In South Africa, electricty load-shedding forces companies to scale back just as the country was recovering from the Covid-19 health crisis.Cities such as Johanesburg struggle with an overburdened power grid and failing infrastructures.
2022 has been one of the worst years for South Africans in terms of power cuts. The country was prey to more than 200 days of load shedding as state-owned Eskom, which supplies more than 90% of the country’s electricity, failed to produce enough power.
After a lull over Christmas, power cuts are slowly resuming.
The downturn is due to ill-managed ageing coal-fired power stations that regularly breakdown.
In addition, these blackouts are having a direct impact on the economy and growth, just as the country was recovering from the Covid-19 health crisis.
In Johannesburg, electricity cuts in combination with the persistent rain has the city struggling with an overburdened grid and failing infrastructure. The eastern cape has also witnessed high volumes of electricity interruptions.
Eskom is responding to high volumes of electricity supply interruptions across the Eastern Cape
The department of mineral resources and energy signed 13 new power generation agreements to bring close to 1 800 megawatts online over the next few years in an attempt to remedy the current energy crisis.
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