‘Nersa-approved increases threaten basic living standards’

The Executive Mayor of the Midvaal Local Municipality, Alderman Peter Teixeira, says Nersa-approved electricity increases threaten the basic living standards of South Africans and will further drive millions into poverty.

MEYERTON. – The Midvaal Local Municipality says it has been inundated with complaints from across communities with residents bemoaning how expensive it has become to access electricity.

This comes after the Midvaal Local Municipality on 1 July 2024 implemented the National Energy Regulator of South Africa’s (NERSA) 12.72% increase in electricity tariffs, along with other the local municipalities across the country.

According to independent estimates, electricity prices have grown by more than 450% since 2008, a tariff increase that is six times higher than the inflation rate.

Teixeira said in a statement: “These increases have had and continue to have a catastrophic impact on South Africans, especially low-income households who must choose between basic items such as groceries or electricity.”

“Although the right to electricity is not explicitly expressed in the text of the Constitution, it is fundamental for maintaining basic living standards.”

“Without electricity, people are deprived of basic necessities, such as lighting, refrigeration of food items and the simple ability to take a warm bath, especially in this harsh winter season,” Teixeira said in a statement.We have been inundated with complaints from across communities with residents bemoaning how expensive it has become to access electricity

According to Teixeira, electricity reduces reliance on harmful fuels like coal and wood which have been proven to cause respiratory issues.

The Midvaal Local Municipality has been inundated with complaints from across communities with residents bemoaning how expensive it has become to access electricity

“Access to electricity allows people to engage in income-generating activities, reducing poverty and improving their economic status.”

“Section 10 of the South African Constitution protects the right to human dignity, and electricity enables individuals to access a basic standard of living, thereby contributing to the realisation of human dignity.”

“Access to electricity is quickly becoming a luxury that many ordinary South Africans will not be able to afford,” says Teixeira.

According to Teixeira, South Africans are already struggling with the high cost of living, and the double-digit increase in electricity tariffs will further drive them into a life of poverty.

“The unaffordability of electricity may lead people to take drastic measures such as connecting to the grid illegally, further weakening municipalities’ revenue collection and their ability to provide services,” he said.

Teixeira says, that should this trend continue, it will lead to energy deprivation, further pushing up the scales against the poor who are already struggling in this economy.

“Ordinary South Africans cannot be expected to carry the burden of the rampant corruption and mismanagement that has been so prevalent at Eskom.”

“Instead of addressing the institutional challenges that Eskom faces and providing tangible reforms to the current energy crisis, the government seems determined to pass the cost on to South Africans through constant and endless billion-rand bailouts (carried by taxpayers) and the NERSA-approved increases.”

“Municipalities such as Midvaal must now face the full wrath of angry residents who are struggling to stay afloat in this economy and keep their lights on,” he concluded.

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