Government must act with urgency in dealing with the electricity crisis!
Johannesburg, South Africa (14 July 2022) – The Defend Our Democracy Campaign and several civil society organisations met with the Minister of Public Enterprises Pravin Gordhan on Tuesday to engage on the country’s electricity crisis.
Organisations present raised the impact of the electricity crisis on the lived experiences of people, the economy, and in turn, on the stability of our democracy.
The meeting called for the electricity crisis to be treated as such by the state and reiterated the views of the National Planning Commission that an energy emergency is declared.
Organisations called for an urgent, integrated, well synchronised and credible plan of action by the government to address the problems in the short to medium term. This plan should have clear deliverables, timeframes and indicate who would be accountable for its implementation and success or failure and how this accountability will be exercised.
The meeting indicated that ‘radical transparency’ was required to deepen public trust, with daily communication by President Cyril Ramaphosa and the cabinet on the crisis and the implementation of the action plan to address it.
It called for a more coordinated approach between different state institutions and departments to remove the red tape and immediately allow for the implementation of projects in the pipeline – renewable, as well as those by independent power producers – to bring more capacity to the grid. The meeting noted reports of greater inter-governmental cooperation and collaboration on the crisis and hopes that this will yield the results that society needs and expects.
However, it cautioned against using the crisis to push through unaffordable, poorly conceptualised, environmentally destructive, corrupt deals.
Organisations expressed concern about sabotage at power stations, indicating that government and law enforcement agencies must act swiftly against the perpetrators.
Similarly, those guilty of corruption and capture must be charged and arrested but also pursued through other means such as individuals being declared delinquent and businesses being blacklisted. In this regard, the Defend our Democracy campaign welcomes news of recent arrests relating to alleged corruption at Eskom.
Organisations also called on communities to play a role in building energy security by protecting local electricity infrastructure and paying for services.
Minister Gordhan indicated that the President would be making announcements in relation to the country’s energy crisis.
The campaign calls on the President to assure the country that the government, coordinating with Eskom management, has practical and workable plans urgently to resolve the electricity crisis.
This is an opportunity to make the undertaking of ending loadshedding a national mission for all in society.