South African Minister of Public Enterprises Pravin Gordhan said his department will appeal a court ruling that government hospitals, state schools and police buildings be exempted from power cuts.
(Bloomberg) — South African Minister of Public Enterprises Pravin Gordhan said his department will appeal a court ruling that government hospitals, state schools and police buildings be exempted from power cuts.
The department has “serious concerns about the implications of the court ruling on the current efforts to stabilize the national grid and get the country out of loadshedding,” Gordhan said in a statement on Monday, using a term for rotational blackouts.
Read more: South African Court Exempts Hospitals, Schools From Power Cuts
The May 5 ruling by the High Court in Pretoria followed an application by opposition parties, labor unions and civil-society groups. Earlier this year, former Eskom Chief Executive Officer Andre de Ruyter warned that if the applicants succeeded in having the blackouts interdicted, the utility would need to halt essential maintenance that would exacerbate South Africa’s energy crisis.
Independent Assessment on Coal-Fired Power Plants (May 8, 3:32 p.m.)
An independent assessment of state power utility Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd.’s coal-fired power plants will be incorporated into the company’s corporate plan for the 2024-25 financial year, the National Treasury said.
The outcome of the assessment, which is being led by vgbe energy e.V., will be shared with the National Energy Crisis Committee once it’s concluded by July, the Treasury said in a statement on Monday.
The Treasury also said that plans to write off a portion of municipalities’ outstanding debt to Eskom will have no additional fiscal implications for the sovereign, according to the statement.
Electricity Minister’s Powers to Be Decided (May 8, 10:43 a.m.)
South Africa’s electricity minister, Kgosientsho Ramokgopa, expects President Cyril Ramaphosa to make an announcement outlining his powers this week.
Ramokgopa, appointed in March, has been operating without any clearly defined authority to procure additional electricity or improve the performance of the state power utility, because those responsibilities are held by the energy and public enterprises ministers respectively.
Eskom to Get Quicker Spares Supplies (May 8, 9:52 a.m.)
Two original equipment manufacturers that supply the bulk of the machinery installed at Eskom’s coal-fired power plants will deploy staff to the company to help management accelerate the procurement of spare parts to repair the ailing facilities quicker, Ramokgopa said in the interview on South Africa’s SABC2 television station.
The utility will be allowed to procure the equipment directly from the companies rather than holding tenders and working through middlemen, he said.
Graft Compounds South Africa’s Energy Crisis (May 8, 6 a.m.)
On a late Thursday afternoon last November, in the midst of rolling blackouts implemented by Eskom, a contractor in the eastern Mpumalanga province pulled a plug connected to one of the site’s main generation units.
The unit subsequently broke down, ensuring yet another day of nationwide outages. The worker later confessed that he’d intentionally sabotaged the machinery — resulting in $1 million in damages and almost $6 million in lost revenue — so his employer would be hired to make the repairs.
The event was one of more than 760 criminal incidents targeting Eskom operations over a 90-day period ending in December. At every step of its supply chain, the utility that’s responsible for producing 90% of South Africa’s energy has had to defend itself against armed robbery, fuel theft, sabotage and corruption — all of which are increasing the risk of a complete power breakdown that could devastate a faltering economy.
Read more: Eskom Is Fighting Corruption at Every Step of Its Supply Chain
State Insurer Won’t Cover Damages Related to Grid Collapse (May 7, 11:11 p.m.)
The South African Special Risk Insurance Association told clients it won’t pay claims for any damages related to a collapse of the national electricity grid, Business Day reported, citing a circular from the state-owned company.
The company has been urged by reinsurers to “eliminate its coverage for claims stemming from electricity-grid failure” should the outages trigger civil unrest similar to that experienced in July 2021, the Johannesburg-based newspaper quoted Sasria as saying.
The new policy on coverage comes with Eskom having yet to release its official system outlook for the coming winter months, when energy demand is expected to increase. South Africa is currently experiencing record daily outages that leave consumers without power for at least 10 hours a day because the state power utility can’t meet demand.
Eskom Intensifies Power Cuts (May 7, 2:55 p.m.)
Eskom will remove as much as 6,000 megawatts of demand from the nation’s grid until further notice, following the failure of more generating units.
Breakdowns at the Majuba, Medupi and Tutuka facilities have added to shortages that resulted from delays in returning seven units to service after reapairs were conducted, the utility said in a statement on Sunday.
President Deploys Army to Protect Plants (May 6, 9:17 a.m.)
Ramaphosa ordered army personnel to be stationed at power plants as theft and sabotage adds to Eskom’s inability to meet electricity demand.
A total of 880 members of the South African National Defence Force will be deployed at plants around the country until Oct. 17, presidential spokesperson Vincent Magwenya said in a statement on Saturday. About 2,700 members were previously deployed March 17 through April 17.
De Ruyter, the former CEO of Eskom, estimated the amount of money that’s being stolen from Eskom at 1 billion rand ($55 million) a month.
–With assistance from Rene Vollgraaff, Antony Sguazzin and Paul Burkhardt.
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