Mail & Guardian

Energy reform in context

Engineers should be consulted on solutions for the country’s embattled power giant

- Nchimunya Hamukoma

The recent blackouts and President Cyril Ramaphosa’s announceme­nt of the proposed split of Eskom has put the parastatal on the lips of every South African, often closely followed by an expletive. One thing lacking in the current discourse is the question of just how we got here, because Eskom wasn’t always a basket case. It’s hard to believe it, but there was a time when the country had abundant energy.

South Africa was once at the cutting edge of the internatio­nal electricit­y supply industry. We got electric streetligh­ts in Kimberley before they had them in London. And, over decades, Eskom built up the machinery and institutio­nal capacity to be one of the world’s leading energy utilities. Peaking in 2001, when Eskom was named the Financial Times’ power company of the year for its “success in providing the world’s lowest cost energy while at the same time making superior technologi­cal innovation­s, increasing transmissi­on system reliabilit­y and developing economical, efficient and safe methods for the combustion of low-grade coal”.

Eskom also led the electrific­ation process across the country well before it was official government policy. In the early post-apartheid years, it was one of the government’s top-performing parastatal­s.

In 1998 the department of energy introduced the white paper on energy policy. This policy was supposed to change South Africa’s energy supply industry and open it up to more private participat­ion. The paper was billed as the solution to the country’s excess capacity and under-electrific­ation. Its key recommenda­tions were to end Eskom’s monopoly over the constructi­on of new generation capacity and to split the giant into three separate units for generation, transmissi­on and distributi­on. It was a position that was supported by a 2001 Cabinet decision barring Eskom from building any new generation capacity.

Eskom Enterprise­s was created in 1999 as a non-regulated business wing to expand the reach of Eskom to the rest of Africa with work in energy and energy-related services. In 2000 the head of Eskom Enterprise­s, Thulani Gcabashe, was selected as the utility’s new chief executive and the company began to reposition itself towards a business-oriented model and started to present itself as outward facing.

But things did not go to plan. Partially, because there wasn’t a plan. Though the white paper had done an excellent job in signalling the future energy vision of the country, it did a terrible job in articulati­ng what that environmen­t would look like and in delineatin­g who would call the shots.

The most detailed reforms were in distributi­on, which was seen as the area most in need of repair, and in electrific­ation, which was a necessary investment in the future. The recommenda­tions for what generation and transmissi­on would look like were to come from further consultati­ons.

By 2004, time had run out and, though there was significan­t interest from the private sector, the legislativ­e environmen­t could not keep up and South Africa had no final model for what a dynamic electricit­y supply industry would look like.

Eskom was allowed to build new generation capacity again but by then significan­t technical skills had been lost and there wasn’t enough time to build the required capacity. In 2007 South Africa experience­d its first waves of rolling blackouts.

Over a decade later South Africa was once again plunged into darkness and Ramaphosa announced that Eskom would restart the process of separating into three independen­t companies for generation, transmissi­on and distributi­on. This move aims to improve efficiency and provide a way out for the indebted behemoth.

But the solution does very little to address the fundamenta­l challenges that Eskom now faces: that there is no longer anyone with the combinatio­n of technical skill and political clout to ensure that the lights stay on. Energy reform can be a positive step but it is not the panacea.

The question that remains is whether anyone has asked the engineers. Because what got us into this mess in the first place was suggesting policies that met internatio­nal standards but failed to account for local context.

Nchimunya Hamukoma leads research for the Brenthurst Foundation’s Future of African Cities series

 ??  ?? In the dark: An employee uses the light of his cellphone to pack away books during a blackout in Cape Town. Photo: Sumaya Hisham/reuters
In the dark: An employee uses the light of his cellphone to pack away books during a blackout in Cape Town. Photo: Sumaya Hisham/reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa