Eskom’s application to National Energy Regulator of South Africa (Nersa) to hike electricity tariffs by 66% over three years is a reminder that Eskom is a liability to South Africans.
It is troubling that at a time when the cost of living is very high, Eskom sees it appropriate to increase electricity prices at an excessive rate. This is after years of subjecting South Africans to blackouts, with businesses shutdown and jobs destroyed.
Eskom is doing what it must do in pure economic terms. The fact is somebody has to pay for the cost of producing electricity supplied by Eskom. In other words, somebody has to pay for the mess that politicians caused at Eskom over the years and it’s going to be you and I.
South Africans disapprove of these proposed tariff increases. The DA has taken to the streets to protest against the increase in tariffs.
What has harmed South Africa is that Eskom does not operate in a competitive environment. Eskom has been a monopoly for a very long time in the energy market. Electricity customers had no alternatives to Eskom. Monopolies abuse the market they operate in. That’s a well-known documented fact.
Since 2008, Eskom has increased tariffs at a rate way above inflation, as shown in the graph below by Businesstech. Coupled with the blackouts we have endured over the past decade and a half, it’s clear that the cost Eskom has imposed on South Africa over the years is colossal.