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South Africa Just Locked In Coal Through 2043 With An Expanded Mine

Published May 16, 2026
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Summary:
  • Eskom and Exxaro signed a 17-year coal supply agreement for the Matla Power Station, running through November 2043.
  • The deal follows a 5.2 billion rand expansion of the Matla coal mine designed to extend its operational life.
  • Matla will supply about 9.3 million tonnes of coal a year, locking in baseload power well past South Africa's 2030 coal phase-down target.

South Africa just signed itself into another seventeen years of coal.

State utility Eskom and miner Exxaro Resources locked in a long-term supply deal for the Matla Power Station that runs through November 2043, after Eskom funded a 5.2 billion rand expansion of the coal mine that feeds the plant.

The Deal

Eskom and Exxaro signed the new coal supply agreement on April 1, 2026, with the Matla mine set to deliver about 9.3 million tonnes of coal per year to the nearby Matla Power Station.

The previous supply agreement was running out, leaving Eskom needing certainty on its baseload power before the contract gap could hit grid reliability.

The Matla plant is one of the older units in Eskom's coal fleet, but the utility needs every megawatt it can get while the country builds out renewables and tries to claw back from years of rolling blackouts.

The deal builds on a relationship that dates back to 1983, when Exxaro and Eskom signed their first coal supply agreement.

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The Expansion

The 5.2 billion rand Matla Life-of-Mine expansion is the project that made the long contract possible, adding new mining areas and infrastructure that extend the working life of the mine.

Eskom funded the expansion under its Cost Optimisation and Revenue Enhancement program, which is meant to lower the utility's long-term coal procurement costs through tighter contracts and more efficient supply.

The expanded mine also includes stricter coal quality specifications, which Eskom argues will lift combustion efficiency at the power station and lower the plant's emissions per megawatt-hour.

The Climate Math

South Africa committed to phase down coal by 2030 as part of an $8.5 billion Just Energy Transition Partnership with the U.S., EU, U.K., France, and Germany, while the Matla contract runs thirteen years past that target.

The newly completed Kusile coal power station is now scheduled to retire in 2060, three decades beyond the country's own emissions commitments.

Eskom argues that coal is the only way to stabilize the grid while renewables scale up, since solar and wind capacity has not arrived fast enough to replace the existing coal fleet.

The trade-off: keep the lights on now, or hit the climate commitments later.

What To Watch

Eskom is in the middle of a financial turnaround and a power crisis at the same time. Coal supply deals like Matla make the turnaround easier and the climate math harder.

The country's renewable build-out is still moving slower than the original plan, and each long-term coal contract makes a faster shift harder to pull off.

The next move is whether South Africa's grid can handle a faster transition to renewables, or whether Eskom keeps signing deals that run past 2040.

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