Treasury has paid R16 billion to heavily indebted power utility Eskom, the first tranche of a debt relief package that will wipe off more than half its liabilities, acting CEO Calib Cassim said yesterday.
The Treasury offered a total of R254bn to the state-owned company in February so it could pay its debt to global financial institutions, which currently tops R423bn.
Analysts view the offer as a crucial lifeline to help Eskom cope with a cash crunch that has hampered its ability to tackle daily power blackouts across South Africa.
"We have received the first drawdown in terms of the Eskom debt relief bill," Cassim said on the sidelines of the BRICS summit, adding it would help the company meet its debts on maturity.
He added the payment came in at the end of July, and the next tranche was expected in October.
Corruption, cost overruns, and widespread theft of coal and transmission line materials have conspired with unrealistically low tariffs to almost bankrupt Africa's biggest power company.
The government handouts come at a huge cost for the country: Eskoms's total debt is almost equal to the total national budget for education, and more than the spending on health or social development.
To prevent Eskom from getting into more debt, Cassim said, the relief package stipulated that the utility could not take out any further loans for the next four years. The Treasury had previously said the restriction was for three years.
A consequence of this is that Eskom will not be able to get any of the $8.5 billion that was committed to South Africa by wealthy nations at the UN climate talks in November 2021 for its transition to clean energy.
Part of those loans were meant for the company to shut down its coal-fired plants, and Cassim said it wasn't clear how or when Eskom would access the funding.
"We should not lose the opportunity of tapping into those things available to us as a country," he said.
REUTERS