Sunday Tribune

Power pricing adds pressure

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SOUTH AFRICA’S MUNICIPAL ELECTRICIT­Y TARIFFS ARE HURTINGTHE ECONOMY,WRITE RESEARCHER­S

XZAVAREH RUSTOMJEE, LAURALYN KAZIBONI IAN STEUART

MACHINERY and equipment industries in South Africa have recently come under huge pressure. Falling demand after the 2008 financial crisis and rising energy costs have harmed the sector.

These trends are worrying because the sector employs a tenth of the country’s total manufactur­ing work force.

We analysed the structural factors facing the industries and zoomed in on the foundries. This is because foundries are a key intermedia­te segment of the machinery and equipment industries value chain. They have been hardest hit by rising electricit­y costs.

Foundries manufactur­e metal components by pouring molten metal into moulds. The components are assembled into various high value products – including cars, pumps, machines, mineral processing and earth handling equipment.

Rising power costs make up 16% of foundry input costs. This was before Eskom’s recent 19.9% tariff increase.

Between 2007 and 2016, 100 of South Africa’s 265 foundries were closed. About 6 000 direct jobs were lost.

This also had an impact on jobs and production in downstream machinery firms. Some downstream firms turned to importing foundry component inputs. Others stopped production and imported fully assembled products, such as pumps and valves.

There are 165 foundries left in South Africa today, down from 265 in 2007. More than 80% source their power from municipali­ties. Half of these operate in Ekurhuleni. This is a largely industrial metropolit­an area, bordering Johannesbu­rg.

South Africa’s state-owned power utility Eskom distribute­s 54% of national power to end-users. About 180 municipal power department­s distribute the remainder.

Municipal tariffs differ widely. Many are much higher than the equivalent tariff an Eskom customer pays. A medium-sized foundry pays 30% more for electricit­y in Ekurhuleni, per kilogram of output, than a similar foundry sourcing power directly from Eskom. A small foundry pays 19% more.

These higher tariffs erode Ekurhuleni foundries’ profits and global competitiv­eness.

What drives municipal power tariff setting?

The municipal finance system lies at the heart of this problem. They have to raise their own revenues, even though central government partly funds them.

One source is through power sales. Ekurhuleni’s power sales make up 40% of total revenue compared with the second-largest source, the 17% in fiscal transfers from the national and provincial government. This dependency has provided a rational but perverse reason for raising municipal tariffs.

The National Energy Regulator of South Africa (Nersa) regulates electricit­y tariffs. They use a published methodolog­y based on cost of supply.

Municipali­ties purchase power from Eskom at wholesale prices. To this they add the municipal distributi­on infrastruc­ture cost and an allowable profit margin.

Too few municipal power department­s have conducted independen­t cost-of-service studies. Many lack the capacity to produce accurate power distributi­on cost data.

Some are unable to plan and manage infrastruc­ture budgets and operating systems.

There has also been historical under-investment in distributi­on infrastruc­ture. Often inadequate funding has been allocated to repairs and maintenanc­e.

Technical support interventi­ons from national government have, so far, failed to address these problems.

Performanc­e-based grants for distributi­on infrastruc­ture upgrades were partly met through the Municipal Infrastruc­ture Grant.

But this is being reduced in the 2018 budget. The approach to the distributi­on asset management programme (Adam) initiative was adopted in 2012. This has failed to reverse the municipal distributi­on infrastruc­ture backlog. And the programme appears to be unfunded now.

The municipal financing system is being reformed but the process is slow, suggesting that parts of our government system are blind to the damage being inflicted on the manufactur­ing sector by municipal power distributi­on inefficien­cy.

Given the slow pace of reform, policymake­rs should look for solutions elsewhere.

First, the search must focus on ensuring municipal tariffs are costreflec­tive and don’t reward poor planning and inefficien­cy.

This requires the physical and economic state of each municipal and Eskom managed electricit­y distributi­on infrastruc­ture system to be monitored.

The electricit­y tariff detail, the respective cost structures, outage performanc­e, backlogs and investment plans should be publicly available to any consumer.

Here, the Department of Water and Sanitation’s systems could be emulated. They run publicly accessible infrastruc­ture condition monitoring systems.

These are for water quality (Blue Drop) and sanitation conditions (Green Drop).

Lobbying

Second, municipal infrastruc­ture and maintenanc­e investment programmes, such as Adam, should be better funded. And the national Treasury’s budget disciplini­ng conditiona­l grants and other policy instrument­s should be applied to speed up a move to municipal costbased tariff setting.

Third, another solution could come out of the evolving energy market. South Africa’s energy generation surplus is set to rise in the next decade. Energy-intensive sectors are already lobbying for special pricing agreements. Their architectu­re and targets will need careful considerat­ion.

The process must involve the Department of Trade and Industry, Economic Developmen­t Department and other industrial policy custodians.

Appropriat­e conditions should also be applied to recipients of special pricing agreements. These include conditions of passing the benefits of lower electricit­y prices through to downstream labourinte­nsive sectors (such as foundries and machinery).

It’s equally important that such conditions be enforced more robustly than in the past.

Fourth, it may take some time before the realisatio­n of some of the structural reforms to the local government financing system. Therefore policy custodians involved in administer­ing investment incentives should consider promoting energyinte­nsive investment­s only in those municipali­ties with more reliable, sustainabl­e and competitiv­e power distributi­on infrastruc­ture.

A specific relocation incentive for those firms that are likely to fail, due to unjustifia­bly high municipal power costs, should also be considered.

Finally, new technologi­es such as distribute­d generation, rooftop PV panels, improved battery storage systems and “smart-grids” are already disrupting the structure and cost of distributi­on infrastruc­ture.

Their widespread adoption is likely to undermine the current system of local government financing, dependent as it is on electricit­y rents, long before the current fiscal financing reform timelines have any impact. – The Conversati­on

Rustomjee is a senior associate at the Centre for Competitio­n, Regulation and Economic Developmen­t, University of Johannesbu­rg, and Kaziboni is a researcher at the centre, while Steuart is a senior economic developmen­t specialist at Cowatersog­ema Internatio­nal.

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