By: Natasha Archary

Electricity Minister, Kgosientsho Ramokgopa has promised South Africans two-thirds of every day will be without loadshedding, as the electricity grid is in “recovery.”
The Minister was briefing media on Sunday, 02 July on the progress made with government’s energy action plan, saying there’s now 29 000 MW capacity available on the grid.
According to Ramokgopa this is why Eskom has been able to keep loadshedding times to a low, only moving between Stages 2 and 3 for the better part of the past month.
“We hit a demand high on 28 June at 31 000MW, but now we are beginning to plateau at 29 000MW.
Positive developments in various areas had all contributed to steady, stable and general improvement, with the current outlook being no loadshedding for 16-hours per day, and Stage 3 for 8-hour of the day.
We are diagnosing the situation to determine where the failures of these units are, and looking at the common problems. We found boiler tube leaks to be the main culprit and we have the expertise to address this.”
Electricity Minister, Kgosientsho Ramokgopa promises South Africans two-thirds of every day without loadshedding
#LoadsheddingUpdate
— Eskom Hld SOC Ltd (@Eskom_SA) July 2, 2023
Sunday, 02 July 2023: Due to consistent available generation capacity, loadshedding will continue to be suspended from midnight until 16:00 and Stage 3 loadshedding will remain in force from 16:00 until midnight. This pattern will be repeated daily until…
Ramokgopa also said that more is being done to combat issues of crime, fraud and corruption at the power utility, with significant work on curbing syndicates from operating to disrupt progress.
“I received a detailed account of some impressive progress that has been made, but I will have a dedicated briefing on that matter.
We have found linkages between syndicates, but I will leave that for now. I can just assure you that there has been significant progress.
We need to resolve this with finances, and have drawn up a report on this that says first we need to tap into the rich liquidity of the private sector.
Second, we cannot relinquish ownership. Eskom must be solely responsible for the ownership and management of the grid. There must be energy sovereignity.”
The Minister says he’s working with the State Security Agency and SAPS to manage this.
Also read: EFF slams Acting PP’s “nonsensical” report on Ramaphosa’s Phala Phala “criminal activity”



