S.Africa’s Eskom cannot rule out more power cuts — CEO

Wed, Sep 4, 2019
By publisher
2 MIN READ

Power

SOUTH Africa’s state power firm Eskom cannot guarantee an end to power cuts linked to plant breakdowns and coal shortages, but maintenance and a planned restructuring are on track, chairman and Chief Executive Jabu Mabuza said on Wednesday.

Eskom supplies more than 90 per cent of South Africa’s electricity but does not generate sufficient cash to meet its debt-service costs and relies on state bailouts to stay afloat.

Nationwide blackouts in the first quarter of the year pushed the economy into a deep contraction.

The situation has improved since March due to stable coal supplies and a maintenance overhaul, Mabuza told a press briefing.

“The one area we are focusing on is to ensure we do not put this country through load-shedding again. Whilst we cannot guarantee there will be no load-shedding we are confident we can keep the lights on this summer,” he said.

The power cuts are referred to as load-shedding in South Africa.

Eskom’s coal stocks were at 50 days, excluding the Medupi and Kusilie power stations, he said, adding that the company planned to undertake plant maintenance on 5,500 MW of capacity over the next seven months.

Coal stocks were at half of required regulatory levels of 50 days or more at the beginning of the year at most power stations.

Medupi and Kusile, currently under construction and not fully operational, are among the largest coal stations in the world but since building started in 2008, both have suffered major breakdowns while costs have escalated. (Reuters/NAN)

– Sept. 4, 2019 @ 15:55 GMT |

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