Maverick Citizen

POWERING UP

Businesses step in to protect Nelson Mandela Bay substations after crippling cable theft

Businesses step in to protect Nelson Mandela Bay substations after crippling cable theft
The Ditchling substation was damaged by thieves in September, causing large parts of Gqeberha to be without electricity for five days. (Photo: Deon Ferreira)

In an innovative plan to try to ensure constant electricity supply, members of the Nelson Mandela Bay Business Chamber have stepped up to provide security guards to protect the metro’s electrical infrastructure after cable theft caused the loss of millions of rands in the manufacturing industry.

The business community in Nelson Mandela Bay will now guard electricity substations in the metro after rampant cable theft paralysed several industries, leading to lost revenue amounting to millions of rands. 

“This is a game changer for municipalities. It is an extreme thing for people to do, to use their own security guards to look after public infrastructure, but this is a very serious problem,” said Denise van Huyssteen, CEO of the Nelson Mandela Bay Business Chamber. 

The Nelson Mandela Bay metro, consisting of Gqeberha (formerly known as Port Elizabeth), Despatch and Kariega (formerly known as Uitenhage) is the Eastern Cape’s biggest metro and home to several key players in the vehicle and vehicle components manufacturing industry. It also houses the infrastructure for large citrus exports.  

Between January and August this year, there were 254 electricity outages in the city caused by cable theft, Van Huyssteen said this week.  

“Considering that some of the bigger businesses in the metro could lose up to R1-million in turnover per day, the costs are staggering — even for being offline for just a few hours. Sabotage, together with vandalism, ailing infrastructure and poor investment are just some of the key drivers which have brought us to this point.” 

She said one of the big manufacturing businesses in Nelson Mandela Bay recently lost 12 days of output due to a power outage. 

“Vandalism of infrastructure has escalated to the extent that just over two months ago we set up a Safety and Security Task Team. Their primary area of focus is on cable theft.”  

She said vandalism of the electricity network had worsened “since the first lockdown [in March 2020]. One of our members lost 12 days of manufacturing due to cable theft.” 

The metro has been plagued by political instability and has been governed by a variety of coalition governments after the ANC lost full control during the previous elections and the Democratic Alliance did not manage an outright majority. 

“Stability must be the highest priority area of focus, and given the current serious state of our economy, courageous leadership is required. This needs to start with the appointment of skilled and qualified right leaders into key positions, and the high turnover in these positions cannot continue, such as four different mayors and seven acting city managers since 2018,” said Van Huyssteen. 

She said the idea to provide private guards for the metro’s electricity infrastructure came from the members of the Business Chamber. 

“The concept was devised by members of our Electricity and Water Task Team — it represents a creative solution to a very serious problem. It is also an extreme move — and probably quite unique — but forms part of our approach of not giving up, but rather trying to drive for an enabling environment in which business can operate.” 

She said that during Phase 1 of this project security at 15 sub-stations will be provided by 11 companies. 

“The municipality’s metro police force should in tandem play a very important role in the success of this initiative,” she said.  

Nelson Mandela Bay Executive Mayor Nqaba Bhanga said they were “tirelessly working” to put measures in place to combat rampant vandalism in the city and in particular at electrical substations. 

In September a large part of the city was left without electricity for several days after one of its biggest substations was vandalised. 

Last week an “advanced alarm system” was installed at a substation. Bhanga says this will be linked to a rapid armed response. 

“As a city, we have taken a conscious decision to appoint five security armed response companies to protect our major assets that provide electricity to our residents.  

“There have been several electricity outages as well as vandalism of our substations, which resulted in outages for about five days. We want to stop this and it is for this reason that we want to deal with criminals decisively because this affects people’s livelihoods and business,” said Bhanga. 

He claimed that the metro’s roads were monitored 24/7 by the internal security and metro police departments.  

“As a result of this intervention, we have been able to catch some of these criminals.”  

“The city will be installing the alarm systems at substations that have been identified to be at risk of being vandalised,” Bhanga said. 

According to the latest integrated development plan (IDP) published for the metro, it is reliant on electricity revenue to offset the rates account and fund a portion of the institution’s administration — but the municipality has lost close to 20% of its electricity revenue in the past year. 

Losses and theft have been identified as major factors contributing to a much reduced gross profit margin for electricity sales. 

Electricity figures in the IDP emphasise the stark decline in economic activity in the city. 

“Consumption growth in terms of GWh purchased from Eskom has been decreasing by an average of 2% over the last five years, even though the number of overall consumers has increased by an average of 12% over the same five-year time period,” the IDP states. 

The percentage of electricity lost due to factors like cable theft had increased from 6% in 2008 to 19.43% in 2021. 

According to the IDP, the city needs R804-million to bring its electricity infrastructure in line with national standards. 

“Funding is required to bring the electrical infrastructure back to an acceptable condition, so that it complies with the required national standards,” the IDP states. 

The bulk of electricity infrastructure in the metro is older than 40 years. The IDP warned that major upgrades had to be done urgently. DM/MC

Gallery

Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Dr Know says:

    Yet another private initiative to bridge the gaps of failed governance. We buy drinking water, we fill our own potholes, we pay for private security, we squirrel away after tax pennies for our pension, we work around power outages . . .Ours is not a sustainable future.

  • Pierre-Andre van Leeuwen says:

    They need funding. Perhaps the money and effort involved in changing the city’s name could have been put to better use?

    • Jane Crankshaw says:

      Couldn’t agree with you more….perhaps ratepayers just have to accept that this is what is meant by “redistribution of wealth”!

      • Jacques Wessels says:

        Changing a towns name is much more important than efficient administration! I fail to understand the failure to trace the cables / copper at the local scrap dealers so I assume it is part of the underbelly of our political system

  • Jane Crankshaw says:

    The saddest thing here is how toothless Municipal coalitions appear to be. More of the same after the elections next week? If so….More hard times ahead and more responsibility for the private citizen whose rates are being used elsewhere or stolen, depending on the party in power.

  • MIKE WEBB says:

    cANCer. Fail AGAIN!

  • Trevor Pope says:

    If crime intelligence was functioning, they would be closing down the market for the stolen scrap, and the problem would be much reduced. Instead they are caught up in ANC fractional battles. Defund the VIP protection unit – their main purpose seems to be to protect the ANC members from each other – and those funds could be used for the benefit of the general population.

    • Trevor Pope says:

      Fractional = fractious factional. Maybe auto-complete is prescient 😐

    • Rob Glenister says:

      I fully agree with you. This scale of theft means that there must be traces and evidence and the people on the ground know about it. Why not spend some of the money on serious rewards (a whistleblower in the US got $200m) and nail the syndicate behind the whole thing.

  • Wilhelm Boshoff says:

    Good. Privatization of government by stealth.

  • Karl Sittlinger says:

    Another ANC failure we need to sort out ourselves…

  • David Anthony James Starley says:

    And what is going to happen?
    Our vast majority of unsophisticated, illiterate, politically blind and brainwashed electorate is going to vote the cANCer back into power, in most parts of the country, and it’s going to get worse and worse and worse.
    The cANCer and government rubbing its hands in glee seeing that private enterprise is paying for (and actually actioning) what they should be doing and thus leaving the coffers fuller for more plundering.
    What a messed up country we live in now!

  • R S says:

    Why is the state not protecting its own infrastructure?

  • Louis Potgieter says:

    Is it possible that the theft and vandalism are covers for pure sabotage? Too much costly destruction is suffered throughout the country on an on-going basis.

Please peer review 3 community comments before your comment can be posted

X

This article is free to read.

Sign up for free or sign in to continue reading.

Unlike our competitors, we don’t force you to pay to read the news but we do need your email address to make your experience better.


Nearly there! Create a password to finish signing up with us:

Please enter your password or get a sign in link if you’ve forgotten

Open Sesame! Thanks for signing up.

We would like our readers to start paying for Daily Maverick...

…but we are not going to force you to. Over 10 million users come to us each month for the news. We have not put it behind a paywall because the truth should not be a luxury.

Instead we ask our readers who can afford to contribute, even a small amount each month, to do so.

If you appreciate it and want to see us keep going then please consider contributing whatever you can.

Support Daily Maverick→
Payment options

Become a Maverick Insider

This could have been a paywall

On another site this would have been a paywall. Maverick Insider keeps our content free for all.

Become an Insider

Every seed of hope will one day sprout.

South African citizens throughout the country are standing up for our human rights. Stay informed, connected and inspired by our weekly FREE Maverick Citizen newsletter.