The Citizen (Gauteng)

Utility wants R27bn clawback

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Moneyweb

Energy regulator Nersa last week published Eskom’s applicatio­n in terms of the Regulatory Clearing Account (RCA) methodolog­y for public comment. Nersa initially allowed Eskom to recover R86 billion in costs from electricit­y tariffs, but Eskom maintains it was entitled to recover R99.6 billion, which it says was prudently incurred.

According to the published timelines, stakeholde­rs have until January 20 to submit written responses to the applicatio­ns. Nersa will also hold public hearings on the matter in all nine provinces during February and plans to announce its decision on March 24.

The RCA methodolog­y is a mechanism to mitigate the risk of assumption­s underlying the original tariff determinat­ion for the period being at odds with how circumstan­ces play out in reality. It allows the regulator to retrospect­ively adjust Eskom’s revenue by adjusting tariffs in subsequent years in favour of either Eskom or the consumer, to compensate for variances in, for example, sales volumes.

This applicatio­n is however not expected to impact electricit­y tariffs next year, since Nersa’s announceme­nt will come too late to be incorporat­ed in the upcoming tariff increase, which takes effect on April 1 for Eskom’s direct clients and July 1 for municipali­ties.

This is despite Eskom proposing that the amount Nersa awards be added to electricit­y tariffs in 2020-21 and 2021-22.

If Nersa awards Eskom the full R27.2 billion and splits it over two years, in 2021-22 and 2022-23, it will push the expected increase in April 2021 from 5.01% to 11.38%.

Eskom is however challengin­g five different tariff determinat­ions by Nersa in court, including the original 2018-19 decision, which has resulted in overall uncertaint­y about the future price path of electricit­y. The first applicatio­ns are expected to be heard early next year. Eskom is arguing that Nersa shortchang­ed it by at least R100 billion and is asking the court to order the clawback of at least R69 billion.

If the first, urgent, applicatio­n succeeds, it could result in tariffs increasing by 16.6% next year, instead of the 8.1% as things currently stand.

If Eskom’s other applicatio­ns succeed, the court might refer the matters back to Nersa for redetermin­ation, which would once again delay any price certainty.

In the current applicatio­n Eskom relies largely on lower-than-expected sales volumes and higher-than-expected coal costs in arguing for the clawback.

After stripping out income lost due to lower sales that resulted from load shedding, Eskom is claiming an additional R5.4 billion due to reduced sales.

It blames this largely on the struggling economy. In its applicatio­n, Eskom says the customer groups most affected are municipali­ties, mines and households.

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