Author
Listed:
- Luyanda Majenge
(School of Accounting, Economics & Finance, College of Law & Management Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 3629, South Africa)
- Simiso Msomi
(School of Accounting, Economics & Finance, College of Law & Management Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 3629, South Africa)
- Sakhile Mpungose
(School of Accounting, Economics & Finance, College of Law & Management Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 3629, South Africa)
Abstract
South Africa remains one of the world’s most coal-dependent electricity systems, with coal accounting for 81.57% of generation in 2023. Despite policy interventions to diversify the energy mix, structural change is slow to emerge. This study provides the first integrated, empirically calibrated forecast of South Africa’s coal-to-clean-energy transition using a unified modelling architecture that combines structural break analysis, Bayesian estimation, and an enhanced Monte Carlo simulation with dynamic volatility (10,000 stochastic pathways). The findings confirm a permanent structural break in 2011 that coincided with the implementation of REIPPPP, following which coal began a statistically significant and sustained decline of approximately 0.7–0.75% points per year. The simulation produced a full probability distribution for the transition year (2053) when coal share falls below 50%. This demonstrated that long-term uncertainty rises faster than linearly and that, under current conditions, deep decarbonisation milestones are unattainable before mid-century. Policy scenario experiments also demonstrated that accelerating the annual decline rate necessitates coordinated, synergistic policy portfolios rather than isolated interventions. These findings provide a transparent, uncertainty-explicit forecast of South Africa’s transition trajectory, as well as a decision-relevant evidence base for planning, regulation, and equitable transition implementation.
Suggested Citation
Luyanda Majenge & Simiso Msomi & Sakhile Mpungose, 2026.
"Forecasting South Africa’s Coal-to-Clean Energy Transition: A Monte Carlo Simulation,"
Forecasting, MDPI, vol. 8(3), pages 1-60, June.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jforec:v:8:y:2026:i:3:p:47-:d:1965729
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