Page added on April 5, 2009
South Africa’s energy minister said on Thursday the country was still in the grip of a major power crisis despite being able to keep the lights on since a series of blackouts early last year.
Voluntary energy savings had failed to meet the required levels, and the country was risking new power cuts, the Minister of Minerals and Energy, Buyelwa Sonjica said in a statement.
State-owned utility Eskom, which provides 95 percent of the country’s power, has rationed electricity since early last year, but has not cut power since last April.
Sonjica said Africa’s biggest economy was suffering from a perilously low electricity reserve margin or spare capacity.
“The recent lack of blackouts has led to the assumption that our energy situation has been resolved,” Sonjica said.
“Unfortunately this is far from the truth. We are in trouble unless we all begin to take responsibility for our habits of energy wastage.”
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