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These Charts Show How Much Trouble Eskom Is In

These Charts Show How Much Trouble Eskom Is In

(Bloomberg) -- South Africa’s government is putting the final touches on a 230 billion rand ($16.2-billion) bailout package intended to get its debt-stricken state power utility back on track.

Except it won’t be nearly enough.

Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd., which supplies about 95% of the electricity used in Africa’s most industrialized economy, has more than 440 billion rand of debt—about 250 billion rand more than Chairman Jabu Mabuza says it can afford to service. The government aid, which will be dispensed over several years, will mostly be swallowed up by ongoing losses.

Eskom lost at least 25 billion rand in the year through March and isn’t generating enough cash to service both its interest and debt repayments, even though it has secured rate increases of more than 500% since 2007, according to Anton Eberhard, a professor at the University of Cape Town who sits on a government task force advising on a rescue plan. The utility, which is due to release results next month, has endured years of mismanagement, massive cost overruns at new plants and a bloated wage bill.

In addition to the rising operating costs, Eskom needs to invest billions of dollars in new capacity to meet rising demand and replace obsolete plants—while simultaneously spending huge sums on reducing its environmental footprint.

Read more: Power Shortages in South Africa Could Get a Whole Lot Worse

Eskom is engaging with the government about the structure and timing of its proposed support, the utility said in an emailed response to questions.

These charts show the extent of Eskom’s problems:

These Charts Show How Much Trouble Eskom Is In

Eskom expects its annual operating and maintenance costs to increase 17% over the next five years. The costs of fueling its mainly coal-fired plants will probably surge about 50% over the period.

These Charts Show How Much Trouble Eskom Is In

The National Electricity Regulator granted Eskom permission to raise tariffs by an average of 7.6% in each of the three years through March 2022, just over half of what the utility asked for. Power prices in South Africa have climbed by more than double the inflation rate over the past decade.

These Charts Show How Much Trouble Eskom Is In

Eskom employs about 48,600 people, up from 32,600 a decade ago. The utility says it has about 16,000 more workers than it needs, while a World Bank study published in 2016 found it was potentially overstaffed by 66%. Job cuts are a thorny issue: They are opposed by the country’s power labor unions, which played a key role in helping President Cyril Ramaphosa win power.

These Charts Show How Much Trouble Eskom Is In

The utillity says it would take 300 billion rand to comply with emissions laws by 2025 at all of its coal-fired power plants— excluding six that it plans to decommission by 2030. But it has committed to spending just 63 billion rand. Eskom will utilize comparatively less expensive equipment to reduce its emissions of particulate matter and nitrogen oxides, and won’t install flue-gas desulfurization units needed to reduce sulfur dioxide production, other than in two new plants that are under construction.

Read more: Eskom Is Killing South Africans With Its China-Level Pollution

--With assistance from Robert Brand, Rene Vollgraaff and Henrique Almeida.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Anne Swardson at aswardson@bloomberg.net

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.