policy analysis generally so as to take into account, where pragmatic, climate vulnerability. This work demonstrates that billions of USD and economic damage (or livelihood) are at stake. Although how this would propagate throughout government is beyond the scope of the recommendations here, specific suggestions for the planning fir the energy—and electricity—sector are detailed. Key policy recommendations needed in the short term include the specific identification of PAMs to meet clean adaptation aspirations. These should, necessarily, be more granular, specific and substantial than at the level identified here. (This would include, for example, the development of technical interventions, policy measures to implement the intervention, the efficacy of those measures (relative to their technical potential), and cost and benefit by sector and subsector, in enough detail so as to develop investment level information—see [
11] for an example in South Africa.) This should also determine the actual feasible levels of wind, solar and energy efficiency penetration, with appropriate subsystem cost curves. The modelling framework employed nationally to develop the SDP and NDCs needs to be updated to allow for a systematic changing of the planning approach to account for uncertainty. A specific advance would be a running analysis across a large ensemble of potential climate futures—as well as other development uncertainties. In so doing, the infrastructure and objectives that are at risk can be identified via an emerging set of techniques. (See recent work for South America and Africa undertaken by the WBG and others [
10,
35]). This should be undertaken in order to identify optimal trade offs and pragmatic next steps in energy infrastructure deployment.
Furthermore, policy coherence within and across sectors is needed. For example, within the electricity sector no systematic integrated analysis between bulk power development (such as the hydropower and coal expansion) and off-grid expansion (illustrated in
Figure 7) has been made. Integrating this analysis allows for gains as costs are harmonized and the co-benefits of off-grid electrification and reduced emissions can be simultaneously captured. Examples for such analysis can be found in Moksnes et al. [
58] and Mentis et al. [
59]. This is especially the case as larger scale investment may be sensibly integrated, and then identified in the national NDC, and such analysis is becoming ubiquitously available. For example,
Figure 7 shows information from the Global Electrification Platform that houses hundreds of potential renewable energy off-grid electrification investment scenarios [
60].
Across sectors there is a clear need to ensure that there is harmonization between hydropower planning and water and agriculture policy. Approaches to improve inter-sector planning are on the increase. Pathbreaking work for Africa quoted earlier includes Sridharan et al. [
35]. However, efforts need to be made to build local capacity to undertake such analysis routinely as a part of the policy process. Work has shown that vulnerabilities can reinforce themselves, and that reinforcing—and deep vulnerability—will go unnoticed without appropriate analysis [
61]. An example includes upstream water diversion and pumping for agriculture, simultaneously reducing the potential for hydropower to generate electricity while increasing the demand of electricity for pumping.
In order to develop the clean adaptation strategy outlined in this report, there will need to be changes to the regulatory framework and market rules that govern the power sector and coal-purchases, as well as energy efficiency markets. These are in keeping with trends developing globally, and investigating the potential for the development of a balancing market is, thus, recommended. Such a market should allow conventional power plants to act (or be retrofitted to act) in a manner to allow the power system to absorb electricity from lower carbon intermittent sources such as wind and solar and, while performing the balancing (rather than primarily producing power), they should be financially rewarded. When there is high concurrent production of wind, solar and hydropower, production from coal-fired power plants will drop. However, due to the structure of coal purchase contracts and the employment of miners, coal production is unlikely to stop. A special reserve fund should be developed to allow for the stockpiling of coal when it is not needed. This will allow for continuous mining operations. The level of the stockpile should be sized to allow for its use to support coal-fired generation when it is needed, such that the average continuous production of coal equals the average variable use of coal. Zimbabwe is a part of the Southern African Power Pool (SAPP). At times of high wind, solar and hydropower production there may be cost benefits to exporting power into the SAPP. As with the domestic coal stockpiling described here, it may be that there are similar opportunities in neighboring countries. They might reduce local coal generation and consider developing a similar stockpiling initiative.
Given the impact and transboundary nature of power trade and river basins, as well as the deep vulnerabilities counterbalanced by the opportunity for climate compatible growth (CCG), this work could be valuably extended from Zimbabwe to assess the Southern African region.
Energy efficiency and demand side measures are growing in importance as is the subject of innovation. New business models and remote billing are allowing for the development of new energy efficiency and services need to be developed. A special focus should be the assessment of large-scale, advanced energy efficiency adoption. However, the national context and potential to take advantage of these specific PAMs needs to be developed to account of new technology and business models including: the freedom to operate (including supply chain constraints); the absorptive capacity of the local market; their compatibility with consumers and society, etc.
The steps outlined above will be required while developing a pathway and milestone approach as recommended. Without so doing, clean adaptation policies and measures (PAMs) may be ineffective or have limited use. Without these PAMs, the economy and environmental performance of Zimbabwe is at risk. However, if implemented sensibly, there is clear potential for Zimbabwe’s growth to be both low carbon and economic.