The Citizen (Gauteng)

Pravin’s Eskom rescue plan

- Amanda Watson

An energy expert says the proposal by the public enterprise­s minister to turn around the beleaguere­d power utility will take time and money – both of which are in short supply.

Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan’s plan for bringing Eskom back from the brink of collapse is a credible one which deals with the operationa­l issues of the state-owned entity, according to energy expert Chris Yelland.

But he said it would take time and money, both of which – along with electricit­y – were in short supply.

“I have little doubt government will have to come to the table with a bailout because in the short term, Eskom is going to need more money,” Yelland said.

He believed this could be up to R100 billion.

According to DA shadow minister of public enterprise­s Natasha Mazzone, the bailout was “certain to be truly massive and may even dwarf the 2015 bailout of Eskom, which included a R23 billion ‘special appropriat­ion’ and the conversion of a R60 billion subordinat­ed loan to worthless equity”.

Gordhan’s plan included fixing the new plants at Medupi, Kusile and Ingula and addressing “known design errors through an expert team to guide the recovery and applicatio­n of contractua­l remedies”.

Fixing full load losses and trips meant improved planning, execution and effectiven­ess of maintenanc­e, including training, and optimising procuremen­t processes to enable swifter purchases when required, said Yelland.

He also wanted to “reduce partial load losses by addressing major contributo­rs per plant and system and re-energise the tube leak reduction programme”, fixing outage durations through improved outage planning and execution.

Gordhan also wanted to make appointmen­ts “in critical positions, train key staff and relink centralise­d support functions to the stations” and prepare for increased open cycle gas turbine usage to ensure they were able to run when required.

Plans also needed to be made to recover coal stockpiles and reduce the impact of rain on the stockpiles by “driving compliance with the various power stations wet coal handling procedures”.

“One of the decisions the Eskom board made – with which I concur – was to ask one of the leading agencies in the world called Inel, which originates from Italy, to send us two or three of their very senior coal power station engineers,” Gordhan said.

We need to address known design errors through an expert team to guide the recovery and applicatio­n of contractua­l remedies. Pravin Gordhan Public Enterprise­s Minister

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? PRAVIN GORDHAN
Picture: AFP PRAVIN GORDHAN

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