Eskom’s existential crisis – CFO bares all to Yelland

Loading player...
CAPE TOWN — Unless Eskom gets the tariff hike they’re asking for, the power utility will have to ask government for another R83bn in three to five years’ time, says its new CFO, Calib Cassim. In the most revealing interview yet, Cassim admits to Chris Yelland, one of the country’s top energy journalists, that Eskom is currently “using one credit card to pay off another –unsustainable under any circumstances.” Municipal arrear debt amounts to R18bn, growing at about R450m per month, while Soweto arrear debt adds a further R17bn, growing at about R50m per month. In total, arrear debt is growing by R500m per month. From the horse’s mouth, these numbers. Here’s a Cassim quote that could either have you fast-tracking or cancelling your immigration plans, depending on the lenses you wear. “If we go down, we bring down the sovereign and the economy. For me, the best thing that has ever happened is the presidential task team, and the fact that we have the ear of the president who understands the urgency. He used the words “financial crisis” in his state-of-the-nation address, and this is the best way to describe where we are, hand-in-hand with our operational challenges.” - Chris Bateman Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
11 Feb 2019 9AM English South Africa Investing · Business News

Other recent episodes

BNC#8; John Endres Q&A - Jobs, politics and the investment freeze no one wants to admit

South Africa’s future hinges on one simple truth: jobs come from growth, and growth comes from political choices. This sharp discussion unpacks how policy, ideology, and global alignment are choking investment and costing livelihoods. Inside the ANC, paralysis, fear, and patronage block reform - despite clear evidence of what works…
10 Apr 9AM 32 min

Roy Tilley: The municipal "Rates Randage Monster" strangling South Africa's property owners

Durban businessman Roy Tilley says a deeply flawed municipal rates formula is pushing property owners and small businesses toward a financial breaking point. In this interview, the Queensmead industrial property owner explains why he believes ever-rising rates are becoming impossible to absorb, hurting tenants, jobs and investment, and argues that…
10 Apr 9AM 20 min