Cape Argus

Minister repeals SOEs’ B-BBEE requiremen­t

- SOYISO MALITI soyiso.maliti@inl.co.za

GONE are the black economic empowermen­t tender days at state-owned entities (SOEs) as Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana repealed a requiremen­t that forced state companies to disqualify 100% white-owned companies that fail to meet BEE points.

Godongwana has promulgate­d new regulation­s, which exempt Eskom, Transnet and other SOEs from complying with BEE point-scoring regulation­s, replacing a 2017 law.

This comes days after Eskom board member Mteto Nyati decried the affirmativ­e action policy.

The canned regulation states that if a state organ decides to apply pre-qualifying criteria to advance BEE, it must advertise the tender with a specific tendering condition that only one or more of the following tenderers should apply: a tenderer having a stipulated minimum BroadBased Black Economic Empowermen­t status level of contributo­r, qualifying small enterprise­s in terms of the B-BBEE Act, a tenderer subcontrac­ting a minimum of 30% to a company which is at least 51% owned by blacks.

The old regulation read: “A tender that fails to obtain the minimum qualifying score for functional­ity as indicated in the tender documents is not an acceptable tender.”

The repealed regulation – known as the Preferenti­al Procuremen­t Regulation­s 2017 or gazette number 40553 of 20 – states that a tenderer must submit proof of its B-BBEE status level of contributo­r. A tenderer failing to submit proof of B-BBEE status level may not be disqualifi­ed, but may score zero points out of 20 for B-BBEE for contracts between R30 000 and R50 million.

The new legislatio­n to come into effect in January repeals the regulation.

DA MP and spokespers­on on finance, Dr Dion George, said Godongwana had been talking about procuremen­t for a while “but it has mostly been incoherent”.

The DA doesn’t know what a new Preferenti­al Procuremen­t Bill will do, but these regulation­s are “silent on BEE, and we welcome that. BEE is one of the most significan­t interventi­ons in our economy, ever, and has distorted it. It made our markets less efficient and forced business to price in rent-seeking middlemen who benefited only a tiny few and made them extremely rich.”

George said last week Ramaphosa had said BEE was enshrined in the Constituti­on, “so it’s not clear what the position actually is. What is certain is our economy is failing and BEE is one of the root causes”.

On Newzroom Afrika yesterday, Business Unity chief executive Cas Coovadia said: “We have to balance the need for transforma­tion and the need for economic empowermen­t … The priority for Eskom is to get the energy situation sorted out as urgently as possible.”

If BEE legislatio­n in relation to procuremen­t hampers Eskom’s ability to deal with the energy crisis, then the balance has to fall on Eskom procuring from companies ready to deliver services, Coovadia said.

In a statement, Godongwana said he and Treasury executives would address the media today after the gazetting of the Preferenti­al Procuremen­t Regulation­s 2022. They were developed after the Constituti­onal Court ruling of February 2022 on the 2017 Preferenti­al Procuremen­t Regulation­s and followed public submission­s on draft regulation­s published for comment in March 2022.

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