South Africa’s power cuts hit factory output on island 3,200km away

Eskom's inability to meet demand is not only hurting South Africa's economy but affecting manufacturers on an island more than 3,200km away.

TFG, the owner of Foschini clothing brand, has fared better than competitors after it expanded its local factories and bought new ones over the past seven years.
TFG, the owner of Foschini clothing brand, has fared better than competitors after it expanded its local factories and bought new ones over the past seven years. (123RF.COM/ File photo )

The Eskom's inability to meet demand is not only hurting South Africa's economy but affecting manufacturers on an island more than 3,200km away.

Chronic power shortages have reduced demand for Mauritian manufactured goods by South African retailers, the main buyer of products from Mauritius, Arif Currimjee, the outgoing chair of the Mauritius Export Association, said in an emailed response to questions. The outages pose a “downside risk” to growth in the industry after two straight years of recovery, he said.  

The power cuts, which intensified in 2022, have led to a slump in demand, increased costs and reduced trading hours for South African retailers. Their sales have declined for four of five months, compared with a year earlier. 

Sales to South Africa of manufactured goods from Mauritius fell almost 29% to 2.07 billion rupees (R841.5m) in the final quarter of last year, compared with the prior three months.  

The Foschini Group in March estimated the outages cut its retail revenue for the 2023 financial year by about R1bn and robbed it of 345,000 trading hours in the 11 months ending February 28. 

Eskom chairman Mpho Makwana said last week the utility is only expected to return to “healthy energy availability” by March 2025.

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