Cape Times

People barren of promised ‘power’

- Dale T McKinley

AMANDLA ngawethu! We hear it all the time, and many regularly shout it. Indeed, “power to the people!” has been a crucial part of South Africa’s political vocabulary for decades, first as the sole preserve of those in the anti-apartheid struggle, now as an almost generic democratic slogan.

While the slogan has always been largely defined by a macro-frame of political and social struggle, the ongoing and intensifie­d electricit­y crisis has given a new twist to its meaning and applicatio­n which raises a fundamenta­l question. Is “power” (in the form of electricit­y) really going to “the people”?

If we believe President Zuma and his Public Enterprise­s Minister Lynne Brown, then the quick and easy answer to that question is that since 1994, most all such power has indeed gone to the people. According to this line of argument, it is precisely because of the ANC government’s commitment to doing so, as part of a larger effort to deal with the discrimina­tory legacies of apartheid, that the country now finds itself in a power crisis.

In other words, it has been the roll-out of electricit­y infrastruc­ture to those – overwhelmi­ngly from the ranks of the black, poor working class – that were excluded from the grid before 1994, which shoulders the primary “blame” for the country’s current electricit­y woes.

To back this up; Zuma, Brown and their ANC government counterpar­ts have continuous­ly cited the fact that since 1994, almost 6 million additional people were connected to the grid. While this is true and while it no doubt represents an important achievemen­t, there are several problems with this whole “story” which crucially undermine the framing argument.

Problem No 1: The claim (presented as fact by government politician­s and reports) that the roll-out has reduced the percentage of households without electricit­y from around 50 percent in 1994 to 15 percent at present, is simply not borne out by the relevant statistics. According to StatsSA’s latest yearly compilatio­n of its General Household Survey (2013), there are 15.1 million households in the country.

During his State of the Nation address, President Zuma stated that there are still 3.4 million households without electricit­y. As the Department of Energy has confirmed, this consists of 1.2 million informal and 2.2 million formal households. One does not have to be a mathematic­ian to quickly figure out the resultant equation; that the percentage of people still without power stands at 22.5 percent. Not nearly as many of “the people” have “power” as claimed.

Problem No 2: While the 11.7 million households connected to the grid might seem like they represent the largest consumer block of electricit­y, the reality is that residentia­l use accounts for only 18 percent of (average yearly) usage. This pales in comparison to the 58 percent consumed by the manufactur­ing and mining sectors combined. When broken down into per customer usage on a monthly basis, the size of the usage gap becomes even more glaring. Residentia­l (“Homelight”) users supplied directly from Eskom consume 0.0007 percent of what large corporate or industrial “Megaflex” customers use.

Further, Eskom’s figures show that sales to residentia­l users from 1996 to 2014 increased by a mere 3.5 percent, from 1.5 to 5 percent of total sales. As energy expert Dirk de Vos has shown, when placed in the context of “the total increase in electricit­y supplied to the country as a whole”, since 1996, “less than 12 percent of that can be ascribed to the expansion of access to electricit­y in previously unserved areas”. The expansion of the electricit­y grid and the resultant distributi­on and use of “Power” is not nearly as much in favour of “the People” as has been made out.

Problem No 3: The price that “the People” pay for electricit­y, and more importantl­y, by that poor majority which is engaged in a daily struggle just to survive, is far beyond that of those who are most able to afford pay. As set against the average cost of electricit­y (measured per kilowatt hour) across all socio-economic sectors, residentia­l users pay 100 percent more. When it comes to a price comparison with the manufactur­ing and mining sectors, residentia­l users pay, on average, 300 percent more than these power-guzzlers.

What makes this class-framed price divide even worse is the fact that almost a third of the power generated by Eskom is sold below the cost of production, with the power guzzlers and internatio­nal clients being the main beneficiar­ies. The cumulative result is that not only have “the People” become the power cash cows, but the cosy, below-cost deals with those who should be charged much more, has financiall­y compromise­d capital expansion requiremen­ts.

Problem No 4: While the dominant trope of media, public and government discourse and thinking is that poor people are the main defaulters and electricit­y “thieves” (mostly through “illegal connection­s”), the reality is that, by far, the biggest power defaulters and thieves are anything but poor.

Meter audits undertaken by Eskom’s Energy Losses Management Programme have shown that around 65 percent of all energy “theft” in Eskom’s supply areas is carried out by the business, industrial, commercial and agricultur­al sectors as the result of meter tampering, lack of metering and refusal to pay.

Not surprising­ly, Eskom admits that the subsequent financial losses incurred are far greater than those resulting from residentia­l “theft”. When it comes to defaulters, it is once again not “the People” who take first prize. Across the country’s municipali­ties, the prime culprits are big business and government itself. A few examples will suffice…

Last year, in the Western Cape municipali­ty of Kannaland, a leaked confidenti­al report revealed that big businesses owed the lion’s share of R20 million in arrears to Eskom. Similarly, a 2014 report from the Free State municipali­ty of Matjhabeng fingered mines, medium-sized businesses, government department­s and those renting state-owned properties as the biggest defaulters. And, even though the 2013-2014 Annual Report of (Johannesbu­rg’s) City Power failed to mention how much its big business, industrial and commercial clients owed, it did reveal that the yearly debt of Johannesbu­rg General Hospital stands at R57 million.

The picture is clear. Our energy crisis is not the result of successive ANC government­s bringing “Power to the People”. Rather, combined with extremely poor forward planning, it is the result of bringing less-than-cost power to a very small minority of manufactur­ing and mining corporates. The crisis has been further exacerbate­d by allowing those who can most afford to pay, to largely get away with largescale power “theft” and non-payment.

It seems like “the People” need to shout a lot louder. AMANDLA NGAWETHU!

This is an extract from a newsletter on SACSIS’ website. Dr McKinley is an independen­t writer, researcher and lecturer as well as political activist.

When it comes to a price comparison with the manufactur­ing and mining sectors, residentia­l users pay on average 300% more

 ??  ?? MISGUIDED STANCE: A man walks past electricit­y pylons as he returns from work in Soweto. According to the president, says the writer, it is the roll-out of electricit­y infrastruc­ture to those – overwhelmi­ngly from the ranks of the black, poor working class – that were excluded from the grid before 1994, that is to blame for South Africa’s current power crisis.
MISGUIDED STANCE: A man walks past electricit­y pylons as he returns from work in Soweto. According to the president, says the writer, it is the roll-out of electricit­y infrastruc­ture to those – overwhelmi­ngly from the ranks of the black, poor working class – that were excluded from the grid before 1994, that is to blame for South Africa’s current power crisis.
 ?? Picture: PARFYME ?? FUTURE FOR ALL
Picture: PARFYME FUTURE FOR ALL

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