Eskom
Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd is a South African state-owned corporation, established on 1 March 1923 as the Electricity Supply Commission (ESCOM) under the Electricity Act of 1922 to coordinate and expand electricity supply for national development.[1][2] Renamed Eskom in 1987, it operates across the full electricity value chain—generation, transmission, and distribution—supplying over 95 percent of South Africa's electricity consumption through a predominantly coal-fired fleet with nominal installed capacity exceeding 40,000 megawatts.[3][4] While Eskom facilitated South Africa's post-World War II industrialization and later extended electrification to previously underserved areas, achieving universal access targets by the early 2010s, its defining challenges stem from chronic under-maintenance, corruption, and capacity planning failures that precipitated rolling blackouts known as load shedding starting in 2008.[5][4] Empirical analyses attribute these outages primarily to escalating unplanned breakdowns at aging plants, exacerbated by governance lapses including state capture under former President Jacob Zuma, where billions in funds were diverted through irregular contracts, alongside policy-driven cadre deployments that prioritized political loyalty over technical expertise.[6][7][8] These issues have imposed substantial economic costs, with estimates of load shedding's impact on GDP growth exceeding 2 percent annually in peak years, though recent operational recoveries—including reduced unplanned outages by over 1,200 megawatts year-on-year and energy availability factors surpassing 70 percent in 2025—have curtailed blackouts by more than 80 percent in the first half of the year.[9][10]History
Founding and Initial Development (1923-1960)
The Electricity Supply Commission (ESCOM) was established on 1 March 1923 under the Electricity Act of 1922, with its formation announced in the Government Gazette on 6 March 1923, to coordinate and expand electricity supply across South Africa amid fragmented private and municipal generation.[1] The Act aimed to provide cheap and abundant electricity as a public service, initially targeting government, railways, local authorities, and industry, with Dr. Hendrik Johannes van der Bijl appointed as the first chairman by Prime Minister Jan Smuts.[1] [2] ESCOM began by taking over electrification projects like the Glencoe to Pietermaritzburg railway line and Cape Town suburban railways, while negotiating surplus power transmission from the Victoria Falls and Transvaal Power Company (VFP).[1] Early development focused on constructing initial power stations to meet rising demand, starting with the temporary Malieveldspruit hydro station in 1925 and the Sabie River Gorge hydro station in mid-1927, followed by coal-fired plants including Witbank (commissioned 1926, expanded to 100 MW by 1929), Colenso (1926, initial 60 MW from five 12 MW turbo-alternators), Congella (1928), and Salt River (1928, ESCOM's first coal-fired station, later expanded to 90 MW by 1935).[1] [11] These efforts overcame challenges like VFP's monopoly and water shortages, achieving sales of 800 million units by 1929 despite the Great Depression, supported by public loans totaling £9.75 million in 1933-1934.[1] [11] By the late 1930s, expansions included the Rand Extension Undertaking in 1934 covering 29,000 km² and sales exceeding 2,500 million units in 1937.[11] In the 1940s, amid World War II delays and post-war shortages, ESCOM commissioned Klip Power Station near Vereeniging in early 1940 with 424 MW capacity (12 × 33 MW units plus house sets), the largest in the Southern Hemisphere at the time, and began construction on Congella (40 MW, delayed) and Vaal stations.[11] Output increased fivefold from 1933 to 1948, with total sales reaching 5,000 million units by 1946, though coal export priorities caused load shedding from 1948 to 1953.[2] In 1948, ESCOM expropriated VFP for £15.5 million, consolidating control and shifting to full state ownership.[2] The 1950s marked rapid expansion with stations like Taaibos (1954, 480 MW coal-fired), Hex River (1953), Salt River 2 (1955), West Bank 2 (1956, 85 MW), Highveld (1959, 480 MW), and Wilge, alongside transmission upgrades to 275 kV, growing supply area to 191,100 km² by 1960.[12] Installed capacity rose from 1,217 MW in 1945 to 2,052 MW in 1954 and 3,297 MW in 1959, with annual sales reaching 16,000 million units by 1960, a 133% increase over the prior decade.[12] [13] Challenges included the 1960 Coalbrook colliery disaster disrupting supplies, prompting safety reforms.[12] Under chairmen like J.T. Hattingh (1952-1962), ESCOM prioritized industrial growth, particularly for goldfields and railways.[12] [2]Expansion Under Apartheid (1960-1994)
During the apartheid era from 1960 to 1994, Eskom experienced rapid expansion driven by South Africa's economic growth, particularly in mining and heavy industry, which demanded reliable and increasing electricity supply. The state-owned utility received substantial government backing, including low-interest loans, to construct large-scale infrastructure amid international sanctions that necessitated domestic self-sufficiency in energy production.[14] This period marked Eskom's shift toward massive coal-fired "six-pack" power stations, each featuring six generating units, to capitalize on abundant local coal reserves and achieve economies of scale.[15] Installed generating capacity grew dramatically from about 4,000 MW in 1960 to approximately 40,000 MW by 1990, reflecting an average annual increase that supported peak demand rising in tandem with GDP growth rates often exceeding 5% in the 1960s.[16] By 1970, capacity had reached 13,000 MW, doubling to around 23,000 MW by the late 1970s, fueled by investments exceeding billions of rand in new plants and transmission networks.[15] Between 1960 and 1992, Eskom commissioned 19 new power stations, averaging one every 20 months, all completed on time and within budget, a feat attributed to centralized planning and technical expertise unhindered by post-1994 policy shifts.[2] Key projects included the Arnot Power Station, commissioned in 1975 with 2,400 MW capacity, exemplifying the era's focus on efficient, high-output facilities near coal fields in Mpumalanga.[13] In the 1980s, construction of Kendal, Lethabo, and Matimba stations added nearly 12,000 MW, with Kendal becoming one of the world's largest coal plants at 4,116 MW upon full operation in 1988.[13] These developments employed thousands, including growing numbers of black workers in technical roles by the 1970s, though electrification access remained skewed, serving primarily urban and industrial users while rural black communities saw limited grid extension until late-1980s initiatives.[2] This expansion solidified Eskom's monopoly on generation and transmission, supplying over 90% of South Africa's electricity by 1994 and enabling the country to export power regionally, but it also entrenched dependency on coal, which comprised 90% of the fuel mix.[14] Government policy under the National Party prioritized capacity surplus to buffer against sanctions-induced shortages, resulting in overbuild that later proved prescient given demand forecasts, though utilization was optimized for baseload industrial needs rather than universal residential access.[13]Post-Apartheid Transition and Early Challenges (1994-2007)
Following the democratic transition in 1994, Eskom prioritized expanding electricity access under the government's Reconstruction and Development Programme, launching the Integrated National Electrification Programme (INEP) to connect underserved areas previously neglected under apartheid policies.[17] By 1999, Eskom had electrified 1.75 million households ahead of its 2000 target, with over 500,000 additional connections by 1997 alone, doubling the number of domestic customers within the decade and raising national household electrification rates from around 36% in 1994 to over 70% by the early 2000s.[17] [14] This expansion was supported by operational efficiencies, including a unit capability factor peaking at 92.7% in 1998 and real electricity price reductions of 15% between 1995 and 2000, enabling self-financing through internal reserves and capital markets without burdening the state budget.[17] Policy frameworks evolved to address the sector's structure, with the 1998 White Paper on the Energy Policy of the Republic of South Africa advocating for greater competition, including independent power producers and the unbundling of Eskom's generation, transmission, and distribution functions to encourage private investment.[18] However, implementation lagged, and the 2001 Eskom Conversion Act transformed Eskom into a state-owned public company (Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd), preserving its monopoly while introducing corporatization and dividend obligations to government shareholders.[19] The final unit of the Majuba Power Station was commissioned in 2001, marking the completion of apartheid-era expansion plans, but no subsequent large-scale generation projects were initiated due to government directives prioritizing private sector entry over Eskom-led builds.[17] Early challenges emerged from underinvestment amid accelerating demand growth in the 2000s, driven by economic recovery, as installed capacity stagnated around 40,000 MW with some units mothballed and net operating capacity at approximately 35 GW by 2003 against peak demands nearing 32 GW.[14] Artificially low tariffs, intended to support affordability and access, constrained maintenance and expansion funding, while rising municipal non-payments—escalating from R920 million in arrears in 1994 to R2 billion by 1999—strained revenues.[17] Policy uncertainty and deferred refurbishments eroded reserve margins from over 20% in the 1990s to 5.1% by 2007, culminating in emergency load shedding starting in November 2007 to avert system collapse, as warned in the 1998 White Paper.[14] [18]Load Shedding Crisis and Recovery Attempts (2007-2025)
Load shedding, the deliberate curtailment of electricity supply to manage shortages, commenced at Eskom in October 2007 with emergency measures to avert a nationwide blackout, triggered by unplanned outages exceeding available capacity.[20] This initial crisis stemmed from a failure to expand generation capacity despite known demand growth forecasts from the late 1990s, compounded by inadequate maintenance on aging coal-fired plants built primarily in the 1970s and 1980s.[21] By early 2008, rolling blackouts affected industrial and residential users, marking the onset of a persistent supply-demand imbalance where peak demand approached 40,000 MW against an installed capacity eroded by breakdowns.[22] The crisis escalated through the 2010s due to systemic mismanagement, including deferred maintenance that allowed plant availability to drop below 70% by 2015, when 99 days of load shedding were recorded.[23] Corruption and state capture, particularly during Jacob Zuma's presidency from 2009 to 2018, exacerbated breakdowns; the Zondo Commission inquiry documented how entities like the Gupta family influenced procurement, leading to inflated costs and sabotaged projects such as the Kusile and Medupi power stations, delaying their commissioning by years.[24] Coal supply disruptions from theft, poor quality, and sabotage further reduced output, with unplanned outages averaging over 12,000 MW in peak crisis years like 2022-2023, when Stage 6 load shedding—up to 6,000 MW cuts—imposed 10-12 hours of daily outages.[14] Economic impacts included GDP losses estimated at 1-2% annually, with mining and manufacturing sectors hit hardest.[25] Recovery initiatives gained traction post-2018 under Cyril Ramaphosa's administration, with the appointment of André de Ruyter as Eskom CEO in 2019 focusing on a Generation Operational Recovery Plan emphasizing boiler tube repairs and procurement reforms to curb corruption.[26] New capacity additions, including Medupi Unit 4 online in 2021 and progressive Kusile units despite delays, added over 4,000 MW by 2023, while private renewable investments under the Renewable Energy Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme supplemented grid supply.[27] By 2024, unplanned outages fell, enabling reduced load shedding stages.[28] In 2025, Eskom reported sustained improvements, with only 26 hours of load shedding from April to October, marking 161 consecutive days without cuts by late October, driven by enhanced energy availability factor exceeding 70% through intensive maintenance.[29] Winter 2025 saw minimal interruptions, totaling 26 hours over four evenings, and projections indicated no load shedding for the summer period from September 2025 to March 2026, supported by stabilized coal logistics and reduced breakdowns averaging 10,835 MW in early October.[30] The government's draft Integrated Resource Plan 2025 outlined further expansions, including 10,500 MW nuclear and 20,000 MW gas by 2039, to prevent recurrence, though challenges like debt exceeding R400 billion and legacy corruption persist.[31] Despite these gains, isolated risks from sabotage and aging infrastructure underscore the fragility of the recovery.[32]Organizational Structure and Governance
Core Operations and Monopoly Status
Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd functions as South Africa's state-owned electricity utility, with a mandate to generate, transmit, and distribute power to support national energy security and economic development.[33] Its operations span the entire electricity value chain, encompassing power generation from coal, nuclear, hydroelectric, and renewable sources; high-voltage transmission via a national grid of over 30,000 kilometers of lines; and distribution to direct customers such as industries, mines, commercial entities, agricultural operations, residences, and redistributors including municipalities.[3][34][35] The Generation division operates 15 coal-fired power stations, one nuclear facility, and various peaking and renewable plants, producing approximately 90% of the electricity consumed in the country as of recent assessments.[36] Transmission responsibilities include system control, maintenance, planning, and expansion to ensure grid stability, while the Distribution division manages regional networks divided into seven operational areas for delivery to end-users.[34][37] These activities operate continuously, with power stations running 365 days a year to meet variable demand.[34] Eskom holds a vertically integrated monopoly structure, wholly owned by the South African government, dominating generation and exercising statutory exclusivity over transmission under the Electricity Regulation Act of 2006.[36][38] This position supplies the vast majority of national power, though distribution is shared with over 170 licensed municipalities that purchase bulk electricity for local reticulation.[39] Reforms via the Electricity Regulation Amendment Act, signed into law on October 24, 2024, mandate the separation of transmission into an independent system operator by March 2027, aiming to dismantle aspects of the monopoly and enable competitive wholesale markets.[38][40] Until fully implemented, Eskom retains control over transmission infrastructure and bulk generation licensing, limiting private entry despite growing independent power producers contributing under 10% of supply.[41][42]Restructuring and Unbundling Efforts
Eskom's restructuring and unbundling initiatives, formalized in the 2019 Roadmap for Eskom in a Reformed Electricity Supply Industry, aim to divide the vertically integrated utility into separate subsidiaries for generation, transmission, and distribution under Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd., with the objective of enhancing managerial focus, operational efficiency, and market transparency.[43] This process supports broader electricity sector reforms, including the amended Electricity Regulation Act of 2024, which facilitates the transition to a competitive power market by dismantling Eskom's monopoly structure.[44] The unbundling prioritizes transmission, with the National Transmission Company of South Africa (NTCSA) achieving legal separation from Eskom by December 2021, followed by registration and requisite license approvals.[45] All suspensive conditions for the merger agreement between Eskom and NTCSA were met by April 2024, enabling NTCSA to commence trading operations on July 1, 2024, as a distinct transmission system operator responsible for grid planning and wheeling services.[46][47] However, as of mid-2025, full functional and financial separation remains incomplete, with commercial operations pending regulatory and shareholder approvals, amid ongoing embedded costs from Eskom in NTCSA's revenue requirements.[48][49] Distribution unbundling has advanced through strategic pilots and entity formation, with reforms accelerating in May 2025 to create independent regional distributors, potentially involving private sector participation to address Eskom's historical inefficiencies in this segment.[50] Generation separation lags, as Eskom retains dominant control, reflecting prioritization of transmission to enable renewable integration and private generation entry, though full divestiture remains constrained by debt relief provisions under the Eskom Debt Relief Act of 2023.[51][52] Labor unions, including the National Union of Mineworkers, have contested the process, filing disputes in October 2025 labeling it a "privatisation agenda" that threatens job security and public ownership, highlighting tensions between reform goals and employment protections.[53] Despite these challenges, the unbundling aligns with Eskom's turnaround plan, contributing to its first profit in eight years reported in September 2025, though sustained progress depends on resolving regulatory hurdles and securing ZAR440 billion in transmission investments over the next decade.[54][55]Labor Relations and Employment Dynamics
Eskom's labor relations are primarily governed by collective bargaining through the Central Bargaining Forum (CBF), involving three recognized unions: the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (NUMSA), and Solidarity.[56] These unions represent a significant portion of the non-managerial workforce, negotiating wages, conditions, and operational changes such as unbundling proposals, which unions have consistently opposed as potential precursors to privatization.[57] Wage negotiations have frequently led to disputes and industrial action, contributing to operational disruptions amid Eskom's ongoing challenges with generation reliability. In June 2022, unlawful strikes by NUM and NUMSA workers at multiple power stations halted planned maintenance and repairs, forcing Eskom to implement unplanned employee shortages and exacerbating load shedding by widening cuts over weekends.[58] [59] Unions demanded increases of 10-12%, rejecting Eskom's lower offers, prompting interdicts from courts to halt the illegal actions; workers returned amid severe outages, with further talks yielding a 7% one-year increase plus housing allowances.[60] [61] A three-year agreement signed in June 2023 provided a cumulative 7% rise for non-managerial staff from July 2023 to June 2026, averting further strikes and aiming for wage stability.[62] [56] As of October 2025, NUMSA demanded a 15% increase ahead of new talks, signaling persistent tensions over inflation-adjusted compensation amid Eskom's financial recovery.[63] Eskom employed 42,030 staff as of March 31, 2025, a 3.5% rise from 40,625 the prior year, with direct employment costs reaching R35.355 billion in the 2024 financial year, averaging R870,277 per employee annually.[64] [65] This headcount supports operations generating approximately 221,200 GWh in 2023/2024, equating to 5.44 GWh per employee, reflecting productivity strains from aging infrastructure and absenteeism during disputes.[66] Employment dynamics have been marked by acute skills shortages, stemming from a decade-long exodus of experienced engineers and technicians, exacerbated by policies prioritizing demographic targets over merit-based retention during transformation initiatives.[67] [68] By 2023, Eskom faced a critical deficit in specialized skills for plant operations and maintenance, necessitating external contractors and original equipment manufacturers for basic functions at coal-fired stations.[69] [70] Critics attribute this to cadre deployment practices, where political loyalty influenced hiring and promotions, undermining technical competence and contributing to systemic inefficiencies beyond direct union actions.[71] Recovery efforts include intensified training, but persistent gaps hinder reliability improvements, with unions advocating for job preservation amid just transition pressures toward renewables.[72]Generation and Infrastructure
Installed Capacity and Fuel Mix
As of July 2025, Eskom's total installed generation capacity stands at 53,214 MW across its fleet of power stations.[73] This capacity supports South Africa's baseload and peaking demands, though actual availability is often lower due to maintenance, breakdowns, and decommissioning schedules.[73] The fleet includes recent additions, such as the commercialization of Kusile Power Station Unit 6 on 30 September 2025, contributing to incremental growth from prior years' totals around 50,000 MW.[74] Coal-fired power stations dominate Eskom's installed capacity, accounting for 45,340 MW or approximately 85.2% of the total, spread across 14 active stations designed for continuous baseload operation.[73] Nuclear capacity totals 1,934 MW from the Koeberg Power Station, providing reliable, low-carbon baseload at 3.6% of the mix.[73] Hydroelectric facilities contribute 661 MW, including 600 MW from conventional hydro and 61 MW from smaller schemes, while pumped storage schemes add 2,732 MW for load balancing and peak shaving.[73] Open-cycle gas turbine (OCGT) stations, primarily diesel-fueled for rapid peaking response, provide 2,426 MW across four facilities.[73] Renewable sources remain marginal, with 100 MW from the Sere Wind Farm and negligible solar capacity directly owned by Eskom, though integration of independent power producers' renewables is increasing via grid connections.[73] Battery storage is emerging with 20 MW installed, aimed at short-term frequency regulation.[73] The following table summarizes the installed capacity by primary source:| Source Type | Installed Capacity (MW) | Percentage of Total |
|---|---|---|
| Coal | 45,340 | 85.2% |
| Nuclear | 1,934 | 3.6% |
| Hydro (incl. other) | 661 | 1.2% |
| Pumped Storage | 2,732 | 5.1% |
| Gas Turbines | 2,426 | 4.6% |
| Wind | 100 | 0.2% |
| Battery Storage | 20 | <0.1% |
| Total | 53,214 | 100% |
Coal-Fired Power Stations
Eskom operates 14 active coal-fired power stations with a total installed capacity of 45,340 MW, representing 84% of its overall generation mix as of July 2025.[73] These facilities, concentrated in Mpumalanga and Limpopo provinces, supply baseload electricity using pulverized coal combustion, with most employing subcritical boiler technology from the 1970s and 1980s, supplemented by newer supercritical units at Medupi and Kusile.[76] The fleet's design supports continuous operation, drawing coal from proximate collieries via conveyor systems to minimize transport costs and emissions.[76] Key stations include Kendal, with 4,116 MW across six 686 MW units commissioned between 1988 and 1992; Majuba, 4,110 MW in nine units averaging 457-712 MW, operational since 1996-2001; Matimba, 3,990 MW in six 665 MW units from 1987-1991; and Lethabo, 3,708 MW in six 618 MW units from 1985-1990.[73] Newer additions feature Medupi (4,760 MW, six 800 MW supercritical units, first synchronized in 2015 with full operation by 2023) and Kusile (3,995 MW nominal, six 800 MW units, with progressive synchronization from 2017 amid delays).[73][76]| Power Station | Installed Capacity (MW) | Number of Units | Province |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arnot | 2,200 | 10 | Mpumalanga |
| Camden | 1,561 | 8 | Mpumalanga |
| Duvha | 3,000 | 6 | Mpumalanga |
| Grootvlei | 1,180 | 10 | Mpumalanga |
| Hendrina | 1,666 | 10 | Mpumalanga |
| Kendal | 4,116 | 6 | Mpumalanga |
| Kriel | 2,790 | 6 | Mpumalanga |
| Lethabo | 3,708 | 6 | Free State |
| Majuba | 4,110 | 9 | Mpumalanga |
| Matimba | 3,990 | 6 | Limpopo |
| Matla | 3,600 | 6 | Mpumalanga |
| Tutuka | 3,654 | 6 | Mpumalanga |
| Kusile | 3,995 | 6 | Mpumalanga |
| Medupi | 4,760 | 6 | Limpopo |
Nuclear, Hydro, and Peaking Plants
Eskom's nuclear generation is centered on the Koeberg Nuclear Power Station near Cape Town, comprising two pressurized water reactors with a combined net capacity of 1,860 MW.[84] Unit 1, with a capacity of 920 MW, entered commercial operation on 4 July 1984, while Unit 2, also 920 MW, followed on 9 November 1986.[84] The station generates approximately 5% of South Africa's electricity, providing baseload power with a design capacity factor exceeding 80%.[85] In July 2024, the National Nuclear Regulator approved a 20-year license extension for Unit 1, permitting operation until 2044 following extensive safety assessments and upgrades, including steam generator replacements.[86] Unit 2's license, originally expiring on 9 November 2025, underwent synchronization to the national grid on 31 December 2024 after completing its long-term operation program, with regulatory approval for a similar 20-year extension pending a decision in 2025.[87] Hydroelectric generation at Eskom includes two run-of-river stations on the Orange River: Gariep, with six 60 MW turbines commissioned in 1971 for a total capacity of 360 MW, and Vanderkloof, featuring four turbines totaling 240 MW and operational since 1984.[88] These facilities contribute a combined 600 MW, primarily supporting peaking and seasonal variability in water flow, though output is limited by South Africa's low rainfall and dependence on Orange River inflows.[89] Eskom also operates three pumped-storage schemes for load balancing and peaking: Drakensberg (1,000 MW, commissioned 1981), Palmiet (400 MW, 1988), and Ingula (1,332 MW, fully operational by 2017), yielding a total capacity of 2,732 MW.[89] These reversible hydropower plants pump water to upper reservoirs during off-peak periods using excess grid power and generate electricity by releasing it through turbines during high demand, enhancing grid stability amid coal plant variability.[90] Peaking plants consist of four open-cycle gas turbine (OCGT) stations fueled by diesel, providing rapid-response capacity of 2,409 MW for short-term peaks and emergencies, particularly during evening hours from 17:00 to 22:00.[90] Key installations include Ankerlig (1,338 MW at Atlantis) and Gourikwa (746 MW near Mossel Bay), with the others comprising smaller quick-start units; these are not designed for baseload due to high fuel costs and emissions but have been critical in mitigating load shedding since 2007.[89] Overall, Eskom's peaking portfolio, encompassing hydro, pumped storage, and OCGTs across 14 stations, totals approximately 5,894 MW, enabling flexible response to demand fluctuations.[90]Renewables Integration and Future Projects
Eskom's integration of renewable energy sources has historically been limited, with its owned capacity primarily consisting of the 100 MW Sere Wind Farm and smaller installations like the 3.2 MW Klipheuwel Wind Farm, contributing to a modest renewable portfolio amid a coal-dominant generation mix exceeding 40 GW.[91] These assets are connected to the national grid, but intermittency issues necessitate backup from dispatchable sources such as pumped hydro and gas turbines to maintain stability, as renewables' variable output can exacerbate frequency fluctuations without adequate storage or curtailment mechanisms.[92] Challenges in scaling renewables include grid constraints and transmission bottlenecks, particularly in high-resource areas like the Northern Cape, where over 2 GW of independent power producer (IPP) solar and wind projects have been integrated since 2010, yet delays in grid expansions hinder further connections.[93] Eskom's efforts to address these involve battery energy storage systems (BESS), including a planned 1,440 MWh facility paired with 60 MW solar PV to provide dispatchable clean energy and mitigate ramping needs during peak demand.[94] High renewable penetration also poses resilience risks, requiring synchronous inertia from conventional plants to prevent blackouts, as evidenced by global precedents where rapid variable renewable growth without firm capacity led to instability.[92] Looking ahead, Eskom launched its first Renewable Energy Offtake Programme in August 2025, aiming to procure power from utility-scale solar and wind projects via power purchase agreements (PPAs) spanning 5 to 25 years, with an initial target of 2 GW in construction-ready capacity by 2026 from a broader 20 GW pipeline.[95] This initiative includes soliciting bids for 291 MW of solar PV in 2025 to diversify supply and reduce coal reliance.[96] Alignment with the Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) 2025 supports ambitious national targets, including 25 GW utility-scale solar PV, 34 GW onshore wind, and 8.5 GW offshore wind by 2050, though Eskom emphasizes a balanced mix incorporating gas and nuclear to ensure reliability amid economic growth demands.[97] The utility's establishment of a dedicated renewable energy business unit in April 2025 accelerates these projects, focusing on executable pipelines while regulatory reforms are needed to attract private investment for transmission upgrades.[98]Maintenance, Reliability, and Sabotage Risks
Eskom's coal-dominated generation fleet, comprising plants averaging over 40 years in age, has long faced reliability challenges stemming from deferred maintenance and equipment deterioration, resulting in elevated breakdown rates.[77][99] Historical underinvestment in upkeep, compounded by skills shortages from workforce attrition, led to unplanned outages averaging over 14,000 MW in early 2023, with breakdowns accounting for a significant portion of capacity losses.[100][69] While plant age contributes to wear, analyses indicate mismanagement and inadequate maintenance protocols as primary causal factors, rather than senescence alone.[99] Under the Generation Recovery Plan initiated in recent years, Eskom has intensified planned maintenance, achieving rates of 12.8% for fiscal year 2025, alongside reductions in unplanned outages by up to 3,100 MW year-on-year.[101][27] This has yielded measurable reliability gains, with the Energy Availability Factor (EAF)—a metric of operational capacity excluding planned maintenance—reaching month-to-date averages above 70% in October 2025 (70.45%) and early September 2025 (71.6%), surpassing board targets and marking a four-year high.[102][103] For the period 1-23 October 2025, EAF stood at 64.28%, an improvement over 61.44% from the prior year, driven by sustained outage reductions to averages of 9,500-10,800 MW weekly.[29][30] Despite these advances, vulnerabilities persist from aging assets and occasional spikes in diesel reliance for peaking units, with expenditures nearing R5 billion in 2025 amid incomplete EAF targets.[104] Sabotage risks emerged prominently during 2021-2022, with Eskom documenting at least 22 deliberate acts, including arson attempts, valve manipulations to induce failures, and disruptions at stations like Tutuka (confirmed sabotage in May 2022) and Lethabo (prevented coal depletion in November 2021).[105][106][107] These incidents, often linked to internal actors or external vandalism such as pylon tampering, exacerbated breakdowns and load shedding, with the last confirmed case at Camden Power Station in November 2022.[108] Incidents declined markedly thereafter, with zero reported at power stations in 2023, coinciding with leadership changes and enhanced security measures, though former CEO André de Ruyter attributed some prior events to organized interference potentially involving foreign elements.[109][110][111] Ongoing risks from cable theft and infrastructure attacks remain, underscoring the need for robust countermeasures to safeguard reliability gains.[112]Financial and Economic Aspects
Revenue Sources and Tariff Policies
Eskom's revenue is predominantly derived from electricity sales, which constituted approximately 98% of total revenue in recent financial years, with the remainder from ancillary services such as wheeling and connection fees.[113] Sales volumes reached 189.7 terawatt-hours in the fiscal year ending March 2025, distributed across customer categories including 81% to local authorities (municipalities), 12% to industry, 7% to mining, and less than 1% to other sectors.[113] Direct industrial customers, who purchase high-voltage power, contribute significantly due to their large consumption, while municipalities resell to residential and smaller commercial users, often adding their own surcharges.[113] Tariff policies are regulated by the National Energy Regulator of South Africa (NERSA) through the Multi-Year Price Determination (MYPD) methodology, which sets revenue allowances for three- to five-year periods based on projected efficient costs.[114] The MYPD framework structures tariffs around four building blocks: primary energy costs (mainly coal procurement), operating expenditures, depreciation and asset base expansion, and a return on assets deemed prudent by the regulator.[115] Eskom submits revenue applications justifying cost recovery, but NERSA often approves lower amounts after public consultations and efficiency benchmarks, leading to regulatory asset base adjustments and deferred revenue shortfalls that exacerbate financial strain.[116] In the MYPD5 period (covering fiscal years 2023/24 and 2024/25), NERSA approved average tariffs of 173.80 cents per kilowatt-hour for 2023/24 and 195.95 cents per kilowatt-hour for 2024/25, below Eskom's requests of higher figures to cover full costs including debt servicing.[116] These approvals incorporated annual escalations, with a 12.74% increase implemented in 2025, driven by rising fuel costs and maintenance needs, though tempered by lower sales volumes from load shedding.[113] Tariff structures differentiate by customer class, featuring inclining block rates for residential users to encourage conservation, time-of-use pricing for large consumers, and flat rates for certain rural or interruptible supplies, all updated annually per NERSA directives.[117] For the forthcoming MYPD6 (2026-2028), Eskom's application seeks substantial hikes to achieve cost reflectivity, amid ongoing debates over NERSA's conservative approvals and their impact on affordability versus operational sustainability.[118]Profitability Trends and Recent Recovery
Eskom maintained profitability through the financial year ended March 2017, but thereafter entered a phase of sustained losses driven by deferred maintenance leading to plant breakdowns, governance failures including state capture-era corruption, regulatory delays in cost-reflective tariffs, and ballooning debt servicing expenses that outpaced revenue growth.[14][119][113] These factors compounded operational inefficiencies and impaired asset values, resulting in net losses after tax escalating from approximately R2 billion in 2018 to over R20 billion annually by the early 2020s.[36] The trajectory worsened in recent years prior to recovery: for the year ended March 2023, Eskom recorded a net loss after tax of R23.9 billion, reflecting higher finance costs and primary energy expenditures amid persistent generation shortfalls.[120] This deteriorated further to a R55 billion net loss in 2024, largely attributable to a one-time accounting impairment from the unbundling of the National Transmission Company of South Africa (NTCSA), though the underlying loss before tax narrowed to R25.5 billion from R34.6 billion in 2023 due to tariff hikes and modest sales recovery.[121][122] A significant reversal occurred in the financial year ended March 2025, with Eskom posting a profit after tax of R16 billion—the first full-year profit since 2017—and a profit before tax of R23.9 billion, underpinned by revenue growth of 15.2% to R341 billion from approved tariff increases and stabilized demand, coupled with reduced diesel and coal costs following enhanced plant reliability and fewer unplanned outages.[123][124][113] The company's turnaround strategy, implemented under new leadership since 2023, emphasized rigorous cost controls, accelerated maintenance, and governance reforms, yielding normalized profit before tax of R11.9 billion after excluding exceptional recoveries.[125] This operational pivot has enabled reinvestment of R23.9 billion into infrastructure, though sustainability remains contingent on continued tariff approvals and debt restructuring.[126]| Financial Year Ended March | Net Profit/Loss After Tax (R billion) | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2023 | -23.9 | Elevated energy costs and finance charges dominate losses.[120] |
| 2024 | -55.0 | Includes NTCSA unbundling impairment; pre-adjustment loss before tax improves.[121] |
| 2025 | +16.0 | First profit in eight years; revenue and efficiency gains key drivers.[123][54] |
Debt Burden and Government Interventions
Eskom's gross debt stood at approximately ZAR 396 billion as of the fiscal year ending March 2022, reflecting years of accumulation from capital expenditure overruns on major projects like the Medupi and Kusile power stations, which exceeded budgets by billions due to delays, design flaws, and procurement irregularities.[127] This burden intensified financial strain, with interest payments consuming a significant portion of revenue and contributing to liquidity crises that necessitated repeated government support. By 2019, debt had surpassed ZAR 440 billion, exacerbating Eskom's inability to fund maintenance and new investments without external aid.[14] In response, the South African government has provided multiple interventions, including cumulative bailouts totaling ZAR 496 billion since the 2008/2009 fiscal year, primarily through direct allocations, loan guarantees, and equity injections to avert default and sustain operations.[128] A landmark measure was the February 2023 debt-relief package of ZAR 254 billion over three years, structured as ZAR 168 billion in capital relief and the balance in concessional financing to lower interest costs, conditional on Eskom achieving operational targets such as reduced unplanned outages and compliance with governance reforms. This initiative aimed to deleverage the balance sheet and convert portions of debt to equity upon fulfillment of conditions, with ZAR 76 billion disbursed in the fiscal year ending March 2024.[122] Subsequent adjustments included a reduction in the package by ZAR 20 billion in March 2025, reflecting performance-based clawbacks and fiscal constraints, alongside the passage of the Eskom Debt Relief Amendment Bill in July 2025 to enforce stricter municipal debt collection and operational accountability.[129][130] These measures contributed to a reported profit before tax in the fiscal year ending March 2025—the first in eight years—partly by slashing finance costs by ZAR 5 billion through bailout-enabled debt restructuring, though Eskom continues seeking new borrowings amid lingering liabilities.[131][54] Despite relief, the utility's debt sustainability remains precarious, with projections indicating potential re-accumulation absent sustained reforms in tariff recovery and expenditure control.[132]Municipal Arrears and Collection Challenges
Municipalities in South Africa purchase electricity in bulk from Eskom for distribution to end-users, but persistent non-payment has resulted in escalating arrears. As of 31 March 2025, total municipal arrear debt to Eskom reached R94.6 billion, marking a 27% increase from R74.4 billion in March 2024.[124] By August 2025, this figure had climbed to R103.5 billion.[123] Of this, 75 municipalities owed over R100 million each as of January 2025, with the largest debtors including metros like Johannesburg and Tshwane.[133][134] The debt has grown at an average annual rate of 26% from 2021 to 2025, surpassing Eskom's revenue growth of about 14% over the same period.[134] Eskom has projected that, absent interventions, arrears could exceed R300 billion by 2030, potentially tripling current levels and undermining the utility's financial recovery.[135][136] Primary causes include municipalities' inability to collect payments from residents and businesses, driven by widespread non-payment, illegal connections, and indigent consumer relief programs that strain budgets.[137][138] Municipal financial mismanagement exacerbates the issue, as many local governments face their own revenue shortfalls and governance failures, leading to delayed or incomplete remittances to Eskom.[139][140] Collection efforts are hampered by legal, political, and economic barriers; Eskom cannot unilaterally disconnect bulk supplies without risking widespread service disruptions, fiscal collapse of municipalities, and national backlash.[139][141] The utility has pursued payment agreements, such as with City Power in June 2025, and proposed measures like prepaid metering, direct consumer billing in Eskom areas, and engineering assistance to improve municipal collection.[138][142] Government-backed debt relief, including R64 billion in fiscal year 2025, has provided temporary relief but has not stemmed the tide of new arrears.[113] These arrears impair Eskom's cash flow, limiting funds for maintenance, infrastructure investment, and distribution reforms, while perpetuating a cycle of utility underfunding amid broader energy sector pressures.[142][140] Despite Eskom's first profit in eight years for the year ended March 2025, the rising debt poses an existential risk to sustainability without systemic municipal reforms.[124][135]Operational Performance and Energy Supply
Historical Electrification Achievements
Eskom's electrification initiatives played a pivotal role in expanding household access to electricity in South Africa, transitioning from limited coverage in the pre-1994 era to widespread grid connections thereafter. At the end of 1994, approximately 44% of the country's estimated 8.4 million households were electrified, with urban areas achieving higher penetration while rural regions lagged significantly.[143] Between 1991 and 1994, Eskom independently connected about 685,000 households to the grid, laying groundwork for accelerated expansion.[144] The launch of the Integrated National Electrification Programme (INEP) in 1994 marked a concerted national effort, with Eskom as the primary executor alongside municipalities. From 1994 to 1998, roughly 2.5 million households received connections, prioritizing underserved rural and informal settlements.[145] Eskom planned to add 1.75 million more connections between 1994 and 1999, focusing on cost-effective grid extensions where feasible.[144] By 1995, urban electrification had risen to 76%, reflecting targeted infrastructure investments.[146] Cumulative progress under INEP exceeded 7.4 million grid connections by March 2018, complemented by over 160,000 non-grid solutions like solar systems for remote areas.[145] Eskom's provincial efforts included 1,045,328 connections in Limpopo, 922,518 in Eastern Cape, and similar scales elsewhere since 1994, driving the national household electrification rate to 86% by 2014.[147][148] This expansion more than doubled domestic customers within the first decade of the program, positioning South Africa among Africa's highest electrification achievers despite subsequent supply challenges.[14]Load Shedding Patterns and Mitigation
Load shedding refers to the controlled and rotational interruption of electricity supply implemented by Eskom to balance demand with available generation capacity and prevent total grid collapse. It was first introduced on January 25, 2008, following warnings in 2007 of capacity shortfalls due to delayed maintenance and insufficient new builds.[149] The practice has recurred intermittently since, escalating in frequency and severity from 2014 onward amid aging coal-fired plants, high unplanned breakdowns, and rising demand. By 2022–2023, South Africa experienced over 300 days of load shedding annually, with stages reaching 6 or higher for prolonged periods, shedding up to 6,000 MW or more.[150] Eskom classifies load shedding into stages based on the shortfall in megawatts (MW) to be curtailed: Stage 1 sheds up to 1,000 MW via up to three 2-hour outages over four days; Stage 2 up to 2,000 MW with up to six 2-hour outages over four days; Stage 3 up to 3,000 MW with eight 2-hour outages or four 4-hour ones over four days; and so on, up to Stage 8 exceeding 8,000 MW with near-continuous cuts of 4–4.5 hours on and off.[151] Patterns historically peaked during winter (high demand) and summer (low hydro due to reduced rainfall), with unplanned outages averaging 12,000–15,000 MW daily in crisis years, driven by boiler tube leaks and pump failures in legacy units.[102] Recent data shows marked decline: only 69 days in 2024 versus hundreds prior, and just 17 days from January to August 2025 compared to 84 in 2024, with 133 consecutive days without shedding by late September 2025.[52][152] As of October 2025, no scheduled shedding is in effect, though risks persist from residual outages.[153] Mitigation efforts center on Eskom's Generation Operational Recovery Plan, launched in 2023, which prioritizes deferred maintenance, unit overhauls, and reliability upgrades at coal plants like Kusile and Medupi. This yielded an energy availability factor (EAF) rise from 55% in fiscal year 2023 to 60.6% in 2025, adding roughly 4,000 MW of recoverable capacity through reduced breakdowns—from 15,000 MW average unplanned outages in 2023 to 9,534 MW in early October 2025.[102][152] Peaking gas and diesel plants, totaling 14 facilities, have supplemented supply, consuming significant fuel but averting deeper stages; diesel use dropped post-April 2025 amid better generation.[90] Complementary measures include curbing non-technical losses via smart meter rollouts and illegal connection removals, targeting a 20% cut in "load reduction" (targeted cuts in high-theft areas) by March 2026.[27] Eskom forecasts no shedding for summer 2025/26, contingent on sustaining EAF above 70% and minimizing winter risks.[154] Private embedded generation has also eased pressure, adding over 6,000 MW since 2020, though grid integration challenges remain.[52]Integrated Resource Planning and Energy Transition
The Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) serves as South Africa's national electricity capacity expansion blueprint, developed by the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy to guide Eskom's generation investments, independent power producers, and overall supply-demand balance over a 20-year horizon, incorporating factors like cost, security, and emissions reduction.[52] First formalized in 2010, the IRP has undergone periodic updates to address evolving demand forecasts, technological advancements, and policy shifts; the 2019 iteration projected a mix emphasizing renewables at 30.7 GW by 2030 while reducing coal's share to 43% amid decommissioning targets of 10,500 MW from aging plants.[155] [156] Eskom, responsible for over 90% of generation, aligns its strategic planning with the IRP, though implementation has faced delays due to funding constraints and grid integration issues.[157] The IRP 2025, gazetted on October 20, 2025, outlines investments totaling approximately 2.23 trillion rand (about $127 billion) to add 105 GW of capacity by 2039, aiming to end load shedding and achieve net-zero emissions inclusively by prioritizing renewables over new fossil fuel builds beyond existing Eskom projects like Medupi and Kusile coal stations.[97] [158] Key targets include 34 GW of onshore wind and 25 GW of utility-scale solar PV by 2039, forming a 59 GW renewables bloc that would surpass fossil fuels in the generation mix for the first time, supplemented by gas for peaking and modular nuclear revival up to 4 GW despite earlier no-new-nuclear stances.[159] [160] [161] No additional coal capacity is planned, with Eskom's existing fleet targeted for improved availability of 66-68% through 2030 via maintenance, though critics question the feasibility of rapid renewables scaling given historical procurement bottlenecks and the need for 20-30 GW of storage to mitigate intermittency.[162] [163] [164] Eskom's energy transition aligns with the Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP), committing to phase out coal dominance—currently over 80% of supply—through decommissioning and repowering, including the 2023 shutdown of the 990 MW Komati plant as a pilot for site repurposing into solar, storage, and green hydrogen.[165] The utility plans to add 2 GW of clean capacity by 2026 and 20 GW by 2040, reducing coal generation to 18 GW while expanding renewables to 32 GW, but progress lags: only partial fulfillment of 8 GW decommissioning pledges by 2030, hampered by repowering delays and economic pressures from high transition costs estimated at $97 billion internationally pledged but slow to disburse.[166] [167] [168] Eskom is exploring public-private partnerships for 5 GW repowering at six coal sites, potentially using gas or nuclear, decoupling shutdowns from JET timelines to maintain baseload reliability amid grid instability from variable renewables.[169] Challenges include supply chain localization for wind/solar components, transmission upgrades for remote renewable sites, and ensuring affordability, as IRP models prioritize least-cost paths but overlook full system costs like backup fuels during low wind/solar periods.[170] [171] While official projections emphasize economic inclusion via job creation in renewables, analysts note risks of stranded coal assets and fiscal strain without accelerated private investment.[172]| Technology | Planned Capacity Addition by 2039 (GW) | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Onshore Wind | 34 | Largest single addition; requires grid expansion for northern/southern corridors.[159] |
| Solar PV (Utility-Scale) | 25 | Complements wind for diurnal variability; focuses on distributed generation.[159] |
| Gas | Variable (peaking) | For flexibility; aligns with discoveries in Mozambique fields.[161] |
| Nuclear (Modular) | Up to 4 | Revival of small modular reactors; controversial due to past cost overruns.[173] |
| Coal Decommissioning | ~10-15 (net reduction) | Aging fleet phase-out; repowering offsets some losses.[155] |