Eskom under fire from MPs

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Eskom came under fire in the National Assembly on Thursday following staggered power cuts that hit many cities in the country.

Opposition MPs used the podium to hit out at the ANC and Eskom for failing to ensure the country's two new power stations were built on time.

"This is a national crisis," said DA MP Natasha Michael.

"It is unacceptable that six years after the last energy crisis, Eskom has still not managed to adequately increase the capacity to deal with such challenges."

Michael accused President Jacob Zuma and the ruling party of putting personal gain above service delivery.

"At the heart of the problem are construction delays at Medupi power station and the ANC-linked Hitachi Africa," she said.

The Congress of the People criticised Eskom for not providing South Africans with adequate notice of the power cuts.

"In South Africa we do have the ability to predict the weather correctly. Eskom blames the unfortunate state of affairs on the rain and weather, and this is not the first heavy rains we've had since 2008," said Cope MP Nick Koornhof.

He said Eskom should have taken the necessary precautions to ensure the power utility's coal stocks for its power stations in the north of the country were not depleted as a result of wet weather.

"Their failure borders on negligent administration of our energy sources and [they] are letting down this country."

The Independent Democrats said Eskom's inefficiency was holding the country's economy to ransom.

"The dodgy deals and the failure of Eskom to build Medupi and Kusile on time have meant that our reserve margin have always been on the verge of plunging our country into darkness," said ID MP Lance Greyling.

Public Enterprises Minister Malusi Gigaba responded by telling the House the staggered power cuts were likely to continue beyond Thursday.

"It is anticipated this emergency will continue until after the evening peak tonight, and we will continue to manage the system," he told MPs.

"Over the last week, Eskom depleted its dry coal stockpiles at some power stations due to the rainy weather conditions. This contributed to severe system constraints due to lower output as a result of wet and poor quality coal," he said.

This was, however, not the only reason for the shortfall in electricity supply.

"Last night, Eskom lost three units at Kendall power station [in Mpumalanga], as well as they had to reduce output at other power stations," Gigaba said.

Low dam levels at power stations in the Drakensberg and Palmiet pumped storage schemes had also compounded the "power emergency".

"These plants act as reserves during peak times, and during constraints they were used beyond the peak times, hence the low reserves at the dams," Gigaba said.

"This was exacerbated by the loss of imports via the Zimbabwe electricity supply authority."

Eskom was forced to declare an emergency this morning and implement power cuts.

"After all reserves were used and after a reduction by key industrial customers, at eight o'clock this morning an additional reduction in demand of about 3000 megawatts was needed to balance the electricity system," Gigaba said.

"To make provision for the shortfall, Eskom's emergency protocol required that all customers, including Eskom and the municipalities, must reduce their demand by 20 percent through rotational load shedding."


Source : Sapa /cp/hdw/rod
Date : 06 Mar 2014 17:47
 
The topic simply reinforces the opinion that MPs are morons. Eskom should not be under fire here - they warned the government that they were running short of capacity and that new power stations needed to be built in the mid '90s. This problem is something that can be squarely (without any sense of wrongdoing) be laid at the foot of the government at that time - i.e. the ANC.
 
The topic simply reinforces the opinion that MPs are morons. Eskom should not be under fire here - they warned the government that they were running short of capacity and that new power stations needed to be built in the mid '90s. This problem is something that can be squarely (without any sense of wrongdoing) be laid at the foot of the government at that time - i.e. the ANC.

Those guys are long gone. I promise you, the current lot are very blameworthy.
 
Those guys are long gone. I promise you, the current lot are very blameworthy.
It takes 8 years (on average) to build a big coal fired power station like Medupi \ Kusile. I don't want to side with Eskom too much here, but how in the name of all that is holy were they supposed to build these things in what would essentially (except for China - they have the means to force the issue) be record time?

This is simply a result of nobody in government at that time having a ****ing clue about the realities of big construction projects. Building one of these power stations is a much bigger undertaking than any of the 2010 stadiums - yet government is happy to let the blame go to Eskom because they're an easy target who can't really defend themselves against their only shareholder (the government).
 
Those guys are long gone. I promise you, the current lot are very blameworthy.

yeah brian dames is probably relaxing on a yacht somewhere, purchased with his bonus $
 
It takes 8 years (on average) to build a big coal fired power station like Medupi \ Kusile. I don't want to side with Eskom too much here, but how in the name of all that is holy were they supposed to build these things in what would essentially (except for China - they have the means to force the issue) be record time?

This is simply a result of nobody in government at that time having a ****ing clue about the realities of big construction projects. Building one of these power stations is a much bigger undertaking than any of the 2010 stadiums - yet government is happy to let the blame go to Eskom because they're an easy target who can't really defend themselves against their only shareholder (the government).

The mid 90's were 20 years ago. Never mind the Power Stations, even those employees are long gone.
 
The mid 90's were 20 years ago. Never mind the Power Stations, even those employees are long gone.
Yes, and Eskom only got permission to start planning (not building) new power stations in 2006. It was only when the 2008 rolling blackout ****storm hit that some government technocrat got it through his \ her fat head that electricity security was actually a problem worthy of some consideration - so here we sit in 2014 with the fallout.
 
The anc and all following the anc are moronic idiots and the only reason they are in power is because of BS empty promises and bribery and corruption.
 
Yes, and Eskom only got permission to start planning (not building) new power stations in 2006. It was only when the 2008 rolling blackout ****storm hit that some government technocrat got it through his \ her fat head that electricity security was actually a problem worthy of some consideration - so here we sit in 2014 with the fallout.

Meanwhile those fatcat Eskom Execs were quite willing to take home fat bonuses year after year, without raising any more stink or fuss.
Frog boiling in the pot was the order of the day.
 
Most of the execs have resigned and as you know Brian is leaving in a few days. Not sure who's next in line.

Change management is non-existent these days.
 
The topic simply reinforces the opinion that MPs are morons. Eskom should not be under fire here - they warned the government that they were running short of capacity and that new power stations needed to be built in the mid '90s. This problem is something that can be squarely (without any sense of wrongdoing) be laid at the foot of the government at that time - i.e. the ANC.

Most of the blame, sure. But on this occasion we have a "wet coal" excuse, which as far as I'm concerned is a wet blanket excuse more than anything else. That's just poor management, of the current crop...
 
Most of the blame, sure. But on this occasion we have a "wet coal" excuse, which as far as I'm concerned is a wet blanket excuse more than anything else. That's just poor management, of the current crop...

The "excuse" in my mind is nothing more than a political battle Eskom is having or planning to have with the government.
 
One must realise that much of the experts that built stations years ago are no longer around.
So skills development is a problem. Not to mention the many environmental challenges and strike action. Many private producers may be able to do it quicker but it's yet to be seen in South Africa.
 
One must realise that much of the experts that built stations years ago are no longer around.
So skills development is a problem. Not to mention the many environmental challenges and strike action. Many private producers may be able to do it quicker but it's yet to be seen in South Africa.

Are you saying we should be tolerant with the current situation or are you saying that we should accept that South Africa is no longer run by adults so just bend over and expect lube optional?
 
I'm saying these are some of the reasons behind the delays
 
The topic simply reinforces the opinion that MPs are morons. Eskom should not be under fire here - they warned the government that they were running short of capacity and that new power stations needed to be built in the mid '90s. .

No, no can't be the ANC was 'different' then. Honest, intelligent, competent, compassionate and positively dripping in integrity.... :erm:
 
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