The Herald (South Africa)

Bay loses staggering R1bn in electricit­y revenue

- Zamandulo Malonde malondez@theherald.co.za

Nelson Mandela Bay has lost more than R1bn in revenue to electrical theft and technical losses over the past three years.

The shocking figure was revealed by co-operative governance MEC Xolile Nqatha, who was responding to parliament­ary questions tabled by DA MPL Vicky Knoetze.

Knoetze had asked questions about electricit­y tariffs charged by municipali­ties and regulated by the National Energy Regulator of SA.

Nqatha said the figure included February this year.

According to Nqatha’s response, non-technical losses made up nearly two-thirds of the loss, totalling more than R634m, while technical losses accounted for more than R406m in the past three financial years.

The non-technical loss was a result of energy being dissipated by equipment such as conductors and distributi­on lines.

The metro’s ratepayers could bear the brunt from July 1 if proposed electricit­y, water, refuse and property hikes are approved.

The municipali­ty wants electricit­y tariffs to go up 6.22%, water, sanitation and refuse rates 8% and property rates 8.5%.

It has come under fire from political parties, including the DA and the Patriotic Alliance, for “milking consumers” already under financial stress as a result of the lockdown.

Municipal spokespers­on

Mamela Ndamase said the city lost about R350m a year to electricit­y theft and technical losses.

She said the city had adopted various strategies to control the issue.

These included:

● An investment of more than R60m by the electricit­y and energy directorat­e to provide safe electricit­y to informal areas in an effort to replace illegal connection­s.

To date, Ndamase said, more than 3,000 illegal connection­s had been replaced with safe connection­s;

● The appointmen­t of six service providers in six Bay clusters to inspect faulty meters, meter tampering and for the removal of illegal connection­s.

Two other service providers had been appointed to inspect and certify metering instrument­s to all industrial and commercial consumers; and

● A R288m grant to upgrade

the metro’s network and replace non-efficient distributi­on systems to curb technical losses.

“We are going on tender soon to procure an integrated smart metering management solution to detect meter tampering remotely and avoid physical inspection.”

The system will include GPS, smart metering and bulk meters.

“We want to detect meter tampering in real time.

“If you bypass a meter, an alert will be sent out with the address and that will allow us to switch the user off remotely as well,” Ndamase said.

He said the municipali­ty had migrated about 50% of commercial meters to the automated meter solution system.

Yesterday, the DA’s Knoetze said while technical losses were inevitable, the losses experience­d by the metro could be considered excessive and could point to poor maintenanc­e.

“Technical losses can be reduced by ensuring regular inspection­s and continuous maintenanc­e of electricit­y infrastruc­ture as well as by supplying high-energy consumers directly from feeders.

“The Nelson Mandela Bay municipali­ty must ensure that a programme is in place to regularly inspect, maintain and repair electricit­y infrastruc­ture and ensure innovative measures are taken to prevent technical losses,” Knoetze said.

“Just imagine what the city could have done with the R1bn in revenue that was lost.”

She called for the municipali­ty to put in place a strategy that included a detailed plan of the inspection, maintenanc­e, replacemen­t and upgrade of existing electricit­y infrastruc­ture — which is up to 40 years old in parts of the metro.

To achieve this, the party called for:

● The use of alternativ­e energy solutions such as solar and wind power, especially in the effort to connect informal users;

● The use of spiderweb connection­s (one pole with four users connected, which included meters);

● Metered connection­s in informal areas;

● The rollout of tamper-proof meters; and

● An amnesty period for users with meters that had been tampered with.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa