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PoliticsSouth Africa's Biting Electricity Problem by ichibanman(op): 4:35pm On May 21, 2008
Lights out on South Africa boom?
By Alison Swersky
Business reporter, BBC News 



Log onto the website of Johannesburg's mammoth shopping complex, Sandton City, and against a bright yellow background is an illustration of a light bulb.

"Enjoy the light comfort of Sandton City," it reads.

A vague advertising slogan for the uninitiated overseas visitor. But for switched-on South Africans, it's a key selling point.

It is intended to suggest that the complex has its own independent power supply - a real asset at a time when power cuts have suddenly replaced hijacking as the dinner-table conversation centrepiece among the middle classes.

People swap tales of lifts coming to a halt between floors; four-way intersections becoming muddled car parks as the traffic lights flicker and die; and queues of frustrated customers outside hastily-closed banks.

The joke goes, what did South Africa have before it had candles? Electricity.

But there are few laughs for those who have never experienced the underdeveloped side of South Africa, cosseted away in leafy gated communities - with electronic gates which, these days, are very much dependent on the vagaries of state energy provider Eskom as to whether they will open.

Quite simply, South Africa, for years a beacon of hope illuminating the continent, is facing an energy crisis which threatens to overshadow the economic achievements of the post-apartheid government.

Lights out

The new spending power of the rising black middle class has combined with soaring commodity prices, foreign investment and a massive infrastructure boom to drive economic growth at an estimated 5% over the past few years.


The big damage was done at the beginning of the year when businesses were totally unprepared
Dennis Dykes, chief economist, Nedbank 

In addition, massive government subsidies have gone toward connecting the poor masses to the national grid, so that two-thirds of South Africa's 42 million people now have access to electricity - almost double 1994 levels.

But in January, the sheer disconnect between demand and supply suddenly became clear with some of the worst nationwide blackouts in its history, which forced South Africa's gold and platinum mines - some of the largest metal producers in the world and the country's crown jewels - to shut for five days.

The result: uproar.

The government stood accused of persistently neglecting South Africa's crumbling power infrastructure, despite repeated warnings of the dangers.

Eskom has also come under fire for not dealing with a chronic skills shortage. Some critics blame affirmative action policies that, they say, lead to the promotion of black employees over their more experienced white counterparts.

There have been allegations of greed as well. Eskom executives pocketed fat salaries and bonuses in the run-up to the crisis, while failing to invest in maintenance and adequate coal supplies, say angry consumers.

Eskom maintains wet coal was to blame, due to the heavy summer rains.

State of emergency

The government called a state of emergency. Since April, Eskom, which produces 95% of South Africa's electricity, has embarked on a programme of what it euphemistically calls pre-emptive load shedding.

Essentially, this is a nationwide rota of scheduled power cuts that affect different neighbourhoods at different times - though unplanned power cuts still occur when the grid becomes shaky and Eskom needs to dump voltage quickly.


From 5 May, however, these are to be largely suspended, as Eskom sees encouraging evidence that its 10% savings target is on track to be achieved.

But celebrations are muted as the government's perceived failure to cater adequately for future growth has created a cloud of uncertainty for companies, investors and households, who are braced for years of problems while Eskom rushes to make plans.

There are also serious worries that the power crisis may black out the World Cup, which South Africa hosts in 2010, despite assurances of a successful event.

Disruption

The power cuts have caused havoc for every industry, from manufacturing to musicals - even frightening tourists by bringing Cape Town's famous cable car to a grinding mid-air halt.

Emigration lawyers and companies selling diesel-charged generators seem to be the only beneficiaries.

Generators have been a saviour for many large franchises and international operations.

But the cost is high - one restaurant forked out 250,000 rand ($32,983; £16,626) for one - making them unaffordable for most small operations.

For independent retailers, a power disruption means abrupt gloom, dead credit card readers, disengaged security tags and no CCTV, heightening the risk of theft.


For food shops, such as Sandton City's gourmet delicatessen, the Bread Basket, it means three ovens full of still-born quiches, lasagnes, cakes and bread rolls.

The Bread Basket's owner, Panos Avraamides, estimates that each power cut costs his business between 5,000 rand and 15,000 rand, depending on whether it is a planned outage or unscheduled.

Butchers arguably have it even worse, as they watch their prime cuts lose their cool in warming refrigerator cases. Restaurants are in a similar position.

Dim economic outlook?

Many economists have shaved about half a per cent off their 2008 economic forecasts as a result of the power problems, with the most pessimistic predicting growth of below 3% for 2008.

This is much lower than the 4% predicted by South Africa's well-regarded Finance Minister Trevor Manuel in his February Budget.

"The big damage was done at the beginning of the year when businesses were totally unprepared," said Dennis Dykes, chief economist at Nedbank, which is owned by financial giant Old Mutual.

Erwin Roode, the owner of Cape Town-based property consultants Rose & Associates, adds that a virtual halt to new private sector construction will not help.

"Eskom has said that in future, electricity certificates would not be granted for any development that requires electricity demand of more than 100 kilowatt amps - that's the equivalent of two hot water geysers in an expensive house," he said.


The shutdown of the mines and subsequent crimp in production due to electricity restrictions is also likely to cause a "punchy dent" in GDP in 2008, says Mr Dykes.

However, other analysts consider that with international platinum and gold prices being driven ever higher by the energy crisis in South Africa, mining groups could still achieve healthy profits.

As a result, the main stock index, the JSE All Share, which is dominated by mining firms, has notched up a series of all-time highs recently, reaching 33,164.3 on 19 May, even as investors sell off retail, industrial and banking stocks.

Consumer woes

South African consumers are looking at a 100% increase in their electricity bills by 2009 if Eskom gets approval from South Africa's electricity regulator, Nersa. But it is widely expected that those that can afford it will be hit much harder, in order to support those who cannot.

Households are already burdened with the global problems of expensive fuel and food costs that boosted inflation to 10% in March - the highest in five years. Successive rises in interest rates took the overnight borrowing rate to 11.5% in April.

But with South Africa boasting some of the cheapest tariffs in the world until now, many economists consider that the hike in electricity prices should have come a long time ago.

The economy may be on pause, but one of the main concerns for shoppers at Sandton City, located in the richest square mile in Africa, is that they don't get stuck in a lift when Eskom turns off the lights.


Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/business/7339213.stm

Published: 2008/05/19 23:00:45 GMT

© BBC MMVIII
InvestmentRe: Stock Market Tips For Nigerians by ichibanman: 8:39am On Apr 23, 2008
FatherOF2:
Nice one GTB, trying to get your timing right with minute drops that will make it available. I smell the paper and ink used for printing those results.
FO2, Please expatiate! huh
Foreign AffairsRe: 'NEPA' Strikes In South Africa! by ichibanman(op): 1:57pm On Feb 06, 2008
huh huh I thought you would wish Nigeria better than that! Little wonder we are where we are. Nigerians ought to think good thoughts about our country. You are what you think you are!
Foreign Affairs'NEPA' Strikes In South Africa! by ichibanman(op): 10:06pm On Jan 31, 2008
South Africa Blackouts Snarl Traffic, Shut Cartier, Vex Mbeki

2008-01-23 19:03 (New York)

Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Workers at Johannesburg's Tre Gatti Cucina restaurant spent peak business hours last week wiping down tables and folding napkins by candlelight, their kitchen idled by South Africa's worst-ever blackouts. With the country's power monopoly, Eskom Holdings Ltd., predicting shortages until at least 2013, the six waiters and kitchen workers may soon be out of work. ``If it continues like this we will have to sell,'' said Dee Kroon, who opened the Italian restaurant in the Johannesburg neighborhood of Craighall Park in 2005. ``Who is going to buy a business if there are power cuts all the time?''

Africa's largest economy is being threatened as a lack of new power plants and increased energy demand have conspired to reduce power to shops and cafes as well as the mines and smelters of companies such as BHP Billiton Ltd. and Anglo American Plc. The shutdowns mean entire regions of South Africa are dark for up to five hours a day, triggering traffic jams as street lights shut down. ``Its having a very serious effect on business,'' said Bill Lacey, an economic consultant at the South African Chamber of Commerce and Industry. The group has called for lower duties on imports of generators for small businesses. The situation is also riling commuters. Last week some trains were torched by rioters at a station near Pretoria, the country's capital, after a blackout stopped services.

Growth Threat

The outages may scupper the government's aim of boosting economic growth to 6 percent, the level it says is necessary to cut a 25.5 percent jobless rate. On Jan. 21, Eskom brokered an agreement ``in principle'' to cut power supplies to the biggest users, including mining companies BHP Billiton and Anglo American by as much as 15 percent. ``That's not a joke. You are taking 10 to 15 percent of your production away,'' said Jasper Pieters, operations director at Mitsubishi Corp.'s Hernic Ferrochrome Ltd., which uses 200 megawatts of power, enough to supply 200,000 US. homes.

``When will power be restored? We don't know. If that's the case then I am afraid it's going to go to job cuts.''

South African President Thabo Mbeki in December apologized to Eskom for failing to heed the utility's call in 2000 to start increasing generation capacity as the economy grew and it extended power to poor townships built under apartheid. Plans to sell part of Eskom to private investors and invite companies such as International Power Plc to develop plants weren't implemented after Enron Corp.'s bankruptcy suppressed the appetite for power investments.

Eskom Gap

``Privatization and independent power plants were the flavor at the time,'' said Bongani Nqwababa, Eskom's finance director. ``The view was that private power companies would build a power station, and they didn't.''

In 2000, Eskom had a so-called reserve margin, the gap between generation capacity and energy use, of about 30 percent. That has shrunk to less than 10 percent, leaving it vulnerable to blackouts when there are spikes in demand. About 20 percent of Eskom's capacity is currently unavailable due to maintenance and a series of plant breakdowns. Plans to re-open three coal-fired plants and build two diesel-fired plants won't meet increasing demand, which jumped 5.6 percent in a single month last year.

Generator Sales

Instead, businesses and individuals are turning to diesel-generated power. The country's most expensive shopping district, Sandton City, is considering spending 80 million rand ($11 million) on a generator to keep the doors open at retailers such as Cartier, MontBlanc and Accessorize. Several of the shops shut last week because of power outages.

In the third quarter of 2007, South Africans imported 44,590 generators, according to the South African Reserve Bank. That compares with 790 in the third quarter of 2003. After a four-year delay in approving new power plants, Eskom in 2004 began a 300 billion rand expansion program. The first major new plant won't begin producing power until around 2012.

The state company, which supplies 95 percent of domestic electricity, plans to double peak capacity to about 80,000 megawatts by 2025 by building coal and nuclear power plants and purchasing hydropower from other countries. ``Government has been very slack, there is no question that it is going to slow down growth,'' said Iraj Abedian, chief executive of Pan African Investment & Research Services. ``It's a disaster.''

World Cup Looms

The crisis comes as South Africa prepares to host the soccer World Cup in 2010, an opportunity to promote the country as a tourist destination. Power outages have disrupted a five-nation field hockey

tournament being held this week in Potchefstroom, about 100 kilometers southwest of Johannesburg. More than 100 players from Germany, Australia, the Netherlands and Spain had games rescheduled to avoid blackouts.

Although World Cup games may be guaranteed electricity supply, closed restaurants and traffic jams will do little for the country's image at an event seen by some 1 billion television viewers. For restaurant owner Kroon, opening for business remains a gamble. ``Tonight I have bookings,'' she said. `I'm not sure I should have taken them.''

-- Bloomberg.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601085&sid=ag8DXEwE8GaI&refer=europe
InvestmentRe: Stock Market Tips For Nigerians by ichibanman: 5:48pm On Nov 12, 2007
Hello all,

Any info on GT Bank's half year result?

By this time, it ought to have been released, shouldn't it?

Price has been relatively stable for a long while now.

Any info? huh huh huh
InvestmentRe: Stocks That Can Make You Rich In 2007 by ichibanman: 5:46pm On Nov 12, 2007
Hello all,

Any info on GT Bank's half year result?

By this time, it ought to have been released, shouldn't it?

Price has been relatively stable for a long while now.

Any info? huh huh huh

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