JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - The ANC's investment firm Chancellor House is planning to sell its 25 percent stake in Hitachi Power, which won a contract to supply boilers to power utility Eskom's two new coal-fired power stations (see Business Times report).
"We are planning to exit within the next six weeks -- but no one must hold us to six weeks because you don't know what will happen in a commercial transaction," ANC Treasurer Mathews Phosa said on Sunday.
The World Bank on Thursday approved a controversial $3.75 billion loan to develop a coal-fired power plant in South Africa despite the lack of support from the United States, Netherlands and Britain.
Opposition parties had called for the World Bank to make the loan conditional on the ANC divesting its stake in Hitachi, a subsidiary of Japanese manufacturer Hitachi, so that the ruling party would not benefit from it.
Helen Zille, leader of the opposition party DA, opposed the loan, saying it would enrich the ANC. Zille lobbied the US, the UK as well as the World Bank itself not to support the loan request.
Chancellor House is owned by a Trust with no beneficiaries.