‘Challenged’ Eskom runs job ad for new CEO with ‘integrity and ethics’

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'Challenged' Eskom runs job ad for new CEO with 'integrity and ethics'
'Challenged' Eskom runs job ad for new CEO with 'integrity and ethics'

Africa-Press – South-Africa. A leader with unquestionable integrity and ethics” with a track record of “turning around commercially and operationally challenged organisations” is needed to take the helm at SA’s embattled power utility Eskom.

Eskom on Sunday published a quarter-page advertisement for a new group chief executive following the resignation of current boss André de Ruyter in mid-December last year. De Ruyter, 52, had assumed his position on Christmas Day in 2019 and is the utility’s 11th CEO since 2007, when load shedding was first implemented.

“The job of Eskom group chief executive in its current configuration is impossible. There is a lack of support and when this became clear to me, it became fundamentally untenable (to continue) given the repeated attacks on me and Eskom’s strategy by senior members of government,” De Ruyter told News24 after he resigned.

This followed a barrage of public attacks on him led by Mineral Resources and Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe, and Public Enterprises Minister Pravin Gordhan’s and President Cyril Ramaphosa’s subsequent failure to publicly support him and his management.

The requirements for De Ruyter’s replacement include:

The incumbent will be responsible for “building an ethos of excellence” and to ensure “efficient and sustainable delivery of electricity supply”. He or she should also possess a track record of working in a “complex environment” and “leading a business turnaround”. The deadline for applications is 27 February.

The power utility has been struggling to keep the lights on and load shedding has been implemented every day of 2023. SA’s governing party, the ANC, has said it wants to end load shedding by the end of the year by reprioritising the national budget and declaring a national state of disaster.

De Ruyter’s three years with some change at Eskom have been marked by death threats, sabotage, relentless accusations and investigations, the Covid-19 pandemic, and a major lack of urgency from government to heed calls for additional capacity.

According to the job ad, Eskom employs 40 421 people and has annual revenues of R246.5 billion. It has debts of just under R400 billion, Bloomberg reported.

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