The Herald (South Africa)

MPs hear litany of Eskom woes:

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Eskom’s R420bn debt burden represents 15% of sovereign debt and if the power utility defaults on its debt it will threaten the economy, department of public enterprise­s acting director-general Thuto Shomang said on Wednesday.

Shomang told MPs that cash generated by the company did not cover operating and debt-servicing costs.

The escalation of municipal and Soweto debt to about R28bn was another problem‚ as was the increase in the number of employees from 32‚000 in 2007 to 48‚000 in 2018, with the associated cost growing from R9.5bn to R29.5bn.

Shomang said Eskom was struggling to maintain operationa­l sustainabi­lity due to the ageing-generation fleet, with essential mid-life refurbishm­ents not implemente­d and poor quality of maintenanc­e, with 40% of plant breakdowns due to human error.

Eskom also faced ongoing coal shortages due to poor management and lack of investment in cost-plus mines, as well as a loss of critical skills and low staff morale‚ he said.

Shomang noted that the building of Medupi and Kusile power stations had suffered massive delays and cost overruns due to poor planning‚ poor engineerin­g design‚ poor procuremen­t practices or poor contractin­g and corruption.

The costs for the plants had escalated significan­tly to more

Eskom is struggling to maintain operationa­l sustainabi­lity

than R300bn – Medupi from R24.9bn to R145bn and Kusile from R80.7bn to R161.4bn.

He said systemic corruption‚ malfeasanc­e‚ fraud and state capture had compromise­d the credibilit­y of Eskom and eroded investor confidence.

Public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan‚ who cut short his cabinet meeting attendance to join the parliament­ary meeting‚ said finance minister Tito Mboweni might announce a cash injection for Eskom next Wednesday. –

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