Page added on February 10, 2009
ESKOM chairman Bobby Godsell has taken aim at SA’s relatively low electricity prices, saying the prices should reflect the cost of producing electricity.
The power supplier has been lobbying the National Energy Regulator of SA (Nersa) to allow for prices that would recover the costs of production.
He said the policy of under pricing electricity had been followed deliberately by both the apartheid and post-apartheid governments. He said cheap electricity was used as part of an industrial strategy to attract foreign direct investment in sectors such as aluminium smelters.
He said there was also a perception that South Africans could not afford the prices that would cover the full cost of production of electricity.
“The trouble with such strategic pricing is that unless the government’s explicit and regular provision for the subsidies is implied in underpricing, secure and adequate provision (of electricity) will be undermined. And so it has been. So we arrive at the uncomfortable joke that SA has the cheapest electricity in the world. Unfortunately we just don’t happen to have any in stock.” He said the government’s decision that Eskom should not add capacity in order to make way for private investors had contributed to the electricity supply shortages.
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