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‘We should not shy away from costs of fixing crisis’

- REUTERS

WHILE the people of Kimberley and the rest of the country were once again hit by Stage 6 load shedding, the new electricit­y minister stated that South Africa should not shy away from spending to fix the country's power crisis.

This comes ahead of a Cabinet decision later this month on his proposals to end the worst power blackouts on record.

Kgosientsh­o Ramokgopa, appointed last month to the newly created role, was speaking in an interview less than two months after the National Treasury granted state utility Eskom R254 billion of debt relief over the next three years.

Government has made repeated attempts to improve power availabili­ty but failed to make progress.

Ramokgopa’s appointmen­t is the latest effort to make a breakthrou­gh before national elections next year at which the ANC faces the prospect of losing its parliament­ary majority.

Ramokgopa said he thought focusing on improving the performanc­e of Eskom’s ailing coal plants was the best opportunit­y to lower the intensity of power outages.

But he said other interventi­ons were needed including investing in the capacity of the national grid and maintainin­g large outlays on diesel for Eskom's emergency open-cycle gas turbines.

“Continued high levels of load shedding penalise the South African economy and it causes untold injury to the poor, and our ability to attract investment,” he said.

He said that if South African borrowing costs had to rise to fund diesel purchases then that was a necessary trade-off given the impact outages were having on unemployme­nt and growth prospects.

“I am presenting to Cabinet and they will make that determinat­ion (on how to address the power crisis) at the end of the month,” he added.

Ramokgopa said grid constraint­s meant some renewable energy projects that had already been built were being throttled and new projects were being jeopardise­d.

He said another set of interventi­ons that Cabinet would consider included Eskom investing more in the coal mines it buys from to ensure better quality supplies and allowing Eskom to buy directly from original equipment manufactur­ers rather than from intermedia­ries.

 ?? File picture: Philip Gostelow, Bloomberg ??
File picture: Philip Gostelow, Bloomberg

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