Disaster South Africa in 'National State of Disaster' following collapse of power grid - Saint Mandela's legacy most affected


On Thursday, South Africa declared a National State of Disaster as the country's power grid continues to collapse despite scheduled power outages lasting up to 12 hours by the state run power company Eskom, which supplies 90 percent of the entire country's power.

According to a statement from the Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs, Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, "Considering the magnitude, severity, and progression of the severe electricity supply constraint."

The National Disaster Management Centre (NDMC) declared the "national state of disaster to prevent the possible progression to a total blackout from occurring and taking into account the possibility to augment existing measures already undertaken by the organs of state to deal with electricity supply constraint."

Screenshot_20230209_142601_Brave.jpg

According to NPR, "South Africa's power crisis is crippling one of Africa's biggest economies and threatening the reelection prospects of the ruling party: the African National Congress."

In order to prevent the collapse of the country's power grid, Eskom has scheduled load sheddings that last up to 12 hours a day. In South Africa the scheduled power outages have been going on for 16 years and, according to NPR, President Cyril Ramaphosa and "the ruling African National Congress Party has done very little to prevent its imminent collapse."

Small businesses make up one third of South Africa's gross domestic product. Eskom has relied up to 80 percent on coal to power their grids but maintenance and updating of the country's coal facilities has lagged over several decades. Several power plants have broken down from being overused from demand by the continent's most industrialized economy and its need for energy.

Al Jazeera reports Eskom also holds 400 billion rands in debt, or roughly $22.6 billion. Further, South Africa's debt as a country rests at $130 billion and half its population is unemployed.

In 2022, the World Bank gave South Africa $497 million to decommission its largest coal power plant and "convert it to a renewable energy source."

President Ramaphosa was originally scheduled to appear at this year's World Economic Forum but canceled to deal with the country's energy crisis. "Load shedding is more than an inconvenience, it is more than a disruption, it is a threat to the progress of our country and the development of its people," he said.

Ramaphosa has a scheduled state of the nation address on Thursday and "South Africans say they are hoping the address will have concrete solutions as neither the government nor the Eskom leadership has done so," reports Al Jazeera.

Another business owner originally from Zimbabwe, Prisca Horonga, said, "You have to wait until the power returns … we cannot afford a generator, so we lose clients all the time."

Horonga runs Corner Cafe in Cape Town where the load sheddings last roughly 10 hours a day.

Beautician Nadine Iqani said, "I am making a third of the income pre-the load shedding times, and I have clients shouting at me."

"It is just a nightmare … working long hours, including weekends, to accommodate clients," Iqani said.

NPR reporter Mpho Lakaje spoke with a small business owner, Mohato Mokoka, in a township of Johannesburg called Soweto. Mokoka's ice production business was failing due to scheduled outages, known as load shedding.

"We're sitting at a production rate now of about 10- to 15 percent from your 100 percent production," Mokoka said.


According to NPR, "South Africa's power crisis is crippling one of Africa's biggest economies and threatening the reelection prospects of the ruling party: the African National Congress."
Has your country ever shit the bed, and you thought, "this'll be bad for my job?"
 
Way back when, South Africa, like Rhodesia, was a well-run country. Shit worked, people had enough to eat. With the changes in government, we've seen both countries head straight into the shitter. "Zimbabwe" went through a famine, for crying out loud. So this is no surprise whatsoever. Believe a great deal of the money intended for infrastructure maintenance and improvements in both countries ended up in Swiss bank accounts. Shitholes today, shitholes tomorrow, shitholes forever...

African-Socialism will never get the blame and they will never learn.

Hopefully Batswana and Rwanda build walls to keep them out.
 
That sounds familiar
What’s America’s unemployment rate again.

And I mean unemployment including those in unemployment those looking for jobs those lauds off etc
Well, it's nowhere near 50% of the adult population. The problem that we burgers have is too much of our working population is in middle management and we don't have enough skilled labor.
 
Well, it's nowhere near 50% of the adult population. The problem that we burgers have is too much of our working population is in middle management and we don't have enough skilled labor.
And it's not just the problem that 50% are unemployed in SA, it's that 50% are unemployable.

I'd guess the number of truly unemployable adults in the US is somewhere south of 15%. Even Guatemalans who can barely speak Spanish (much less English) can get work in a chicken processing factory.
 
And it's not just the problem that 50% are unemployed in SA, it's that 50% are unemployable.

I'd guess the number of truly unemployable adults in the US is somewhere south of 15%. Even Guatemalans who can barely speak Spanish (much less English) can get work in a chicken processing factory.
You say unemployable, I say great underground rappers that will ruin a movie with a super dope concept.
 
Well, well, well. If it isn't the consequences of your actions huh. How tragic.
We aren't at that point yet. We save that one-liner when South Africa is a necropolis where every black person is dead and corpses are littering the streets piled up in huge piles.

Right now, we are at "just another day in helltopia" in South Africa. Consequence mode won't be achieved until at least 98% of the black population are dead by their own black hands.
 
Once I have time I definitely want to know more. We almost never hear about South Africa in the states, all I know is that it's not been very good recently.
It's basically just going on as usual. The big thing is naturally the power issue and then the economy is doing pretty shitty, but the economy hasn't been doing well since the 70s...
1676014209171.png
To think the Rand use to be more valuable than the Dollar...

So things aren't great but it's like the frog in the boiling water thing, it's not going badly rapidly enough for anyone to particularly care enough to do something.
 
Wasn't the South Africa government destroying white owned farms and chasing out white farmers only to beg for them to come back once they realized that the white farmers were responsible for the reason why there was food?

It was some country in Africa if it wasn't SA
Zimbabwe did and Mugabe didnt even give it to blacks who could farm he gave the land to his cronies to biy loyalty. Most just left the land to go fallow so agricultural output collapsed. They also used to round up black farmhands both during and after the war and torture them en masse or force them to Mugabes "political rallies" where theyd be beaten and/or raped if they didnt cheer on their glorious leader. A great book on it is Mugabe and the White African.
 
So, according to a chap living there, this is just a formality to acknowledge the low-level state of emergency that has been going on for at least the past six months now.

Though I can't help but think that they're looking at a complete grid collapse in a few years, along with an economy that just withers away due to an inability to sustain any sort of industry.
 
A lot of the non-SA parts of southern Africa seem to be the best-run parts of the continent, and if it weren't for AIDS running rampant might actually be quite decent places to live by 3rd-World standards. With SA having had so much more money and infrastructure to begin with, it's embarrassing how much they're screwing up compared to their neighbors.
Botswana is doing OK. What are they doing that everyone else isn’t?
Africa should be a paradise - everything grows year round and there’s wealth, minerals, everything. Instead it’s violence, disease, and incompetence
 
large majority of the niggers was better off too. better standard of living, less crime, more security, some were given their own little pseudo kingdoms where they could larp as kangz. the only ones who were worse off were the upper/ruling class niggers, who resented the fact that they were forever locked out of power by apartheid.
well, now apartheid is gone and the situation has reversed - quality of life for the large majority of niggers is declining fast, but the upper/ruling class niggers can now enjoy all the state power they dreamt of for so long.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Moths
Way back when, South Africa, like Rhodesia, was a well-run country. Shit worked, people had enough to eat. With the changes in government, we've seen both countries head straight into the shitter. "Zimbabwe" went through a famine, for crying out loud. So this is no surprise whatsoever. Believe a great deal of the money intended for infrastructure maintenance and improvements in both countries ended up in Swiss bank accounts. Shitholes today, shitholes tomorrow, shitholes forever...
But they got rid of whitey and that's what's important.
 
Botswana is doing OK. What are they doing that everyone else isn’t?
Used the money they got from mining to invest in education, industry and decent infrastructure because unlike the rest of Africa they seem to be capable of thinking more than a week ahead. Also lucked out in having governments that actually put the wellbeing of the nation above personal interests.
 
Botswana is doing OK. What are they doing that everyone else isn’t?
Africa should be a paradise - everything grows year round and there’s wealth, minerals, everything. Instead it’s violence, disease, and incompetence
Seretse Khama wasnt a total retard. When Botswana gained independence in 1966 it had just 7 miles of roads, and one of the lowest rates of literacy globally. Between 1966 and 2018 its economy grew 10x faster than the world average. Its still got its issues and was fucked hard by aids but by comparison to the rest of Africa its a paradise.
 
Used the money they got from mining to invest in education, industry and decent infrastructure because unlike the rest of Africa they seem to be capable of thinking more than a week ahead. Also lucked out in having governments that actually put the wellbeing of the nation above personal interests.
Botswana's native population look different from the we wuz kangz type of groid, too.

Though, they're going to be over run by Indians sooner or later. Once it's full of pajeets, it will revert to a shithole.
 
Botswana's native population look different from the we wuz kangz type of groid, too.

Though, they're going to be over run by Indians sooner or later. Once it's full of pajeets, it will revert to a shithole.
Yeah the Tswana look weirdly way less aggressive than other tribes in the region despite also being Bantu. They also don't have the same chip on their shoulder against whites, some of the farmers who fled from Zimbabwe and South Africa settled in Botswana.
 
Back