Bobby Godsell: Why I resigned

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Ex-chairman of Eskom's board Bobby Godsell said he had resigned on Monday morning because government had not supported the board's decision to accept Jacob Maroga's resignation nor its attempts to resolve the dispute.

In a statement on Monday evening, Godsell said that Maroga had offered to resign on October 28, and the board had accepted his resignation.

"The board's legal advice is that the resignation was quite clear in its intent, and the board was entitled to accept it," Godsell said.

He explained that on October 29, Maroga then denied resigning.

"The board offered to submit this dispute of fact to binding private arbitration. Mr Maroga has not responded to this offer," Godsell said..

He said that on November 8 the board had proposed a comprehensive set of measures which would have had the effect, if agreed by Maroga, of requiring the board to state its case for why it believed the relationship with Maroga had broken down irretrievably.

"Mr Maroga would then be given a reasonable period of time in which to respond. Mr Maroga rejected these proposals," said Godsell.

"Thus far government, as Eskom's sole shareholder, has been unable either to support the board's original decision (to accept the resignation) or its two attempts at resolving this dispute.

"In these circumstances, and with the best interests of the organisation in mind, the only course of action seems to me to resign as chair and as director," Godsell said.

He added that Eskom was a "critical national asset".

"The talented, dedicated and highly experienced people who work at Eskom are more than capable of meeting its present challenges.

My hope is the government will move quickly to ensure united and effective leadership," Godsell said.
 
Very diplomatic. Unfortunately it reveals nothing :/

Actually it does reveal a lot if you read between the lines. He will no doubt find employment very easily in the international sector.
 
I would love to see the brain drain graphically after the events of the past month or so...

Especially the Eskom engineers...

Who would be so kind as to leak this information...
 
I would love to see the brain drain graphically after the events of the past month or so...

Especially the Eskom engineers...

Who would be so kind as to leak this information...

Eskom brains left a long time ago, they now work for them as private contractors at 4-5 times their original salaries. AA is a good thing when you know how to deal with it. The rest of africa are also interested in their skils.
 
Eskom brains left a long time ago, they now work for them as private contractors at 4-5 times their original salaries. AA is a good thing when you know how to deal with it. The rest of africa are also interested in their skils.
That's right, most of the skills left Eksdom some time ago, and my estimate is that most are working abroad and a few making money contracting to Eksdom.
You'll also find a good few Brit's employed in Eksdom - just one of the work-around's for AA where you need skilled people, and all this cost while Eksdom is fully staffed with AA candidates.

I have first hand experience in this.
 
I have first hand experience in this.

I also know a good few people although it's not my field. They all thought they were fooked as older white males with no future but reality proved them wrong and they are smiling all the way to the bank ;)
 
I also know a good few people although it's not my field. They all thought they were fooked as older white males with no future but reality proved them wrong and they are smiling all the way to the bank ;)
Eskom had a top world class education and training program, with the best training centres at Rosherville, Henly on Klip, and Midrand, but I guess that's also fallen to pieces.
Eskom boasted the highest trade test pass marks, and pass rates.
 
Eskom had a top world class education and training program, with the best training centres at Rosherville, Henly on Klip, and Midrand, but I guess that's also fallen to pieces.
Eskom boasted the highest trade test pass marks, and pass rates.

It's the african way.
 
Thats the way things are in this country. Whenever a black fails and is corrected(As with the report handed to Maroga in 2007) the race card is played.:D
 
So, the board is powerless.

The main shareholder, government, is running the show.

Well then, get rid of the board and run the show government, lets get this over with.
 
The fact is government has interfered. Being the major stakeholder, they do have that right but they are using it for the wrong reasons.

We need our parastatals to go back to being run as businesses. Look at the messes SABC,ESKOM and SAA. The only decent goverment department run like a business is SARS who look for incentives to encourage people to pay tax and actually track and crack down on their "debtors".
 
Innocent Victims

In AFRICA are there ever ANY :confused:


Susan Olson

Background

GPE grew alongside the South African coal mining industry, each very much dependent early on upon the other.
Two and three decades ago, Eskom simply tendered for coal to be supplied to planned power stations and received responses from mining houses to supply that coal.
Rather than dictate the terms of long-term coal supply agreements to suit the technical and commercial requirements of a 25 to 30-year generating station life,
Eskom allowed the mining houses to write mine financing documents that suited their capital and return requirements.

Known as "cost-plus" contracts, these mine financing documents assured that the mining houses recovered 100 percent of their capital investment
as well as a healthy return on that investment during and post that recovery.
For reasons unknown, however, few of these documents required performance on the part of the mining houses to deliver coal of the quality for which the associated plants were designed.
Nor did these documents make provisions to fuel stations at 100 percent load if the station was so required.
More troubling is that GPE has historically and consistently failed to enforce what little performance the contracts required.

Now then

I WONDER -- did Anglo-American / Anglo-Vaal ever own any Coal mines that supplied to ESKOM :confused:

I WONDER -- did Mr Godsell have something to do with these Oppenheimer companies :confused:

Would I be amiss in painting Mr Godsell in the same colours as Mr Knott-Craig :confused:


Innocent Victims :rolleyes:


MW
 
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