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Blackouts: Prepare for the worst

May 29 2008 11:00

Johannesburg - South African power utility Eskom on Thursday warned that it could take about two weeks to bring South
Africa's power system back up if it were to collapse.


Speaking at a breakfast presentation, Eskom CEO Jacob Maroga said SA had not experienced a nationwide blackout despite being on the brink of collapse in January this year.


"I don't want to be alarmist," said Maroga, "but the consequence of a nationwide blackout is not fully understood."


While Eskom has suspended planned load-shedding following a reduction in consumer demand over the past few months, Maroga warned that the threat of load-shedding and to the system as a whole would remain until the utility had restored its reserve margin.


"The system remains tight, and a tight reserve margin requires the use of emergency measures more often," Maroga said.


A fall in reserve margin, the additional power available in the system that allows it to be run securely, has forced Eskom to run its power stations harder.


This has resulted in additional primary energy costs and consequently in the utility's request for an increase in electricity tariffs.


Secure supply and cheap electricity was the result of excess capacity enjoyed in the 1980s and 1990s.


Days of cheap power are over


Both Eskom and the government have warned that the days of cheap
electricity are over. Maroga said policy-, regulatory- and planning issues conspired to get Eskom to where it was today.


"The situation we are in is deep, it is serious and it's material," he said.


Since January's declaration of a national power crisis following the forced shutdowns of mines and rolling blackouts countrywide, Eskom has undertaken some maintenance, limited further unplanned outages, brought an additional 2 600MW on stream and improved its coal stockpiles to 18 days.


"Of course we want to have zero unplanned outages, but the reality is that that is a fantasy," said Maroga.


Eskom is hoping to limit its unplanned outages to 2 500MW at any one time, but this cannot be guaranteed.


- I-Net Bridge

 

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funny funny
Jun 05 2008 13:56 Report this comment

veez i seriously think first of all we all know this is africa if u dont u should seriously go and find some help or ur just a stupid as most who run this country. if ur happy about whats going on ur obviously not having any problems as us normal south africans are. food gettin outa control, fuel, intrest rates and power . whats next? god forbid that veez runs the country he will make a law that if u complain ur kicked out the country forgood. lol *laughs*
 
sadtruth
Jun 05 2008 13:52 Report this comment

this is another reason why monoply is a bad thing in this country. eskom monoply they can charge whatever they want and u have to pay it. telkom same thing. gas prices and even food. who has a hand in every pie of this goverment does, yet they smile and say lol i get 50 000 a month for sittin on my arse all day and talkin a bunch of rubish , surely they wont have to worry. since they can just jump on a airoplane like our president when things get abit too hard for them and come back when it cools down.sad but true.
 
what a joke
Jun 05 2008 13:48 Report this comment

i watched fokus with freak robison. on that program it said we the people only use about 20% of the power eskom has to provide. while the other 80% is used by them giving other countrys power and mines and stuff like that. yet the amount of money that comes from that 80% is so little yet we have to pay for them? i dont understand that... i dont know why someone just pulls the plug on the other countrys already. but then again its not eskom its more like "EKSDOM!"
 
veez
Jun 03 2008 15:18 Report this comment

U bunch of idiots..this is Africa and in the south you live.U the priviliged lot always thought you were first world country when it was not.Take it or lump it this is where u live in SA which is no better than its neighbours. Every TOM , Dick and Thabo in parliament is doing his own things and give a damn about the people.Promises promises and nothing but promises. After 2010 what.This is AFRICA. Wait for it....until the WATER crunch comes... You see on tv how they waste...they dont pay ..it is free cause u & i pay for it. U live in the dark of afrika ..better get used to it. Not happy...go on get the hell outa here.
 
Morgan
Jun 03 2008 11:55 Report this comment

I think i need to open a company like Eskom. I mean where else can you make stupid mistakes for 10 years and know about them. And then turn around and expect the consumer to pay for your mistakes. Well done eskom you get idiots of the year "hmm maybe decade" award
 
L Savage
May 29 2008 17:22 Report this comment

A politician would a) be trying to blame someone else b) not be doing anything to help the situation c) offer no clear way forward d) expect a pay increase for all this. No, I'm afraid I'm an engineer. That means being underpaid to find 'obvious' solutions to other people's problems that are of their own making, and then trying to convince them that the shortcuts they want to take in order to save money, instead of doing it right the first time will cost them in the end. I am guessing you are an MBA (or a lawyer).
 
Guru
May 29 2008 17:06 Report this comment

Gees I’m sorry my mistake – you’re a politician
 
L Savage
May 29 2008 17:05 Report this comment

*chuckle* Good one :)
 
 
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