Sunday Times

Nersa takes a tumble with Eskom

- CHRIS BARRON

THE Dentons report on corruption at Eskom has blown the National Energy Regulator of South Africa out of the water, say energy analysts.

While Eskom was squanderin­g hundreds of billions of rand on fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e, violations of procuremen­t procedure, conflicts of interest and operationa­l inefficien­cies, Nersa, whose job it is to protect consumers, allowed it to raise electricit­y prices by 440% between 2008 and 2016-17.

Law firm Dentons was commission­ed by Public Enterprise­s Minister Lynne Brown in 2015 to investigat­e Eskom. Although she promised it was going to take a “deep dive”, the investigat­ion was abruptly halted after three months when it began naming names.

By then, it had uncovered only 10% of Eskom’s wrongdoing, according to analyst Ted Blom, who heads the energy portfolio for the Organisati­on Undoing Tax Abuse (Outa). The report on this work was hidden from the public until recently exposed by the Financial Mail.

Blom, who consulted to Eskom from 2006 to 2008, says when he offered to show Nersa evidence he had compiled of the corruption and maladminis­tration at Eskom, he was turned away.

“I cried foul in 2008 and 2009 about the corruption at Eskom and I cried hard,” he says. “They saw me as a troublemak­er. They were not interested.”

Some of his most damaging calculatio­ns, which he presented to senior executives at Eskom before taking them to Nersa, concerned the coal account.

According to the Dentons report coal is the biggest cost item for Eskom. It cites one case in which it paid R13.4-million for R4.2-million worth of coal. At a time when coal prices were falling by an average of 50%, Eskom’s coal bill was growing at 18% per annum.

The Dentons report found there was no competitiv­e tendering process for coal.

Nersa told Blom that its governing legislatio­n didn’t permit it to investigat­e corruption, only inefficien­cy. But neither did it seem to have investigat­ed these.

The National Energy Regulator Act obliges Nersa to ensure that the expenditur­e Eskom claims is prudently and efficientl­y incurred.

The Dentons report makes it clear this has not been the case.

“Therefore one can assume that Nersa was not giving it sufficient attention,” says energy expert Chris Yelland.

The Dentons report has confirmed that Eskom’s internal processes have been far from efficient and prudent.

“Nersa should have spotted this but they rely on Eskom to provide the informatio­n. They provide informatio­n that supports their applicatio­n for a tariff increase.”

Nersa is expected to interrogat­e the informatio­n supplied by Eskom through a rigorous public FREE REIN: Eskom was allowed to increase the price of electricit­y by 440% between 2008 and 2016-17 consultati­on process. The Dentons report shows fairly starkly that it has not done so aggressive­ly enough.

“I think Nersa were naive. I don’t think they expected Eskom to be lying to and misleading them,” says Blom. As a result, they never interrogat­ed the Eskom figures properly, “they just took what they were given and made marginal adjustment­s.”

Yelland makes the point that Nersa frequently did not give Eskom the tariff increases it applied for and were attacked by Eskom for preventing it from being a sustainabl­e business.

“CEOs from Brian Dames to Brian Molefe said openly the problem was Nersa did not give them what they needed. That was a con, as we now know.”

But Nersa could have known much earlier if it had paid attention. In addition to Blom’s whistleblo­wing attempts a report by Deloitte in 2011 revealed fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e and the flouting of procuremen­t procedure in 2008.

A report by the Special Investigat­ing Unit which was handed to President Jacob Zuma in 2012 should have given Nersa plenty to chew on as well, as should have two exposés by TV programme Carte Blanche.

“It would have been clear over an extended period of time for anyone who cared to look that Eskom was not being as efficient as it should have been by a long way,” says Yelland.

Blom says all Eskom should have got from Nersa were marginal price increases to adjust for inflation.

Instead, it received whopping increases of 27.5%, 31.3%, 24.8%, 25.8%, 16%, 8%, 8%, 12.7% and 9.4% between 2008 and 2016.

In August last year, the North Gauteng High Court set aside the 9.4% tariff increase Nersa had granted to Eskom in March.

The court found it should have been no more than 3.51%.

 ?? Picture: MARK WESSELS ??
Picture: MARK WESSELS

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