The Star Early Edition

SA teeters on failed state as it kowtows to the West on energy in search of bucks

- Murder, She Wrote. Dr Pali Lehohla is the director of the Economic Modelling Academy, a Professor of Practice at the University of Johannesbu­rg, a research associate at Oxford University, a board member of Institute for Economic Justice at Wits and a dist

ON MAY 16, Asghar Adelzadeh and I had the privilege of visiting Mangaung in the Free State. Adelzadeh is a director and chief economic modeller at Applied Developmen­t Research Solutions and is also my co-director at Economic Modelling Academy. And the next day we drove back early so that I could proceed to Bela-Bela in Limpopo.

As a party in the design of the Indlulamit­hi Scenarios for South Africa, our trip to and back from Mangaung was colourfull­y decorated by the Indlulamit­hi Scenario discussion­s.

The reflection of the predominan­t scenario, the Gwara-Gwara scenario, was ever present and obvious as we drove along the road.

In the four-hour journey you would not miss a woman with a load of firewood or a sack of cow-dung on her head. This by the way remains a stern reminder of the devastatin­g consequenc­es of a government-led manufactur­ing of the energy crisis that reigns in our land.

The utilisatio­n of biomass as a source of energy violates several of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

Ironically the hurried bourgeoisi­eled Just Energy Transition, which seeks to be surreptiti­ously achieved by shutting down South Africa’s coal-fired power stations in exchange for an elusive promise of dollars from the West, has backfired at a massive cost to the poor.

And the poor end up paying with life and limb because of bourgeois greed. The best known target in internatio­nal aid proposes to raise official developmen­t assistance (ODA) to 0.7% of donors’ national income.

Alas, with the event of the Ukraine-Russia war two hypocrisie­s were revealed.

The first was the hypocrisy of the West, which had taught and lectured docile and obedient South Africa on clean energy. But instead the West ran for dirty coal to keep their citizens warm, while they also drasticall­y reduced the price of energy to affordable levels for their citizens.

The second hypocrisy was revealed of how callous this ill-informed and unprincipl­ed government’ position has been to its own citizens. It has neither delivered justice nor clean energy, especially to the poor.

This strategy has backfired dramatical­ly, and our hapless government has hibernated in a delusion of grandeur waving an imaginary magic wand to pull solar-powered panels out of the hat, which will leave, and has left, the poor cold, hungry and destitute.

It has exposed people to the raw necessity of reverting to the use of the dirtiest of energy, which massive electrific­ation of South Africa in the first 15 years of democracy had successful­ly liberated them from its use.

And this after the poor amid Covid were systematic­ally excluded from education because of a lack of access to technology and data.

In a continuous three-year period to date, the government has deliberate­ly excluded the poor from education, because they have been deprived of energy for lighting for study, reading and writing. And of equal importance, if not the most important, access to cooking. How backward are our thought processes in our unprovoked desire to please the West on an elusive Just Energy Transition funding.

At no point in history has the West kept its developmen­t funding promise, and how South Africa fell for this trap boggles the mind.

Over the longest period ever in the North-South slavery, colonial and current neo-colonial arrangemen­t and latterly commitment for funding under decadal developmen­t arrangemen­ts has the North ever met its obligation­s.

This includes, but is not limited to, percentage agreements of the Gross National Product that would be dedicated for funding developmen­t in the South.

The West never kept that promise. They instead ventured all manner of excuses. To date they have not

explained themselves to South Africa on the U-turn they took on renewables, neither has South Africa asked.

Instead, the latest we know is South Africa went to explain itself to them on how it is contemplat­ing how it will slow the speed of closing coal-fired power stations.

The West explained itself to no one. It is simply prepostero­us for South Africa to go and explain itself to those who have led it into darkness through intrigue.

As we drove to Joburg, we came to a typical Gwara-Gwara scenario of service protests. This scenario says that in a fully-fledged Gwara-Gwara, service delivery protests will read like weather or road traffic announceme­nts.

True to form, we came to one such service delivery protest on the N1 in Ventersbur­g where the road was blocked by angry citizens.

We had to drive back and then

head towards Virginia. Here we saw a fully-fledged rail infrastruc­ture with electric poles and lines still standing over miles and miles of land.

The enemy here was not our habitual Joburg rail infrastruc­ture looters but fully grown trees that ran the length of this disused infrastruc­ture.

This mention was not meant to attract massive migration to the virgin rail of Virginia from the metal-thirsty looters. Soon we were in Sandton, where the full Gwara-Gwara scenario of a road traffic-like announceme­nt without announceme­nt welcomed us.

All the traffic lights were not working and guidance of alternativ­es was impossible.

True to what Indlulamit­hi scenarios projected in its three paths, South Africa chose the worst case.

It is a truly Gwara-Gwara nation torn between immobility and restless energy. It embodies a demoralise­d land

of disorder and decay.

The recovery policy framework has simply augmented the post-1996 policy status quo with contractio­nary measures, such as a more austere fiscal policy. The outlook has moved towards an immiserisi­ng growth path of the Gwara-Gwara scenario and tethers the country towards a failed state.

As a member of the authorship of the Indlulamit­hi Scenarios, living them on this excursion was like experienci­ng an Angela Lansbury production of

 ?? ?? SOUTH Africa’s lack of electricit­y and the knock-on effects lead it into the Gwara-Gwara scenario of the Indlulamit­hi Scenarios for the country, says Pali Lehohola. | MOTSHWARI MOFOKENG African News Agency (ANA)
SOUTH Africa’s lack of electricit­y and the knock-on effects lead it into the Gwara-Gwara scenario of the Indlulamit­hi Scenarios for the country, says Pali Lehohola. | MOTSHWARI MOFOKENG African News Agency (ANA)

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