JOHANNESBURG: South Africa's ailing economy is expected to take a further beating as the country battles its worst power outages in seven years because of surging demand for electricity.
The state-owned power firm Eskom has been struggling to keep the lights on since November with consumer demand repeatedly eclipsing supply.
Now, with heavy industry told to reduce consumption by at least 10 percent and the country's growth forecast revised downward, the government is scrambling to allay investor jitters and calm public angst.
Eskom began rolling blackouts, or load shedding, in Africa's most advanced economy in 2008, as its crumbling infrastructure has battled to meet ballooning demand since the end of apartheid in 1994.
Government was warned as far back as 1998 about a possible system collapse in a policy document presented to parliament.
But it was only in 2007 that work began at Medupi, in the northeast, to build the country's first new power station in 20 years.
The first unit of the 4,764-megawatt facility was initially expected to deliver power in 2012, but numerous delays have since pushed that deadline to June this year.
Another facility under construction near the eastern town of Witbank is not expected to start delivering power until December 2016.
"The potential impacts that load shedding will have on business, business confidence and consumers alike is inestimable," said South Africa Chamber of Commerce and Industry chief Vusi Khumalo.
Henk Langenhoven, chief economist for a federation representing the energy-intensive steel and engineering industries estimated that electricity disruptions could slash production by 23 percent.
He said the detrimental impact of insufficient power and the "cumulative effect of the uncertainties does not bode well for 2015."
And with an economy heavily dependent on gold and platinum mining, the central bank last month revised its 2015 growth forecast down from 2.5 percent to 2.2 percent -- specifically fingering the country's electricity woes.
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