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Eskom head in China as South Africa grapples with acute outages

(Bloomberg) --Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd.’s acting chief executive officer travelled to China, as the South African state-owned utility implements record power cuts that are hobbling the nation’s economy.
Eskom head in China as South Africa grapples with acute outages

Calib Cassim accompanied South African Public Enterprises Minister Pravin Gordhan on the trip to Beijing, Chairman Mpho Makwana said by phone on Wednesday, declining to provide further details.

“The minister will address those issues via a press conference when he is back,” Makwana said.

Gordhan’s department oversees Eskom. His spokesman, Ellis Mnyandu, referred a request for comment to Eskom. The utility’s media desk didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment sent by email.

Eskom has been implementing rolling blackouts since 2008 to reduce reliance on its ailing power plants. Those outages have intensified in recent years and the country has been subjected to 16 consecutive months of blackouts that can last as long as 12 hours a day.



Gordhan traveled to China earlier this month to discuss an impasse that’s blocked the delivery of locomotives and spare parts needed to improve the performance of state rail and ports operator Transnet SOC Ltd. South Africa’s Minerals Council, an industry lobby group, estimates that the sector forfeited 50 billion rand in 2022 because of constraints on the nation’s freight-rail network.

Gordhan met Zhang Yuzhuo, the director of China’s Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council on Tuesday.

The commission will “support China’s central enterprises in accordance with the principles of marketization and rule of law, and strengthen cooperation with South African state-owned enterprises in transportation and energy security,” it said in a statement on Wednesday. DM/Bloomberg

By S'thembile Cele and Paul Burkhardt, with assistance from Amogelang Mbatha and Fran Wang.

Comments (3)

Luan Sml May 10, 2023, 08:44 PM

Let’s guess how the discussions went… China delivers trains and parts, South Africa purchases energy infrastructure… ?

Johan Buys May 10, 2023, 06:14 PM

Buy a few turnkey gas generation plants while there, deliver to the free state and connect up to the Renergen domestic natural gas resource. It will be a third of the price of the turkish powerships. One GW gas plant is about R15 billion (complete package deal). Buy six and for a fifth of the mess of Kusile we have double the output of Kusile. China will probably offer a six for the price of five deal.

Hermann Funk May 10, 2023, 05:52 PM

Calib Cassim a multi-talented man. He knows as much about locomotives as he knows about electricity.

virginia crawford May 12, 2023, 07:11 AM

Very funny - if it wasn't true!