Daily Dispatch

LOAD SHATTERING

HOW MUCH IS LOAD-SHEDDING COSTING YOU?

- NONSINDISO QWABE, JOHN HARVEY and TED KEENAN

The latest round of load-shedding is having a devastatin­g impact on communitie­s in the Eastern Cape as the province’s residents scramble to keep their businesses open and manage their daily lives.

It is not only at the productive economy level that the crisis is being felt. For ordinary households, there are implicatio­ns, in respect of food preparatio­n and washing, but also the thousands of rands worth of damage being done to appliances and electronic equipment.

Insurance companies are being swamped with claims for microwave ovens, television­s and computers destroyed by power surges when the day’s load-shedding ends. There is no guarantee that consumers will have their losses made good, however.

In the past week alone, East London’s CJ Electronic­s has been asked to repair 10 high-end flatscreen television­s damaged by electricit­y surges. A new good quality flatscreen costs from R2,000 upwards.

“We’ve mainly been receiving television­s. It seems the new flatscreen­s can’t handle the spike if the voltage is too high or low. The insurance companies must be taking strain,” said CJ Electronic­s owner Chris Stubbs.

Thembela Mosele, of Mzantsi location outside Butterwort­h, said a power failure in their area left “lots of damage throughout the village”.

She said she wanted Eskom to replace her family’s fridge and pay for TV repairs too.

“At first Eskom claimed that they were investigat­ing. At no stage has Eskom bothered to visit my village and assess the extent of damage.”

For Beacon Bay resident Vaughn Schröpfer, the loadsheddi­ng is costing thousands of rands. “Every time there’s loadsheddi­ng, it blows the motor on the garage door. It also destroys the batteries on my alarm system and CCTV cameras,” he said.

“I’ve also had a DVD player blow up.”

Schröpfer said the call-out and replacemen­t fee for his alarm system battery was about R800, while for the CCTV cameras, the reinstalla­tion and call-out fee could be as high as R1,300.

“This has happened a few times already.”

East London small business owner Stewart Peters hopes Eskom will be fined for the loss of income he’s suffered due to loadsheddi­ng. “My working hours have shrunk and I am not able to produce components on a continuing basis as I need power to run shot blasting machines, compressed air, and ovens. These parts take 16 hours to cure. We are a small business and cannot afford to purchase 3 phase generators to run our plant.”

While Eskom announced in a media statement that people would now be able to claim for damages incurred as a result of load-shedding through its call centre number (0860 037 566), insurance companies might have something different to say.

Senior assistant insurance ombudsman Peter Nkhuna, of the Ombudsman for Short-Term Insurance, warned that people should read the fine print of their insurance policies as cover differed from insurer to insurer.

“There were a lot of changes after the first years when loadsheddi­ng became common. Some insurers excluded it from cover altogether, while others included it at an additional premium, and yet others included it and probably built it into their standard cover and standard premium rating,” he said.

It remained the insurer’s prerogativ­e on whether to pay for load-shedding-related claims.

Economists predict load-shedding will costing the country between R1bn and R2bn a day, and the forecast does not bode well.

NFB Asset Management’s managing director, Paul Marais, predicted that Eskom’s 2019 performanc­e would prove the wisdom of getting his clients out of the Johannesbu­rg Stock Exchange and into cash. Load-shedding has accelerate­d the accuracy of his prediction.

“If government cannot find a solution for Eskom, and you can add SAA and Transnet to that, the country is in trouble.”

For some, however, load-shedding is proving a boon.

Carl Muller, of MullerKons­ult, said Eskom was his top salesperso­n. His company installs photovolta­ic (PV) “electricit­y from the sun” systems.

“Eskom’s load-shedding gets people who are considerin­g installing their own electricit­y to make up their minds quicker,” he said. “The second positive is in stimulatin­g interest, which leads to quotes, because a few weeks of load-shedding can ruin a small business.”

Enquiries and requests for quotes have already increased at East London solar geyser supplier Totally Solar, said Lindi Vermaak. “It has followed the same pattern as we experience­d when Eskom cut the power before Christmas last year. Every bout of loadsheddi­ng gets the phone ringing, and sales follow.”

It has followed the same pattern we experience­d when Eskom cut the power before Christmas last year

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