The Citizen (KZN)

Powerless

Brace for stages five and six load shedding if much-needed diesel does not arrive in the country this week .

- Amanda Watson amandaw@citizen.co.za

There is not enough diesel in South Africa needed to top up the tanks.

If diesel takes any longer than this week to arrive on our shores, stage five and six load shedding from Eskom may not be far off. This means Eskom would have to cut 5 000MW and 6 000MW respective­ly from the grid in order to meet demand, meaning more frequent outages.

According to Eskom’s load shedding website, stage four doubles the frequency of stage two, which means you will be scheduled for load shedding 12 times over a four-day period for two hours at a time, or 12 times over an eight-day period for four hours at a time.

“If more load needs to be shed than has been scheduled in stages one, two, three and four then National Control will instruct additional, unschedule­d load shedding,” the Eskom site stated.

“This means you may be shed outside of your scheduled times.”

Eskom’s schedule goes up to stage eight.

Explaining Eskom’s current inability to deliver power, general manager of system operations Bernard Magoro noted the utility’s plan B, the diesel generators which supplied 3 000MW – 2 000MW from Eskom and 1 000MW from an independen­t power producer – had run into a problem.

Simply put, there was not enough diesel in South Africa, nor were there any ships close enough for the between 20 and 25 million litres needed to top up the tanks.

The other problem was that the generators were never designed as base load suppliers of electricit­y, but rather to fill in at peak demand times.

When it came to shutting down units at power stations due to tube leaks, Magoro noted it was not a simple process.

“At 6pm on Monday night, we had a shortfall of 7 700MW. Stage four load shedding gave us 4 900MW and for the rest we had to utilise our diesel generators to meet the demand,” Magoro said.

Board chairperso­n Jabu Mabuza noted more than R5 billion had been spent on diesel to cover the shortfall caused by labour disputes, coal shortages and unplanned outages.

Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan said it was a “difficult time”.

Flanked by Eskom CEO Phakamani Hadebe, chairperso­n Jabu Mabuza and chief operating officer Jan Oberholzer, Gordhan acknowledg­ed people’s frustratio­ns and apologised before local and internatio­nal media. With burst boiler tubes in eight units at three power stations, a planned strike on the horizon and uncertaint­y over the reliabilit­y of ageing plants where little maintenanc­e has been done, Eskom is on the ropes.

“It’s going to be a struggle to actually overcome this crisis,” Gordhan said, “but we are determined to prevent us going past stage four”.

It is only in the next 10 to 14 days that residents will find out what the sustainabi­lity task team and technical review team’s plans were to keep Eskom’s head above water until all the issues are sorted out “in the next year or two”.

“It is a time when I know many people are frustrated because of the uncertaint­y around what is actually happening and the disruption which happens in the business world and various households as a result of the load shedding which is going on in the country,” Gordhan said.

Mabuza noted for five years up to February 2018 – when the new board was appointed – maintenanc­e costs had almost halved from R40 billion.

“This was incongruen­t with plants which were ageing more and more,” Mabuza said.

“The question has to be, what was that money spent on? That is an issue which is currently being pursued through law enforcemen­t agencies.”

Eskom was in an operationa­l crisis which needed a correspond­ing response but financial processes were not allowing this, Mabuza said. –

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 ??  ?? CONCERN. Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan, left, and Eskom chairperso­n Jabu Mabuza at yesterday’s press conference on the electricit­y supply problems at Eskom. Picture: Nigel Sibanda
CONCERN. Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan, left, and Eskom chairperso­n Jabu Mabuza at yesterday’s press conference on the electricit­y supply problems at Eskom. Picture: Nigel Sibanda

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