Eskom Wants South Africa to Take Over 50% of Debt: City Press

Eskom Wants South Africa to Take Over 50% of Debt: City Press

South Africa’s state-owned power utility wants the government to take over about half of its debt so it can accept support pledged by rich nations to help reduce dependence on coal and cut emissions, City Press reported.

Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd. is set to be the biggest beneficiary of $8.5 billion in loans and grants pledged to South Africa by nations including the U.S. and U.K. at the COP26 climate talks. Its total debt stood at 402 billion rand ($26 billion) at the end of March. 

“It makes no sense to add more debt to the current 400 billion rand,” Johannesburg-based City Press quoted Eskom Chief Financial Officer Calib Cassim as saying. “Government must take over 200 billion rand of it. It’s just like in one’s personal finances, where one has to make substantial progress with the payment of one mortgage before taking out another one, otherwise you are risk of defaulting,” he said. 

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Eskom hasn’t made progress in talks, spanning two years, with department of public enterprises and National Treasury about taking over some of its debt, City Press reported, citing Cassim.

The National Treasury didn’t make additional provisions for Eskom in the medium-term budget policy statement on Thursday. 

Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana suggested that the utility sell some of its coal-fired power stations to put it in a better position to finance its planned shift to cleaner energy. Key government ministers agree on the plan, which would also help reduce Eskom’s debt burden, he said. 

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