DA appeals to NERSA to relieve consumer burden
I met on Monday with the National Energy Regulator of South Africa (NERSA) to discuss alternative pricing options to the model currently employed by Eskom. At issue is the Modern Equivalent Asset (MEA) method that Eskom employs to evaluate its costs.
The Democratic Alliance (DA) has appealed to the regulator, Mr Tembani Bukula, to ease the rate of price hikes currently contained in the Multi-Year-Price-Determination (MYPD 2).
NERSA has made a disastrous move for consumers by approving burdensome tariff price hikes (25% per annum) on the basis of book-keeping theatrics.
The MEA is often used by public enterprises to justify inflated ‘cost recovery' from consumers who can barely afford it. Yet, ‘return on assets' in NERSA's ‘summary of allowed revenue' has been inflated by more than 1000%.
This makes Eskom's balance sheet look better than it really is, and then falsely justifies consumer price-hikes.