Eskom implements loadshedding AGAIN!
The pathetic Eskom has done it again! It has implemented Stage 2 loadshedding from 12:00 Friday until 23:00 on Sunday night.
The loadshedding has been exacerbated by the forced shutdown of five generating units at the Medupi Power Station as a result of the inability to get coal into the units due to the heavy rain in the Lephalale area last night.
The area experienced 65mm of rain, which added to the constraints caused by the heavy rains due to cyclone storm Eloise over the past two weeks.
Really? In Scotland and northern Europe rain is experienced for most of the year. No load shedding there. This is not for the first time that is raining in South Africa. In fact, its has been raining here since beginning of time. What Eskom has been doing for all this years?…and decades? It’s like building a house without a roof and preying that it’s not going to rain. Downright stupid, isn’t it?
Eskom has implemented contingency plans and deployed additional resources to deal with the heavy rainfalls in the Mpumalanga and Limpopo areas, and the teams are working hard to return as many of these units to service as soon as possible (what a beautiful PR stunt is this).
Eskom claims it currently has 4 114MW on planned maintenance, while another 15 739MW of capacity is unavailable due to unplanned maintenance.
Eskom would like to urge the public to reduce electricity usage in order to help us minimize loadshedding. The system remains vulnerable and unpredictable. Loadshedding is implemented as a last resort in order to protect the integrity of the system.
As previously communicated, Eskom continues to implement reliability maintenance during this period, and thus the system will continue to be constrained, with the risk of loadshedding remaining elevated.
So, get ready for more load shedding. Thank you, Eskom.