Mail & Guardian

Free up energy before the budget

Cyril Ramaphosa wants to do the right thing – bring independen­t power producers on to the grid. He must act despite opposition from top ANC members

- Davie

Kevin

President Cyril Ramaphosa’s address to 400 business luminaries in Sandton this week, where he promised to cut red tape so businesses and households can come up with their own energy solutions, could be seen as a mini State of the Nation address.

If he follows up and announces that Mineral Resources and Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe will immediatel­y issue the necessary declaratio­ns, we will all believe the government is actually leading rather than continuall­y pontificat­ing on the need for reform without doing anything about it.

The energy crisis so threatens our future that Business Unity South Africa’s (Busa’s) Sipho Pityana this week called for Ramaphosa to lead rather than endlessly look for consensus, saying decisive action was necessary to address the “unpreceden­ted economic crisis” the country was facing. Pityana said urgent action was needed to turn what was the longest downswing since World War II.

“We have to do all we can to stave off a sovereign rating downgrade,” Pityana said.

Ramaphosa finds himself in a pressure cooker as business calls for urgent interventi­on to end the electricit­y crisis. Finance Minister Tito Mboweni appealed in early morning tweets for structural reforms before the budget next month, lest the country be downgraded to junk.

But there is discord at the highest levels of the ANC. Heavyweigh­ts are leading an attack on corruption buster Pravin Gordhan, the minister of public enterprise­s and a key Ramaphosa ally, by calling for Eskom to be transferre­d from his department to the energy department.

A Busa sub-committee has called for energy regulation to be taken over by Ramaphosa. He dismissed the idea, telling Busa delegates that he could not be the “minister of Eskom”.

Ramaphosa’s speech to Busa’s indaba stressed the need for economic change, he saying that 2020 would be the year of reform.

But these policy pronouncem­ents need to translate into action, especially of the kind Mboweni would like to be able to use when he tables the February budget.

The Minerals Council’s Roger Baxter said in a statement ahead of the Busa indaba that “Eskom is in a significan­t crisis and cannot guarantee reliable electricit­y supply to meet the country’s needs. Eskom has been indicating that it needs two years of permanent stage two load-shedding to give it the space to fix certain power stations [including Medupi] back to a better reliabilit­y level. This will be disastrous for the economy unless urgent steps are taken in the short term to encourage additional private supply from existing and new sources.”

Baxter said the government needs to urgently help bring on stream and licence new private sector power options for embedded generation and private generation for selfuse, but which is fed through the national grid.

“In addition, government and Eskom should be contractin­g in, at the least cost possible, any extra renewable energy from existing wind and solar plants that are sitting idle. Government needs to urgently tackle red tape which is holding up significan­t additional power that could be brought on stream to bridge the gap.

“This red tape includes [Integrated Resource Plan] exemptions, [national energy regulator] Nersa generating licences (especially over 10 megawatts), environmen­tal and land use authorisat­ions, technical barriers and agreement to enable wheeling on the national grid at nominal cost.”

Ramaphosa seems to have listened to this advice. He told Busa delegates that the government was ready to embrace self-generation by households and business as part of the solution to addressing the electricit­y deficit, which was contributi­ng to an “economic crisis” of low growth and rising unemployme­nt.

Action would be taken to remove the obstacles to distribute­d-generation plants, because “we cannot stop technology and we cannot stop the future from arriving”, he said.

Mantashe has come under increasing pressure to allow individual­s and businesses to generate their own power. He has drawn criticism for appearing to be pro-coal, given his reluctance to free up energy provision. Ramaphosa needs to ensure that the rules on own power provision are eased up and in place before the budget.

He told the Busa indaba that one of his neighbours had installed solar panels on the rooftop of his house and had told him that, if allowed, he would sell his surplus power to Eskom.

So successful has rooftop solar been in Australia, that 2130 megawatts of this power was added to the grid in the past year. Energy expert Chris Yelland said this would be sufficient in South Africa’s case to reduce two stages of Eskom load-shedding during a working day.

Eskom, meanwhile, appears to have thrown in the towel, presenting its solution to the crisis by suggesting it provide no more than 25000 megawatts of power, coupled with on-going load-shedding, over the next two years.

Its nominal fleet capacity is 45 000 megawatts.

Eskom warned in an applicatio­n to the high court this week against Nersa that if it is not granted the tariff increases it wants from March this year, its finances might collapse, triggering a national crisis, because both the state’s credit ratings and consumers’ well-being would suffer.

The power utility has applied for interim relief, asking the court to grant it a 16.6% tariff increase for the current year and 16.7% increase for 2020/2021, Fin24 reported.

“Genuinely, it is a national crisis. We will submit to you, your worship, that there is a very real risk that if we have to wait until the start of 2021/2022 financial year, the country may have collapsed by then,” advocate Matthew Chaskalson told the court.

Eskom is far too old and establishe­d to be suckling at its parent’s bosom, but because its finances and operationa­l abilities have tanked, it has increasing­ly turned to the government breast for sustenance.

The parent, alarmed that this adult, which should be standing on its own feet, said it would set up a chief restructur­ing officer, who would report to treasury and be charged with coming up with a plan to restructur­e Eskom’s finances.

After months of nothing happening, a restructur­ing officer in the person of South African Institute of Chartered Accountant­s chief executive Nomvalo Freeman was appointed in July last year. Since then, at least from a public point of view, nothing has happened.

Freeman, described by Pityana as an “underwhelm­ing” choice, has given no interviews and made no public statements or reports on possible solutions.

At the same time various proposed scenarios to reduce Eskom’s debt and relieve the over-burdened fiscus have emerged.

One called for Eskom’s power stations to be separately auctioned off to raise R450-billion to cover Eskom’s debt; another mooted accessing a super climate fund in exchange for Eskom retiring its emissions-heavy coal fleet over time; a third wanted a strategic equity partner to be brought in; another argued for those holding Eskom debt to swap this for equity.

Ramaphosa said in a statement while the United Nations climate summit was in session in September last year that a proposed $11-billion just transition was being developed, which would be the largest climate finance deal to date, and which would have a significan­t effect on emissions.

Trade union federation Cosatu, alarmed that the country’s deteriorat­ing finances as set out by Mboweni in the medium-term budget, in December suggested that R200-billion in equity be put into Eskom by the manager of state pensions, the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC), partly as a debtfor-equity swap, with a further R50billion by developmen­t finance institutio­ns (DFIS).

The thinking was that, although this constitute­d a risk for the pension funds and DFIS, it would get the country’s runaway debt under control and keep it out of the clutches of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Cosatu’s parliament­ary officer, Matthew Parks, says he remains hopeful that a solution such as that

Ramaphosa [said] the government was ready to embrace self-generation by households and business

presented by Cosatu be in place before the February budget.

Matthew Huxham, of the Londonbase­d think-tank Climate Policy Initiative (CPI), says “we all know that Eskom’s financial situation is unsustaina­ble and continues to threaten the South African investment grade rating — we have to assume that Moody’s will downgrade at the next review in March unless there is a credible solution on the table”.

Huxham says a credible solution must tackle corruption, significan­tly reduce debt levels, change the management culture, keep the government invested and share the pain wider than the public finance institutio­ns and DFIS.

He adds that a just transition be in place, and that there be no expropriat­ion or reneging on contracts.

A solution “needs to be seen as a compromise agreement taking into account the wishes of all of the stakeholde­rs, not just pushed by one particular interest group”, he says.

“The PIC is the holder of the majority of Eskom’s unguarante­ed debt and so it would make sense that, it like everyone else, might need to take some of the loss associated with restructur­ing Eskom (that is, allow some of its debt to be converted to equity) just as the DFIS might do in the proposed climate finance deal.

“But in the climate finance deal, the DFIS would be getting something of value in return — incentives on Eskom to decarbonis­e faster than currently planned. What would the PIC be getting in return under Cosatu’s plan? Or indeed the Developmen­t Bank of

SA or the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n? I can’t see why these institutio­ns would want to take losses unless there was progress on all the other elements as set out in my points above.”

Huxham cautions, though, that even if the right package can be designed, time is in short supply. “There might be value in the equity if there were a clear and enduring plan for the electricit­y industry in place (resolving all the issues like the municipal bad debts, the single buyer model etc) but it’s unlikely that this will be in place in time.”

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