Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Eskom crisis: Warning of ‘huge risks’

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SOUTH Africa is drawing skepticism over its plans to declare a state of disaster to help tackle crippling blackouts, with critics arguing that the measure will undermine spending controls and isn't the solution to the nation's energy crisis.

Rolling power outages, known locally as load shedding, have been instituted since 2008 to protect the electricit­y grid as state power utility Eskom fails to generate enough energy to meet demand from its old and poorly maintained coal-fired plants.

On Tuesday, the governing African National Congress called for state-of-disaster laws to be used to end the outages by year-end.

More details may be announced after a cabinet meeting that begins on Thursday, or when President Cyril Ramaphosa delivers his state-of-the-nation address on February 9.

“Existing legislatio­n and institutio­ns, if used in good faith, provide all that is necessary to get over load shedding as fast as reasonably possible,” said Hilton Trollip, an energy research consultant and fellow at the University of Cape Town.

‘Huge risks' will accompany the imposition of a state of disaster and the government needs to justify why existing laws are inadequate, he said.

While it's unclear what government measures would follow such a declaratio­n, Eskom has long requested truncating procuremen­t rules in order to speed up delivery of spare parts to fix its plants.

Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe has raised the option of securing electricit­y from floating gas-fired plants if legal obstacles are removed.

Bids by Turkey's Karpowersh­ip to supply South Africa have made slow progress because of lawsuits and environmen­tal challenges.

The energy shortages have hobbled the country, with the central bank estimating they will shave an estimated 2 percentage points off output growth this year.

Efforts to improve the performanc­e of power plants and bring new capacity onto the grid have fallen short, and with elections looming next year, the ANC is under mounting pressure to turn the situation around.

A state of disaster was last imposed in March 2020 in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic, enabling the government to fast-track spending and cut red tape. It later emerged that public funds had been abused, tender processes bypassed and that ANC politician­s were among those who benefited from questionab­le contracts.

That experience will undermine support for implementi­ng similar dispensati­ons and the additional measures don't appear to be needed, said Happy Khambule, energy and environmen­t manager for lobby group Business Unity South Africa.

“Many policy instrument­s that would lead Eskom onto a sustainabl­e path require implementa­tion, which is unfortunat­ely sorely lacking,” he said.

“The correct path to end loadsheddi­ng is to leave Eskom to do its job without further interferen­ce,” increase energy generation, give incentives to individual­s and businesses to generate their own power and have a consistent demand-side electricit­y management programme, he said.

The ANC's plans do have backing from the Congress of South African Trade Unions, the country's biggest labour group and a member of the nation's ruling alliance.

“A state of disaster will send the message to society that government is treating this crisis with the urgency it requires," it said in a statement.

“It will concentrat­e all of government's attention and resources to stabilizin­g and rebuilding the grid and providing government and Eskom with the necessary powers and tools to end load shedding.” - Bloomberg.

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