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‘While we all desperately want to, we cannot end load shedding overnight’

‘While we all desperately want to, we cannot end load shedding overnight’
President Cyril Ramaphosa at the opening of the ANC's 55th national conference at Nasrec in Johannesburg on 16 December 2022. (Photo: Leila Dougan)

Many of the measures in our Energy Action Plan will not be felt immediately, so we are using every means at our disposal to get power onto the grid as a matter of extreme urgency. But we can all play a part.

A week ago, the Sowetan newspaper carried a front-page headline, “Unplugged”, listing many small businesses around the country that have been crippled by the electricity crisis. The closure of these businesses shows some of the devastating impact of persistent load shedding on people’s livelihoods and on their dreams for a better life. 

There are many other reports about the effects of load shedding on people’s lives, about the disruption at hospitals, schools, courts, and other government services. We hear about the factories that lose precious hours of production, farmers that are unable to keep their produce fresh, and investments that are being held back. 

As load shedding continues to wreak havoc on businesses, households and communities, the last thing South Africans want to hear are excuses or unrealistic promises. The demands for an immediate end to power cuts are wholly understandable. Everyone is fed up. 

However, we are in the grip of an energy crisis that has been many years in the making. Though it may be easy to blame our present woes on dysfunctionality at Eskom, a combination of factors have contributed to the crisis. 

It is important to recall the reasons for the current situation so that our response tackles the causes of our crisis, not just the symptoms. Lack of investment in new generating capacity, poor power plant maintenance, corruption and criminality, sabotage of infrastructure, rising municipal debt and a lack of suitable skills at Eskom have all created a perfect storm. There can be no sustainable solution without addressing all these factors in combination. 

We should not make the mistakes of the past. For many years, critical maintenance was deferred, and our power stations were run too hard in order to keep the lights on. As a country, we are now paying the price for these miscalculations. 

We must be realistic about our challenges and about what it is going to take to fix them. While we all desperately want to, we cannot end load shedding overnight. 

Over the past few days, I have held consultative meetings with representatives of labour, business, traditional leaders, religious leaders and the community constituency. I have also met with premiers, metro mayors and leaders of political parties. In each of those meetings, I stressed the importance of staying the course, instead of coming up with unsustainable short-term solutions. 

Six months ago I announced a national Energy Action Plan to improve the performance of Eskom’s power stations and add new generation capacity as quickly as possible. This plan was the result of extensive consultation and was endorsed by energy experts as the most realistic path towards ending load shedding. 

As we know only too well from the experience of the past few weeks, many of the measures in the plan will not be felt in the immediate term. That is why we are using every means at our disposal, calling on every resource we have, to get power onto the grid as a matter of extreme urgency. 

Eskom’s fleet of coal-fired power stations supplies the bulk of our energy needs. That is why there is a singular focus in Eskom on improving plant performance. A team of independent experts is conducting a diagnosis of the problems at poorly performing power stations and taking action to improve plant performance. 

Six power stations have been identified for particular focus over the coming months to recover additional capacity. Eskom is also working to connect Kusile Unit 5 to the grid by September this year. Every urgent effort is being made to restore other units at Medupi, Kusile and Koeberg with significant capacity. 

Eskom has imported 300MW of capacity from neighbouring countries. There are negotiations under way to secure an additional 1,000MW. Eskom is also working to buy surplus power from companies with available generation capacity for a period of three years. 

The government has signed agreements for 25 projects from bid windows 5 and 6 of the renewable energy programme, and these projects will soon be proceeding to construction. Collectively they represent 2,800MW of new capacity. 

To increase the overall supply of electricity, in addition to what Eskom provides, we have taken steps to enable substantial investment by private power producers in new generation capacity. The licensing requirement for embedded generation projects has been removed. Since we first raised the licensing threshold to 100MW, the pipeline of private sector projects has grown to more than 100 projects with more than 9,000MW of capacity. 


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We have cut red tape and streamlined regulatory processes, reducing the timeframes for environmental authorisations, registration of new projects and grid connection approvals. 

Another major source of new generating capacity are solar panels on the roofs of houses and businesses. Work will soon be completed on a pricing structure that will allow customers to sell surplus electricity from rooftop solar panels into the grid. 

We can all play our part by paying for the electricity that we use. The huge debt owed to Eskom by municipalities badly affects Eskom’s ability to fund critical maintenance. 

All the stakeholders I have met over the last week, without exception, appreciate the seriousness, depth and complexity of the challenges we face. They have all expressed their commitment to take whatever measures that are required to restore our electricity supply and get on with the task of improving the lives of the South African people. 

While we cannot end load shedding immediately, what is certain is that if we work together with urgency to implement the Energy Action Plan, load shedding will steadily become less and less severe. Through collective action, we will much sooner reach the point where we have enough power to end load shedding altogether. DM

This is the President’s weekly letter to the nation released on Monday.

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Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Thinker and Doer says:

    Mr President, you have been seized with this energy crisis for at least the past 8 years, and yet it is still worsening. There has been no signs of effective action being taken. Statements and promises and plans are completely meaningless, as there is absolutely no implementation. If supposedly a detailed plan was adopted 6 months ago, where is the implementation? Why are the steps that you are noting in your statement only being taken now, when they should have been taken years ago?Why was Mr De Ruyter allowed to be hounded from office and not provided with sufficient support to address the corruption and criminality that has significantly worsened the crisis. Why is Minister Mantashe allowed to remain the Minister responsible for energy when he as actively impeded the necessary urgent procurement of independent power production? All that you can say is that you acknowledge the severe suffering that has befallen everyone is as a result of the corruption and mismanagement by government and Eskom of the electricity system, but all you can say is that we must continue to be patient and endure the suffering, and wait for results. This is completely unacceptable, and tone deaf to the anger of the public.

  • J W says:

    The ANC has caused this energy crisis by allowing criminal networks to infest the power stations and trying to force powerships down our throats at an immense and long term cost. How many tens (or hundreds) of millions of rands in kick backs are Mr Mantashe and friends set to make from the Karpowerships deal? We also have on going talk of more nuclear power, which is good, clean energy but over priced with kickbacks from Russia. Meanwhile the sun keeps shining and the wind keeps blowing with nary a solar panel or wind turbine connected to the grid, curtesy of Mr Mantashe conspiring with Mr Patel to make bidding with renewables next to impossible.

    What is for certain Mr President, is that you and the cabal of corrupt cadres got us here. The ANC needs to collectively fall on their sword and resign, holding national elections as soon as possible.

  • Johan Buys says:

    CR is acting a bit weird. The call this weekend to freeze the 19% tariff increase is irresponsible. Or populist. Or both.

    What we are owed is a summary of the measures for short term relief that were considered and reasons for being abandoned.

    1. Did they consider putting all default areas and councils on perm stage 8?

    2. Did they figure that business is spending R3b to R4b on diesel generators per month which will cost the country R1b pm in reduced tax takings. That is 140 million liters at Eskom diesel price. Just find it for Eskom to run the OCGT and be done!!

    3. With a stroke of a pen they can allow renewable IPP with more capacity than their contracts to inject that extra at some bargain price like R1/kWh. That is wasted energy that costs the economy multiples of the R1/kWh.

    Take us into your confidence and we may display patience. The mushroom treatment is not working.

  • Nils Heckscher says:

    This is the first attempt in a long time of informing the public on the energy crisis, I am aware of. During COVID we had, the by now legendary, family meetings. Yet the ongoing crisis in the energy, water and waste/environmental sectors remain unanswered and void of leadership that explains how it plans to address these issues. I am desperately missing any reference to the damaging political interference and the damage that the deaprture of Andre de Ruyter has caused.
    We want and need leadership that keeps us and our partners informed and that shows us the plan it has to get us out of the mess we’re in.

  • Matthew Conradie says:

    Mr President

    I am so dissapointed in you. When you managed to oust your predecessor, I had such high hopes for our country.

    Instead you’ve allowed evil leeches like Gwede Mantashe to remain in power, ignored any of the findings of the very expensive Zondo commission, supported the murder of tens of thousands in Ukraine.

    Since the ANC has come to `power`, no new power stations have been commissioned. Before the ANC came to `power` a power station was completed ever couple of years. Yet the ANC refuses to be accountable for our current situation. And this is just one of the SOEs that are in ruins.
    See the List_of_power_stations_in_South_Africa from Wikipedia

    I beg you, please for the sake of our country and its people, oversee the demise of the ANC. I don’t know how a successor will manage to remove the rot left by your party but perhaps we can minimize the damage that could still be done.

  • jeyezed says:

    Just one word of acceptance of responsibility or admission if culpability would have gone a long way towards restoring a glimmer of respect for you. The ANC is responsible for every single one of the shortcomings you listed. Vote them out.
    What you can do is take concrete steps to rectifying the situation by booting out the deadwood in your cabinet, removing all the restrictions on ESKOM which prevent them for acting in the country’s best interest, supporting the NERSA rate increase and then getting out of the way.

  • Miles Japhet says:

    Admit your party’s and your ideology is the root cause of this crisis. Then adopt wholesale
    PPP policy for ? Then adopt across the board PPP policy for SOE’s and abandon BEE to save our country.
    Takes wisdom and courage – do you have it Cyril?

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