The Mercury

Nersa threatened with court action over Eskom coal costs

- Siseko Njobeni

THE ORGANISATI­ON Undoing Tax Abuse (Outa) has threatened legal action against the National Energy Regulator of South Africa (Nersa) in a bid to force the regulator to reveal the coal costs in Eskom’s tariff applicatio­n.

Outa said Nersa had allowed Eskom to hide the important Eskom coal costs, “which include the massively corrupt Gupta coal deals”.

The lobby group said Nersa had previously announced that it had declined Eskom’s request to omit certain costs from its revenue applicatio­n, allowing it only to omit informatio­n on the regulatory asset base. “That decision was ratified at a Nersa board meeting on July 27, 2017, and publicly announced. But now it has emerged that Nersa subsequent­ly decided to allow Eskom to keep certain coal costs secret,” Outa said.

Eskom has applied for a 19.9percent tariff increase for the 2018/19 financial year. Crucial figures relating to coal burn costs were blacked-out in the applicatio­n released for public comment.

Outa’s energy director Ted Blom said yesterday: “This indicates that the state capture movement may extend to Nersa as well, as the continued secrecy draws a veil over the corrupt Gupta transactio­ns, which are believed to be worth billions of rand.”

Blom said the hidden informatio­n was crucial for a transparen­t and fair pricing decision. He said the regulator had justified the exclusion of the informatio­n.

Confidenti­al

He said Nersa told him that, based on the reasons submitted by Eskom for confidenti­al treatment of identified parts of the revenue applicatio­n “in terms of the Promotion of Access to Informatio­n Act, 2000, (Nersa) decided that the informatio­n is confidenti­al because its disclosure is likely to cause harm to the commercial or financial interests of Eskom”.

Outa said Nersa had failed to publish the decision of September 4, “and the agenda for Nersa’s executive meeting of September 4 does not include any reference to this matter. This is not transparen­t. Given this sad state of affairs, we reserve our right to approach the courts for relief if needed,” said Blom.

The blacked out informatio­n included assumed coal burn costs per power station as well as coal burn volume per power station.

“Nersa requires burn to be submitted per station, per contract type and per supplier. Eskom calculates coal burn on a weighted-average-cost basis. A single coal stockpile is maintained for all coal delivered to the stock yard, irrespecti­ve of the contract type,” Eskom said. The utility said that the coal burn did not differenti­ate between contract types such as cost-plus and fixed-price.

Nersa also blacked out informatio­n relating to the volume of coal on stockpiles per power station. The withheld informatio­n referred to the tons of coal on stockpiles during the 2017 financial year and the first quarter of 2018 financial year.

Eskom said the informatio­n was from a coal stock survey conducted in February and May this year.

Meanwhile, the SA Municipal Workers’ Union (Samwu) has urged Nersa to reject Eskom tariff applicatio­n, saying the 19.9percent increase was not affordable.

“We are concerned that the majority of our members, who are by the way the least paid government employees, are going to be gravely affected should this absurd request be granted” said Samwu general secretary Simon Mathe.

 ??  ?? Nersa’s head office in Pretoria. Figures relating to Eskom’s coal costs were blacked out in a Nersa report.
Nersa’s head office in Pretoria. Figures relating to Eskom’s coal costs were blacked out in a Nersa report.

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