Business Day

Mogajane lists Eskom bailout rules including sale of unit

Treasury director-general wants to finalise conditions so they are in place before funds flow to power utility

- Linda Ensor Parliament­ary Writer ensorl@businessli­ve.co.za

Eskom will be required to sell off its internal lending operation, Eskom Finance, which has a loan book of about R10bn, as one of the conditions of receiving a government cash injection.

Eskom Finance was started in 1990 primarily as a means to enable its employees to have access to home loan finance.

The requiremen­t was disclosed by Treasury directorge­neral Dondo Mogajane in reply to questions by members of parliament’s appropriat­ion committee on Wednesday, following his briefing on the Special Appropriat­ion Bill.

The bill allocates an additional R59bn to Eskom over two years: R26bn in 2019/2020 and R33bn in 2020/2021.

The government has been heavily criticised for allocating the funds without imposing stringent conditions on the bailout, with credit ratings agencies and lenders being particular­ly worried about the state of governance at the state-owned power utility.

Mogajane stressed that the Treasury was still working on the conditions and that more stringent ones would be forthcomin­g. The Treasury wants to finalise the conditions as soon as possible, he said, so they are in place once funds start to flow to the power utility.

One of the conditions would be that Eskom sell its Eskom Finance operation.

The electricit­y utility was not in the business of offering loans to staff and others, Mogajane said. The R10bn that could be derived from the sale could be invested in operations.

Other preliminar­y conditions would include that any additional funding by the state be used only to pay off debt and interest payments and not for things such as bonus payments. Eskom has debt of over R400bn and is increasing­ly unable to meet its interest obligation­s.

Mogajane said another condition would be that if Eskom wanted to use the state funds for operations, it would have to get permission from the Treasury.

Other conditions were that Eskom must submit a boardappro­ved annual schedule of redemption­s and interest repayments. The Treasury also wants daily reporting by Eskom to itself and the department of public enterprise­s on its liquidity situation, as the electricit­y utility is currently doing.

It would be required to publish its turnaround strategy as soon as it is approved and provide the Treasury with critical monthly management reports signed off by the group CEO and group CFO.

Eskom would also be required to furnish proof of its tax compliance in light of what Mogajane said was a worrying trend of state-owned entities not paying PAYE, for example.

Other conditions were to have quarterly engagement­s with the department of public enterprise­s and the Treasury. Eskom must also set up a steering committee to report on the reorganisa­tion of the utility on an ongoing basis.

Mogajane said he had written to directors-general at both national and provincial government­s insisting that they pay amounts owing to Eskom and threatened he would slice off these amounts from department­al budgets if they failed to do so. He noted that one municipali­ty owed R3bn to Eskom.

Mogajane cautioned that if the Treasury were to slice off the local government equitable share to pay off the municipal debt to Eskom, that would affect service delivery.

The question of repayment of municipal debt to Eskom was being discussed between the Treasury, the department of cooperativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs and the SA Local Government Associatio­n.

THE GOVERNMENT HAS BEEN HEAVILY CRITICISED FOR ALLOCATING THE FUNDS WITHOUT IMPOSING STRINGENT CONDITIONS

 ?? /John Liebenberg ?? Dim outlook: The government has agreed to give Eskom a cash injection as the power utility struggles under the burden of R400bn debt.
/John Liebenberg Dim outlook: The government has agreed to give Eskom a cash injection as the power utility struggles under the burden of R400bn debt.

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