- Market report: Storm of disappointing developments keep investors cautious
- AFSIC – Investing in Africa – more than just a conference
- AFSIC interview with Chris Chijiutomi, MD & Head of Africa, British International Investment
- 18th Edition Connected Banking Summit – Innovation & Excellence Awards - West Africa 2024.
- AFSIC - 5 Weeks to Go - Join our Africa Country Investment Summits
Eskom’s Turnaround Imperiled as Debt Approaches $35 Billion
JOHANNESBURG (Capital Markets in Africa) – The embattled South African state power utility’s debt burden, described by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. as the biggest threat to the nation’s economy, has burgeoned, compounding the difficulty the government faces in formulating a turnaround plan.
Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd.’s debt is approaching 500 billion rand ($35 billion), according to data compiled by Bloomberg from public records, including bonds and issued loans, up from about 370 billion rand a year ago. While the utility declined to comment on the current number, it’s Chief Executive Officer Phakamani Hadebe last month put total debt at about 450 billion rand.
Eskom hasn’t been selling enough power to cover its operating costs and interest payments and has been forced to implement rotating blackouts over the past few years to prevent a collapse of the national grid as its fleet of aging and poorly maintained plants struggled to keep pace with demand.
President Cyril Ramaphosa announced plans earlier this year to split the company into three units to make it easier to manage, and the National Treasury allocated a 69 billion-rand cash injection over the next three years in the February budget — a bailout that’s already been partly offset by the rising debt.
The restructuring will allow for greater participation by private industry in the electricity industry but there are no plans to privatize Eskom, Ramaphosa said at an investor conference organized by Goldman Sachs in Johannesburg on Wednesday, his first engagement with the business since he won a five-year term in May 8 elections.
“Eskom is too big to fail,” he said. “If Eskom fails, this economy fails.”
The composition of the utility’s debt has also changed, with loans accounting for just more than half of its total burden, up from 40% a year ago. The switch to short-term financing hasn’t been smooth sailing — a loan agreed with China Development Bank failed to come through as scheduled earlier this year and Eskom had to take out an urgent 3 billion rand bridge loan from Absa Group Ltd. to avoid a call on existing guarantees.
Source: Bloomberg Business News