TotalEnergies and its partners have brought Africa’s largest hybrid renewable energy facility into commercial operation near De Aar in the Northern Cape, adding solar generation paired with grid-scale battery storage to South Africa’s national electricity network. The Hydra project combines a 216 megawatt solar photovoltaic plant with a 500 megawatt-hour battery storage system, and is expected to generate more than 400 gigawatt-hours of electricity a year, enough to supply roughly 200,000 average South African households.
Under a 20-year power purchase agreement with Eskom, the facility will supply 75 megawatts of dispatchable renewable electricity to the grid daily between 5am and 9.30pm, extending well beyond the hours the sun is actually shining. That distinction matters commercially: unlike conventional solar plants, whose output Eskom can only absorb when the sun is up, the battery system allows Hydra to shift stored generation into the evening peak, when demand on the grid is highest and coal capacity is most strained. TotalEnergies Southern Africa managing director Magali Pailhé said the project would provide reliable renewable electricity to the national grid.
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Hydra was developed by a consortium in which TotalEnergies holds 35%, Hydra Storage Holding holds 35% and black-empowered developer Reatile Renewables holds the remaining 30%. The project reached financial close in December 2023 and moved from construction to commercial operation in roughly two and a half years.
| Metric | Detail |
|---|---|
| Solar capacity | 216MW |
| Battery storage | 500MWh |
| Annual output | 400GWh+ |
| Dispatchable supply to Eskom | 75MW, 5am–9.30pm daily |
| PPA duration | 20 years |
| Households supplied | approximately 200,000 |
| Ownership | TotalEnergies 35%, Hydra Storage Holding 35%, Reatile Renewables 30% |
The project was procured under the Risk Mitigation Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme, launched by the then Department of Mineral Resources and Energy in August 2020 at the height of the country’s load-shedding crisis. That programme’s early bidder list was dominated by three Karpowership gas-to-power projects, which together accounted for 1,220 megawatts of the 2,000 megawatts on offer. Those projects met sustained regulatory and environmental resistance and were ultimately abandoned, while the programme’s rigid design drew criticism for locking government into expensive 20-year contracts that critics argued failed to match the scale of the supply crisis at the time. Hydra is among the projects that survived that troubled procurement round to reach operation.
The plant builds on TotalEnergies’ existing renewable energy footprint in South Africa, which includes a stake in the 86 megawatt Prieska solar plant, operational since 2016, and a separate 260 megawatt wind and solar development with Sasol and Air Liquide under corporate power purchase agreements, expected to reach completion by the end of 2026. Globally, TotalEnergies says it holds close to 36 gigawatts of gross renewable power generation capacity and is targeting more than 100 gigawatts in the coming years, positioning South Africa as one node in a broader international renewables push rather than an isolated market bet.
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Hydra’s commissioning also reflects a broader shift among independent power producers toward hybrid solar-battery configurations, which improve the reliability of intermittent generation and make renewable output more comparable to baseload supply. For Eskom, still working to stabilise a generation fleet reliant on ageing coal plants, dispatchable renewable capacity of this kind offers a way to add supply without the multi-year build times associated with new coal or gas plants, even as the utility continues to navigate the broader financial and structural reforms under South Africa’s Just Energy Transition programme.
