News

This is what Ngwathe owes Eskom

 Sixteen Free State municipalities, including Mangaung Metropolitan Municipality, jointly owe Eskom over R17 billion for services rendered, as at the end of August 2022 – a huge increase of R2.6 billion since August 2021.

Eskom supplies electricity monthly in bulk to these municipalities who then sell it at a profit to their customers. In addition, municipalities receive government grants for Free Basic Electricity (FBE). Regardless, their current accounts and arrear debt remain unserviced bringing Eskom Free State to its knees.

Even in these trying times, Eskom is expected to provide electricity to these munipalities while maintaining its networks and paying for diesel to ensure security of supply and meet the demand, was said in a statement by Eskom today, Tuesdae 11 October.

Below are the Free State municipalities that owe Eskom as at 31 August 2022.

Municipality Overdue debt 12 Month consumption/bill  12 Month total payments
Maluti A Phofung R 6, 838.8 m R 1, 234.7 m R 311.6 m
Matjhabeng R 4, 850.8 m R 910.0 m R 80.0 m
Ngwathe R 1, 558.5 m R 337.9 m R 129.7 m
Dihlabeng R 715.8 m R 288.5 m R 106.8 m
Moqhaka R 692.3 m R 399.9 m R 150.0 m
Nala R584.4m R 150.4 m R 33.9 m
Mangaung R306.6m R 2,484 m R 2,134 m
Nketoana R 556.8 m R 117.8 m R 1.2 m
Mantsopa R 262.7 m R 67.3 m R 31.8 m
Tokologo R 177.2 m R 44.1 m R 0.15 m
Phumelela R 164.8 m R 32.8 m R 14.2 m
Mafube R 132.8 m R 130.4 m R 94.2 m
Letsemeng R 128.8 m R 48.1 m R 8.3 m
Masilonyana R 124.4 m R 46.4 m R 6.6 m
Tswelopele R 72.0 m R 45.3 m R 19.6 m
Total R17,177.6 m R2,618.9 m R988.1 m

The top three owing municipalities, Maluti A Phofung, Matjhabeng and Ngwathe Local Municipalities, on average consume R200 million (97GWh) of energy monthly. To date these municipalities have brazenly increased their debt to Eskom to R13.3 billion.

“It is extremely difficult for Eskom to continue absorbing the shortfall and continue infrastructure expenditure to supply these non-paying municipalities. It is unfair and unjust for delinquent Free State municipalities to expect Eskom to provide electricity at no cost to them, especially while the country is facing supply constraints,” says Agnes Mlambo, General Manager CentralEast Cluster (Free State and KwaZulu-Natal).

Municipalities have a constitutional responsibility and a Municipal Finance Management Act (MFMA) compliance obligation and duty, not only to Eskom but to their customers, to fulfil their financial obligations for the bulk supply of electricity for Eskom.

“Metsimaholo Local Municipality is the only municipality in the Free State that maintains a zero balance, and Setsoto Local Municipality continues to honour its current account. We thank them for prioritising their Eskom accounts and wish that there were more municipalities like them in the Free State,” adds Mlambo.

Municipal debt puts an immense burden on Eskom’s revenue stream, which negatively affects service delivery.  We urge both Eskom and municipal customers to use electricity legally and to pay for all services when due.

At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Support local journalism

Add The Citizen as a preferred source to see more from Parys Gazette in Google News and Top Stories.

Liezl Scheepers

Liezl Scheepers is editor of the Parys Gazette, a local community newspaper distributed in the towns of Parys, Vredefort and Viljoenskroon. As an experienced community journalist in all fields for the past 30 years, she has a passion for her community, and has been actively involved in several community outreach projects as part of Parys Gazette's team.

Related Articles

Back to top button