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Eskom suits sent to coalface of crisis

Minister of public enterprises Pravin Gordhan briefs the media about the power outages that have hit the country./Masi Losi
Minister of public enterprises Pravin Gordhan briefs the media about the power outages that have hit the country./Masi Losi

As the country faces daily planned power cuts, which are seen as a threat to the economy, all Eskom managers have been ordered to cancel their holiday leave.

The managers would be deployed to individual power stations to get a sense of what's happening on the ground, public enterprises minister Pravin Gordhan told the media at a briefing at the financially dire state utility's offices in Johannesburg yesterday.

Gordhan said the period between December 15 and January 15 the demand drops, and no power cuts - Eskom's "load-shedding" - are expected during that time.

He said President Cyril Ramaphosa would soon announce a task team to configure a road map for the next five years to help turn the troubled company around.

"This was one of the centres of state capture," Gordhan said.

Business Day reported on Wednesday that Eskom would ask the government to take R100bn of its debt onto its own balance sheet.

While the move would give Eskom relief, it would add another two percentage points to the government's debt-to-GDP ratio and could be seen as negative by credit-ratings agencies.

Gordhan said there was nothing definite with regard to the R100bn figure.

Currently, Eskom operates thanks to a R350bn debt guarantee by the government.

Eskom, which supplies most of SA's electricity, has amassed R419bn debt over the past 10 years due to its huge capital build programme.

It is now unable to pay interest costs from revenue earned, and must borrow to service its debt. Interest costs over the next three years are projected to be R250bn.

Overall debt is projected to rise to R600bn over three years .

Gordhan dismissed suggestions the government would privatise Eskom, saying this came from people trying to cause political mischief.

He said the issue was about finding the money to bridge the gap between revenue and expenditure.

With regard to the construction of the two mega power stations, Medupi and Kusile, Gordhan said forensic investigations had signalled that contractors had been falling short in design and quality.

"There's going to be tough talking between the board and management on one hand, and with companies.

"Somebody is making money from the doubling of costs in Medupi," Gordhan said.

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