Sinbad
Honorary Master
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2006
- Messages
- 88,759
- Reaction score
- 41,319
The key variable you are overlooking is the planned outage/maintenance figure, which is not static.But it was 9.5GW around a week ago and we had Stage 2.
South Africa’s biggest forum. Discuss, discover, and connect with thousands of members.
The key variable you are overlooking is the planned outage/maintenance figure, which is not static.But it was 9.5GW around a week ago and we had Stage 2.
... and of course, the weekend.... Everything will be back to stage 2 on Friday.
Are you blind? My solution was there. Keep it at stage 2. Fix the fcking things. Long term load shedding is a reality whether the emergency stuff is used or not. At least by not using the emergency stuff, they dont rack up more debt.So what is your solution? Or, are you completely happy with LS as a long term reality?
Are you blind? My solution was there. Keep it at stage 2. Fix the fcking things. Long term load shedding is a reality whether the emergency stuff is used or not. At least by not using the emergency stuff, they dont rack up more debt.
So a business that is bleeding money, must produce something for R1, and sell it for 50c for the greater good?One reason Eskom burn diesel 24/7 is they can pass on this cost directly to the consumer through tariff clawbacks.
It also benefits the economy to the tune of R20-R50 per kWh to avoid load shedding (CSIR study).
Your so-called solution is just a knee-jerk reaction, hence why I gave you a chance to think about it before you became personal.Are you blind? My solution was there. Keep it at stage 2. Fix the fcking things. Long term load shedding is a reality whether the emergency stuff is used or not. At least by not using the emergency stuff, they dont rack up more debt.
Go and read the CSIR report and think about what it costs Eskom to produce a kWh then come back with silly comments.So a business that is bleeding money, must produce something for R1, and sell it for 50c for the greater good?
So a business that is bleeding money, must produce something for R1, and sell it for 50c for the greater good?
Go tell your children to study. Not me. I am learned enough.Go and read the CSIR report and think about what it costs Eskom to produce a kWh then come back with silly comments.
Better still go and swot up contribution accounting principles as well.
Yup since this morning and they're actually reporting it.Yeah saw that. They've put up the planned maintenance figure as well, at 7000MW.