Tough times ahead for Eskom, SA

Cape Town. 280109. Ms Lynne Brown was born in District Six on September 26, 1961, in Cape Town, South Africa. She lived in Parkwood Estate until she completed her matric. She and her family then moved to Mitchell's Plain, a township built in the late 1970's following the forced removals of black people from suburbs designated white residential areas by the then-Apartheid government. Ms. Brown has been a member of the ruling African National Congress (ANC) since the 1980's and has held various leadership positions in the ANC. She is currently Treasurer of the ANC's Western Cape region. She was elected to parliament during South Africa's first democratic elections in 1994. As an ANC member of parliament, she has served as Chairperson of the Standing committee on Community Services, the Chairperson of the Standing Committee on Health and Welfare and the Standing Committee on Finance and Public Accounts. She has been an ANC chief whip and Deputy Speaker, as well as Speaker of the Western Cape Provincial Parliament. In May 2004, Ms. Brown was appointed Western Cape Minister of Finance, Economic Development and Tourism. Following a cabinet reshuffle in July 2005, her portfolio has been refined to Finance and Tourism, also serving as the Leader of Government Business in the Western Cape. On 25 July 2008 Ms Brown was elected by the Provincial Legislature as Premier of the Western Cape, the first woman to ever serve in this important post. With the support of the Provincial Cabinet she is determined to continue to achieve and deepen democracy for all, with a clear focus on good governance and the needs of the poor. She is currently also an ANC NEC member and Chairperson of the NEC Legislature and Governance Sub-committee. Picture Mxolisi Madela

Cape Town. 280109. Ms Lynne Brown was born in District Six on September 26, 1961, in Cape Town, South Africa. She lived in Parkwood Estate until she completed her matric. She and her family then moved to Mitchell's Plain, a township built in the late 1970's following the forced removals of black people from suburbs designated white residential areas by the then-Apartheid government. Ms. Brown has been a member of the ruling African National Congress (ANC) since the 1980's and has held various leadership positions in the ANC. She is currently Treasurer of the ANC's Western Cape region. She was elected to parliament during South Africa's first democratic elections in 1994. As an ANC member of parliament, she has served as Chairperson of the Standing committee on Community Services, the Chairperson of the Standing Committee on Health and Welfare and the Standing Committee on Finance and Public Accounts. She has been an ANC chief whip and Deputy Speaker, as well as Speaker of the Western Cape Provincial Parliament. In May 2004, Ms. Brown was appointed Western Cape Minister of Finance, Economic Development and Tourism. Following a cabinet reshuffle in July 2005, her portfolio has been refined to Finance and Tourism, also serving as the Leader of Government Business in the Western Cape. On 25 July 2008 Ms Brown was elected by the Provincial Legislature as Premier of the Western Cape, the first woman to ever serve in this important post. With the support of the Provincial Cabinet she is determined to continue to achieve and deepen democracy for all, with a clear focus on good governance and the needs of the poor. She is currently also an ANC NEC member and Chairperson of the NEC Legislature and Governance Sub-committee. Picture Mxolisi Madela

Published Nov 25, 2014

Share

Eskom and South Africa must brace themselves for tough measures in order to make the power supply sustainable, Public Enterprises Minister Lynne Brown said.

“We have to organise the country to attack these problems... Failure is not an option,” she said at Eskom's Megawatt Park in Johannesburg.

Eskom released its interim financial results for the period ended September 30, painting a bleak picture for the state-owned company's liquidity.

Eskom's six month year-on-year profit was reduced to R9.3 billion, with a projected year end profit of half a billion rand.

Meanwhile, municipal debt to the power producer rose to R4 billion. The National Energy Regulator of SA (Nersa) approved tariff hikes that would provide an additional R7.8bn for the financial year 2015/2016. In addition, government pledged a support package, which included an equity cash injection of no less than R20 billion.

Eskom CEO Tsholofelo Matona warned that the company's bleak financial situation, coupled with the operational problems resulting in recent power cuts, meant the power producer faced “a very untenable situation”.

“We have a crisis on our hands. “We know where the problems are... we know what some of the solutions are, but for the period ahead we are living on the edge.”

Matona said there were a number of factors that contributed to Eskom's reduced profits, including increased coal costs, the use of more diesel in open gas turbines to support the national power grid, and declining sales volumes.

Nersa had also granted only an eight percent tariff hike, while the power producer had asked for 16 percent.

Matona welcomed government's support package. “We think it will help relieve our immediate financial challenges for the next three years.” Eskom had put in place an “aggressive” savings target of R60 billion to demonstrate “we are helping ourselves”, he said.

It was also working with government to find ways to recover billions of rands of debt from municipalities, including some “extraordinary” measures being discussed, which neither he nor Brown would elaborate on.

Matona said: “Eskom has kept lights on for the longest period ever, even when conditions of the plant cannot do it. But this has become a problem now that we cannot avoid.

“We are facing the costs of having operated the plant in the way we have. “We need this to be the problem of all of us; we need consumers to appreciate this and work with us.”

Eskom would take the opportunity to do maintenance whenever this was viable, but maintenance often led to reduced capacity.

Matona said it “pains” Eskom to implement load-shedding, but this was sometimes necessary as it had been over the last two weekends.

“When we have to reduce load , we protect the economy and rather focus on residential sectors.

“...When we do loadshed, it is out of responsibility to prevent a total blackout that could be catastrophic for the country and the region.”

A total blackout would take “weeks and weeks” to rectify, he said.

Sapa

Related Topics: