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Cost of power outages to South African economy significant: president

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Melkbosstrand North of Cape Town South Africa Power Lines Feed Electricity To the National Grid From the Koeberg Nuclear Power Station. (Photo by: Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

With South Africa still grappling with its energy challenges, President Cyril Ramaphosa said on Monday that the cost of power outages to the country’s economy is significant.

“It contributes to investor unease at a time when we are trying to attract more domestic and foreign capital to South Africa and to improve our global rankings on ease of doing business,” Ramaphosa said.

The president conceded in his official letter that last week’s load shedding which disrupted business running has had a negative impact on the economy.

South Africa has been hit by days of blackouts which dealt a heavy blow to economic activities and seriously affected people’s lives.

On a seasonally adjusted quarterly basis, the country’s gross domestic product shrank 3.2 percent in the first quarter of 2019 and rolling power outages were cited as the reason behind the decline, according to local observers on energy statistics.

Ramaphosa said the newly-released Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) would address these energy problems.

“The IRP takes into account the constraints facing (state-owned electricity utility) Eskom, and deals with the desire by electricity users to have alternatives to meet their energy requirements,” he said.

The IRP, approved by the South African cabinet on October 17, is the national electricity infrastructure development plan based on least cost-electricity supply and demand balance, which takes into account security of supply and the environment.

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