Cape Times

Eskom’s Ntsoloko was on Acwa board

- Siseko Njobeni

LONG-STANDING Eskom executive Mongezi Ntsokolo was, until November last year, a board member of independen­t power producer (IPP) Acwa SolAfrica Bokpoort Company.

Ntsokolo’s membership of Acwa’s board raises conflict of interest questions, because Eskom is a designated buyer of renewable energy power.

Acwa is one of the IPPs participat­ing in the ongoing Renewable Energy Independen­t Power Producer Procuremen­t (Reippp) Programme.

Ntsokolo, Eskom’s executive for transmissi­on, resigned from Acwa with effect from November 1 last year. An Eskom veteran, Ntsokolo has held high-profile positions at the power utility, including head of distributi­on and generation.

Prior to his resignatio­n, Ntsokolo had been a board member of Acwa since 2013.

In May 2012, Acwa’s Bokpoort project was one of the 19 projects selected by the Department of Energy as the preferred bidders in the second window of the country’s IPP procuremen­t programme.

Former Eskom interim chief executive Matshela Koko on Thursday took to Twitter to criticise his former colleague’s role as an Acwa board member.

Koko said Eskom’s policy prohibited employees from having a personal or other interest in an Eskom contract. This included third party-related transactio­ns with indirect links to an Eskom contract.

Koko questioned Eskom’s choice of Ntsokolo to sign power purchase agreements with 27 IPPs. “In line with Eskom good corporate government practices, Mongezi Ntsokolo, who is a director in Acwa Power IPP, was authorised by the new Eskom board to sign the unlawful (contract) with 27 Reipps. Welcome to the New Dawn,” he tweeted.

Eskom spokespers­on Khulu Phasiwe on Friday said Ntsokolo signed the IPPs in his capacity as head of transmissi­on. “It is the transmissi­on business that will connect the IPPs to the national grid,” said Phasiwe.

Ntsokolo last year denied that his involvemen­t with Acwa amounted to a conflict of interest. In a memorandum – dated 6 October 2017 – to former Eskom interim chief executive Johnny Dladla, Ntsokolo said, as early as 2007, it had been Eskom’s practice to encourage members of its executive team to serve as independen­t board members of external companies.

“The benefit to Eskom would be exposure to corporate governance, career growth, business and technical contributi­on to such companies by (Eskom’s executive committee) members and enhancemen­t of Eskom’s influence into the industry,” said Ntsokolo in the correspond­ence.

As a result, Eskom’s executive committee members had served in a number of companies, including the Public Investment Corporatio­n, Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n, Nedbank, Standard Bank, CSIR and the City of Johannesbu­rg.

“Although these companies carry out business with Eskom, it was never viewed as a conflict of interest,” Ntsokolo said.

He said he had been declaring his role at Acwa since his appointmen­t in September 2013. He was not a shareholde­r of Acwa and had no private interests in it, he said, while the commercial contract with Acwa was concluded prior to his appointmen­t to the board. He said he had no influence over the contract.

Ntsokolo said Acwa’s board discussion­s were of a technical and project management nature, “and have never been of a commercial nature… ”

 ?? PHOTO: AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY/(ANA) ?? South African and Saudi Arabian government delegation­s, as well as energy developer Acwa Power, attended the launch of the R5 billion Acwa Power Solafrica Bokpoort Concentrat­ed Solar Power Project in the Northern Cape.
PHOTO: AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY/(ANA) South African and Saudi Arabian government delegation­s, as well as energy developer Acwa Power, attended the launch of the R5 billion Acwa Power Solafrica Bokpoort Concentrat­ed Solar Power Project in the Northern Cape.

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