BUSINESS NEWS - A day after energy regulator Nersa approved four electricity trading licences, Eskom announced on Wednesday night that it will challenge the decision in the high court.
Brian Day, chair of the South African Independent Power Producers Association (Saippa), considers this “a regressive step and against the excellent progress being made in reforms”.
Moneyweb reported that Nersa approved the trading licences of Africa GreenCo, Discovery Green, Green Electron Market (GEM) and CBI Electric Apollo.
This brought the number of licensed traders to 10, including Eskom’s own National Transmission Company of South Africa (NTCSA).
Eskom said in a statement it will take Nersa’s decision on review in the high court.
Eskom’s objection
It objects to Nersa allowing more than one licensee to provide electricity in the same area.
“The trading licences were approved without the necessary trading rules for the industry being developed,” Eskom says and points out that the regulator members acknowledged this during their deliberations.
Eskom says this infringes upon and breaches Nersa’s own rules and the licences issued to Eskom by Nersa.
“Eskom disagrees with this decision and has instructed its attorneys to initiate legal proceedings in the High Court.”
Moneyweb reported that the regulator indeed decided during the same meeting to develop a framework and rules for trading and for cross-border trading to clarify the applicable rules.
Encouraging competition
Nersa full-time regulator member for electricity, Nhlanhla Gumede, said during the regulator meeting that there is no limit to the number of traders allowed to operate in a distribution area. In fact, trading licences apply nationally and are not limited to a single distribution area.
He said Nersa must encourage competition in the electricity supply market.
He said Nersa does not grant distribution licences but licences to operate distribution networks – the wires. According to Gumede, these licences exclude trading. Only one such licensee is permitted in an area to prevent “getting the wires crossed” and creating health and safety risks.
Read more on Caxton publication, The Citizen
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