As South Africa remains in the grips of Stage 6 loadshedding - with large electricity tariff hikes also now on the cards - Mineral Resources and Energy minister Gwede Mantashe claims the power crisis can be tackled within just six to 12 months. "Eskom must do introspection: do we have the capacity to deal with the crisis? If not can we go out and look for that capacity… it will take us six to 12 months to solve this issue if we pay attention to that," he said in an interview with eNCA on Friday. Mantashe's comments come just as the African National Congress, at its 55th National Conference, resolved to move certain State-owned entities back into their relevant portfolios. This would see Eskom moved out of Pravin Gordhan's Department of Public Enterprises and into Mantashe's department. Mantashe has been openly critical of Eskom management and last month went so far to accuse the utility CEO and his team of "actively agitating for the overthrow of the State" in their failure to arrest loadshedding. Eskom CEO Andre De Ruyter has since tendered his resignation. "In Eskom, we have 48 000MW connected to the grid but Eskom at best can give us 26 000MW. There's 22 000MW that is idling but connected, it is not decommissioned," Mantashe said. "And if there was a focus on servicing and maintaining those megawatts, we wouldn't have loadshedding."
from Engineering News | Home https://ift.tt/souCkLv