Daryl Johnston calls load shedding a “crisis” for the City’s network infrastructure

Daryl Johnston calls load shedding a “crisis” for the City’s network infrastructure


»Daryl Johnston calls load shedding a “crisis” for the City’s network infrastructure«

Daryl Johnston, a member of the City of Tshwane’s Mayoral Committee (MMC) for Utilities and Regional Operations, describes load shedding as a “crisis” for the network infrastructure of the city.

This is because the utility company increased load shedding to Stage 6 in the evenings and Stage 4 in the mornings.

“Raised levels of load shedding are a crisis for our municipality, affecting both the condition of our electricity network, as well as our ability to attend to outages.

“Stage 6 load shedding means that rolling blackouts will affect regions of our city two to three times a day for a total time without electricity at a minimum of six hours per day. Our networks were never designed for load shedding and continuously turning the network on and off has a major impact on the condition of our network infrastructure,” he said.

Johnston highlighted that load shedding might result in prolonged outages owing to infrastructure theft, vandalism, and overloading.

“[As] the frequency of load shedding increases, City resources will be stretched by just switching areas on and off. The same teams needed to perform this switching also play a critical role in electricity network repair and maintenance work and they will have significantly less time available to work on restoring electricity for non-load-shedding related outages.

“[Municipal] teams are working determinedly to face this immense pressure on our electricity network, but the reality is that our system was not designed to cope with this situation. The heavy rains we have been experiencing recently are also making this situation worse, with wet weather increasing the likelihood of equipment faults, and this situation is very serious for the entire Tshwane,” he said.

The MMC asked households to turn off appliances during load shedding and to only put them back on after 10 to 20 minutes when power is restored in order to prevent energy surges.

“The surges generated as power is turned back on causes areas to trip minutes after having been restored, causing extended outages in some area. Making sure not to have energy-intensive appliances on during peak times – particularly in the evening from 6pm to 9pm.

“We continue to pursue long-term interventions to see what we as the City can do to alleviate this continuous challenge. In the interim, we all need to work together to best manage this difficult time,” he said.


»Daryl Johnston calls load shedding a “crisis” for the City’s network infrastructure«

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