S. African electricity utility blames incessant rain for worsening power crisis

Source: Xinhua| 2019-12-09 18:36:59|Editor: yhy
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CAPE TOWN, Dec. 9 (Xinhua) -- South African electricity utility Eskom on Monday blamed rain for rolling power blackouts that have continued for five days.

With the incessant rains, Eskom is beginning to experience flooding at some power stations, which have further led to load losses and has impacted supply as the rainy weather persists, the utility said.

"Eskom has lost additional generation units this morning, increasing unplanned breakdowns to 14,200MW as at 09:25. Along with a higher demand of about 600MW, necessitates load shedding to move up from stage two to stage four from 10:00 today until 23:00," the state-run firm said.

Stage two load shedding allows up to 2,000 MW to be shed, while stage four calls for 4,000 MW to be rotationally cut off.

Under stage four load shedding, South Africans have to endure unscheduled power cuts at any given time without any warning for close to four hours at a time.

"We remind customers that load shedding at stage four is no cause for alarm as the system is being effectively controlled," Eskom said.

Load shedding is a responsible act and highly controlled process, implemented to protect the country form a national blackout, the utility said.

This fresh round of rolling blackouts comes on the back of an already shrinking economy, and will further impact economic growth as South Africa heads into the festive season and the height of the country's tourism influx.

As the country's major electricity supplier, Eskom has maintained monopoly on power supply, leaving South Africa few alternatives for additional energy supplies.

Eskom, the world's fourth largest coal-burning power plant, has been haunted by poor management and alleged corruption, two major factors that have contributed to the worsening power crisis.

Experts estimate that this new round of load shedding, which began on December 5, has cost the country five billion rand (about 340 million U.S. dollars) in economic losses.

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