ESKOM CRISIS

Sapa|

04 November 2009 18:46

'Unfair to only blame Maroga' - Hogan

Article tools

Print
Send

Services

Subscribe to newsletters Feeds
Become a Facebook fan Follow Moneyweb on Twitter

Public Enterprises minister says embattled Eskom CEO is not solely responsible.

Embattled Eskom CEO Jacob Maroga is not solely responsible for the power utility's problems, Public Enterprises Minister Barbara Hogan said on Wednesday.

Replying to questions in the National Assembly, she said it was unfair to blame only Maroga.

Earlier, fin24.com reported that President Jacob Zuma had intervened to prevent Maroga being sacked by the Eskom board.

As a consequence, the board had been embroiled in an fierce dispute with government - led by Hogan and her deputy Enoch Godongwana.

"Meanwhile, Eskom is apparently leaderless and the electricity giant's lips are sealed. Official spokespersons have for days been embarrassed by requests for information, and unable to provide answers," the website reported.

Hogan's spokesman had also declined to comment on the issue, as had the presidency.

Fin24.com said the main reason for the board's dissatisfaction with Maroga was ostensibly his handling of a report by Susan Olsen.

In July 2007, six months before the electricity crisis, Olsen, an American energy consultant, warned Maroga in a comprehensive report that Eskom's coal division "would collapse under its own weight" unless serious steps were taken.

Democratic Alliance spokesman Cobus Schmidt said later on Wednesday Zuma had "absolutely no business telling the Eskom board that they cannot fire Jacob Maroga".

"Mr Maroga's tenure has been marred by all number of problems, and it is clear that the Eskom board has lost faith in him.

"For there to be political interference at this stage is simply untenable."

Schmidt said Maroga should be dismissed for several reasons.

These included his decision to fire Olsen after she warned in a confidential memo to Maroga that Eskom's coal procurement practices  were placing electricity supplies in jeopardy.

Maroga appeared to do little to act on Olsen's advice, and ultimately South Africa endured a period of "load shedding" which cost the country approximately R2 billion per day, Schmidt said.



Article tools

ADD YOUR COMMENT

Name:
Surname:
Email:
Subject:
Comment:

Similar articles

Articles with the same people

Articles with the same company

JSE TODAY
NEED MORE INFORMATION? Please leave your details and we'll get back to you. information supplied by Nedbank Online Share Trading
All Share
Daily indicators
Winners & Losers
All share
JSE Quickprice

Blogs

Felicity Duncan

The Iraq war is over

But Obama says US needs to deal with economic troubles at home.

The Investment Case - SABMiller

Are the brewer’s prospects enough to drive you to drink?

Tracey Swanepoel

Meetings: Work? Or just a waste of time?

Decision-free zones are drains on productivity.