Energy

Eskom asks for huge electricity price increase

South Africa’s state-owned power utility asked the electricity regulator for permission to raise prices by 36% in its 2026 financial year, far exceeding inflation in the continent’s most industrialized economy.

Eskom told the National Energy Regulator of South Africa that it sought the hike because prior increases were “inadequate” for its financial needs, it said in a submission to Nersa. The nation’s annual inflation rate for August was 4.4%.

South Africa has grappled with rising electricity costs that have roughly tripled over the past 14 years. The cash-strapped utility, which amassed R400 billion in debt, has benefited from multiple bailouts from the National Treasury to keep its power plants running.

Conditions of that support mean that the loss-making company can’t take on additional loans. 

The company, which is responsible for most of South Africa’s power provision, has for years struggled to provide consistent electricity supply, crippling businesses and economic growth.

While the country has gone more than 177 days without power cuts in 2024, record blackouts last year prompted many rich households and businesses to spend thousands of dollars each on clean-energy solutions. 

“Eskom has made its revenue application based on the costs it will incur to efficiently provide electricity to the customer,” CFO Calib Cassim said in a statement.

“It is a critical component in ensuring Eskom continues to provide reliable electricity services while improving its financial sustainability.”

The utility has applied for a 11.8% increase in fiscal 2027 and a 9.1% hike in 2028.

“Although government’s debt support assists with liquidity requirements, it does not adequately enhance our long-term financial sustainability,” Eskom said.

“The government, through the minister of finance, has stressed that Eskom needs to migrate toward cost-reflective tariffs that will make it sustainable.” 

The government has also said that it will not continue providing further support beyond its current guarantee, leaving the power utility to apply for the above-inflation tariff increases.

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