The Citizen (Gauteng)

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EXPECTED: POLICY PAPER TO SPELL OUT NEW VISION

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Struggling SOE to get a new chief exec by end of October.

South Africa has been promising for months to fix Eskom, the state power utility that’s drowning in debt, made record losses and is reliant on government bailouts to remain solvent. While little tangible progress has been evident so far, several key decisions are due to be taken this month.

Here’s what to watch out for:

The appointmen­t of a new chief executive officer.

The utility, which provides about 95% of the country’s power, has been without a permanent CEO since Phakamani Hadebe quit in July. The post has been temporaril­y filled by its chairperso­n, Jabu Mabuza, who has said his replacemen­t will be named by the end of the month.

Among the candidates shortliste­d are former LNG Canada CEO Andy Calitz and Jacob Maroga, who was Eskom CEO from 2007 to 2009.

Release of policy paper

Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan is overseeing the drafting of a special policy paper that will spell out the government’s envisioned future for Eskom.

It’s likely to flesh out a proposal to split the utility into generation, transmissi­on and distributi­on units under a state holding company. The paper could be referred to Cabinet as soon as Wednesday and will be released by the end of the month.

Debt reorganisa­tion

Eskom owes R450 billion and isn’t generating enough cash to pay the interest.

The utility’s management told investors in August that its chief restructur­ing officer, Freeman Nomvalo, would submit a report to the Cabinet by the end of last month recommendi­ng how the debt should be reorganise­d.

One of four options was to move most of the debt onto the government’s balance sheet while the others weren’t disclosed, according to investors, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The government and Eskom declined to comment on that process, or whether it will be incorporat­ed into the policy paper.

Gordhan has said investors will be consulted on any reorganisa­tion.

Finalisati­on of the energy blueprint

The Integrated Resource Plan, which has been years in the making and maps out South Africa’s energy mix for the next decade, is due to be discussed by Cabinet on Wednesday and then released for public comment, according to Mineral Resources and Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe.

A March draft envisions electricit­y output capacity rising more than 40% to 78 344 megawatts by 2030. The bulk of that is to come from renewable sources.

Mid-term budget

The government has allocated R128 billion to Eskom over the next three fiscal years.

Finance Minister Tito Mboweni will spell out where the money will come from when he releases his mid-term budget on October 30. Treasury has already signalled to government department­s that they will have to drasticall­y cut costs. Additional bailouts for Eskom are unlikely.

Treasury has set 28 conditions for Eskom to secure the aid, including that it provide daily updates on its cash position, strengthen its board and provide clarity on costs and benefits of two new power plants. – Bloomberg

Utility must provide regular updates on finances

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