Judicial Inquiry needed after DA documents reveal Eskom ignored energy crisis warnings
President Jacob Zuma must appoint a Judicial Commission of Inquiry to investigate why the CEO of Eskom, Jacob Maroga, ignored a series of confidential internal memos that showed Eskom's internal practices were precipitating an energy crisis in South Africa, and to determine who else knew about them. One of these memos, authored by a leading international expert on the subject, warned that "without intervention", Eskom's primary energy generation faced "collapse", and would not be able to "meet current needs, much less future requirements". This memo was delivered to Mr. Maroga just six months prior to the rolling blackouts that hit South Africa in early 2008.
The consultant, who also provided intricate details of the steps Eskom needed to follow to avert the crisis, had her contract with Eskom terminated days after the memo was sent.
(A full copy of this damning seven-page memo can be read here.)
The most serious series of allegations pertain to the "cost-plus contracts", which Susan Olsen, a partner at a leading international oil and coal research group, shows allowed South Africa's major mining companies to exploit Eskom, and actively inhibited Eskom's power stations from working at full generating capacity.
More broadly, Olsen demonstrates how Eskom's lack of experience and failure to understand coal markets played a significant role in their later supply problems, and how Eskom's "hemorrhaging [of] talented staff" had left the power utility lacking "leadership, experience, knowledge and direction".