South Africa’s electricity reform reaches moment of truth

A new report highlights the urgent need for structured actions to advance South Africa’s shift from Eskom’s monopoly to a competitive electricity market. Released by the South Africa Electricity Traders Association and produced by Krutham, the document outlines ten key steps amid easing load shedding. It stresses the importance of execution to secure investment and energy security.

South Africa is transitioning from over a century of vertically integrated monopoly control in electricity supply to a competitive, multi-market system, driven by the recent load shedding crisis. The report titled Policy to Power: Ten actions to deliver green, accessible and secure electricity, released this week, argues that reform now requires focused sequencing, accountability, and political commitment rather than just new laws.

At the forefront is the call for a Cabinet-endorsed electricity reform roadmap, featuring clear milestones, deadlines, and assigned responsibilities to prevent fragmentation across government bodies. Existing legislation, including the amended Electricity Regulation Act, already supports a competitive wholesale market, open grid access, and an independent transmission system operator. The South African Wholesale Electricity Market (SAWEM) is set to operate alongside bilateral contracts.

The report emphasizes unbundling Eskom Holdings as the most significant economic reform since 1994, aiming to separate transmission, system operation, and market functions from commercial interests, ensuring nondiscriminatory grid access. It also urges defining Eskom’s future structure, including its capital and generation fleet, which faces replacement for over half of its coal capacity within 15 years.

Private sector activity is already underway, with nearly 4.7GW of projects over 5MW reaching financial close between 2023 and 2025, and 18GW more in the pipeline. Traders are facilitating aggregation, risk management, and financing without state guarantees. However, the report warns that incomplete regulations, such as trading rules and wheeling frameworks, could limit broader participation.

Pricing reforms pose a challenge, as tariffs have outpaced consumer inflation. The pending revised Electricity Pricing Policy (EPP) needs Cabinet approval in 2026 to enable cost-reflective, market-based pricing. Transmission expansion by the National Transmission Company South Africa remains a critical bottleneck, while municipalities managing 40% of the distribution grid require stabilization.

Overall, with load shedding easing and private investment emerging, the report stresses a narrow window to implement these measures for sustainable energy supply, growth, and decarbonization.

Artikel Terkait

The latest BLSA Reform Tracker shows South Africa’s economic reforms reaching a 71.75% completion index, up 27% since March 2024, but quarterly progress has slowed and municipal dysfunction persists. Cooperative Governance Minister Velenkosini Hlabisa stated that local government failures are the main barrier to growth. National initiatives like Operation Vulindlela continue, yet execution at street level lags.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

Egypt’s Minister of Electricity and Renewable Energy Mahmoud Esmat met with Nexus Analytica to advance regulatory changes in the electricity sector.

Eskom has secured a medium-term new power agreement with ferrochrome producers, including Samancor Chrome and Glencore-Merafe, at a discounted tariff of 62c/kWh to revive operations and save thousands of jobs. The deal, which requires Nersa approval within 30 days, aims to restore up to 1,500MW of load by year-end. CEO Dan Marokane hailed it as a boost to Eskom's liquidity without needing higher tariffs or more borrowing.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

Federal Economy Minister Katherina Reiche wants to abolish feed-in tariffs for new photovoltaic systems up to 25 kilowatts from 2027. The draft amendment to the Renewable Energy Sources Act provides for this change.

Situs web ini menggunakan cookie

Kami menggunakan cookie untuk analisis guna meningkatkan situs kami. Baca kebijakan privasi kami untuk informasi lebih lanjut.
Tolak