‘ANC lacks the energy to solve SA’s electricity crisis’: DA

02 August 2022 - 15:22
By Bobby Jordan
After the ANC unveiled plans to support private generation, the DA has asked: 'After 15 years of load-shedding, why now?' File photo.
Image: Misha Jordaan/Gallo Images After the ANC unveiled plans to support private generation, the DA has asked: 'After 15 years of load-shedding, why now?' File photo.

Rolling blackouts would disappear if the ruling ANC put as much energy into the grid as it does into addressing its leadership disputes.

That’s the opinion of the DA, which launched a “renewable-friendly” energy policy on Tuesday on the eve of yet another potential round of load-shedding during the afternoon peak “due to a shortage of generation capacity”.

In a wide-ranging policy briefing, the party said its ambition of transforming SA’s energy generation landscape was in stark contrast to national government’s plan, which lacks detail and coherence. The DA was also critical of the government’s delayed response to 15 years of load-shedding with a lack of concrete plans on how to restructure Eskom.

President Cyril Ramaphosa’s plan was remarkable, mostly for its lack of concrete timelines, according to DA shadow minister of mineral resources and energy Kevin Mileham, who said the party planned to introduce an “energy tracker” to measure government delivery against promises made.

He said proposals aired at the ANC’s weekend policy conference were way overdue, including plans to support private generation. “Why are you only doing it now? What prompted a wake-up after 15 years of load-shedding?” asked Mileham.

In her address, DA spokesperson Siviwe Gwarube said debate at the ANC’s conference was telling, as it was “mostly about leadership contests, instead of the real issues facing South Africans today”.

Mileham said the DA policy was geared towards ending the Eskom monopoly on power generation by promoting independent producers, with a strong emphasis on renewable energy. Key policy objectives included:

  • incentives for electric vehicles, private solar generation and battery storage technology;
  • a transition plan to upskill and re-skill the thousands of people dependent upon the fossil fuel economy, particularly coal mining and associated activity; and
  • research into the viability of fracking and nuclear power, with short-term support for the planned life extension of Koeberg nuclear power station.

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