This was published in the TimesLive on 29 August 2024 under the same title.
In retrospect, South Africa's electricity delivery in the last fifteen years is most curious. Several times during this period, RSA has had the worst stages of load-shedding and, thus, energy supply instability. In a post-2017 period, acutely in 2023, exceptions have been the rule. There is renewed vigour to restore the RSA electricity supply sector to stability. The country is on its way to fewer supply interruptions required for economic growth and investment.
No less notable than the
primary process reengineering interventions at ESKOM have been the infusion of
a new, able, and somewhat strategic c-suite anchored by executive authority
vibrancy of a sector respected and Ramaphosa-appointed Minister of Energy, Dr
Kgosientsho Ramokgopa. Of all the variables associated with the almost total
collapse of the national electricity grid and across value chain challenges, a
recalibration of c-suite leadership made the difference.
From the Board
Chairperson, Mteto Nyathi, CEO Dan Marokane, all other heads of critical
divisions, and the remarkable various heads of power stations, four are women:
umbokoto. As a group of people connected by skill, grit, attributes, knowledge,
and the mission of keeping South Africa's lights and industrial machines on,
the ESKOM leadership presides over a tribe we must celebrate for letting the
nation thrive. Their tribalism is just about a good one for our well-being.
Without reflecting on
earlier poor leadership choices and decisions, it is not difficult to realise
how past national policy inconsistencies and the preoccupation with complying
with disguised structural adjustment programs packaged as just transition
initiatives have stolen development hours and years from "we the
people."
The primacy of
electricity supply to 'we the people' got replaced by the exigencies of our
commitments to a global carbon emissions reduction agenda. As it would be, as a
nation, we have learned from the experience of countries that entered just
transition programs without decimating their energy supply. This learning was a
function of the commissioned competence to lead ESKOM.
This national
electricity recovery experience exposes truths about the existence of talent
and competence in South Africa, with which other areas of dysfunction could be
fixed. Applied correctly and given space, RSA's engineering prowess can
catapult the competitive development trajectory.
Besides the dangerous
preoccupation of those in political leadership to claim technical knowledge in
areas in which they are not qualified, RSA must try to discover and assign the
element of truth in each national experience and each divergent trend of
opinion to its due place. We must elevate the respect of professionals and see
whether the main lines of practical policy implementation will emerge. The
vocation of politics should recede to its function of translating interests as
the currency of politics into policies professionals must, and if lawful and constitutional,
loyally execute within the means available.
Given the competence of
the inaugural political leadership of democratic South Africa, most of whom
were not necessarily politicians but anti-apartheid activists swallowed into
politics by the exigencies of fighting apartheid, RSA made the grievous error
of decimating the significance of professionals as the substrate of public
service and state formation at the altar of an otherwise low barriers of entry
vocation of public representatives based politics. This anomaly has seen the
usurping of technical prowess required in certain public sector positions and
roles to create space for the 'dream deferred' brigade of politicians committed
to 'interests' emanating from shared or otherwise ignorance of what an economy
as sophisticated as the one South Africa needs to stay competitive.
The winds of change in
ESKOM and other areas, like what is being reported in KZN crime fighting
initiatives driven by a career police commissioner, the border management
authority, and 'tyre-hit-the-road' experienced officials in pockets of
excellence all over RSA must be curated for scaling across sectors. The GNU
spirit should be exploited to explore new areas where professionals could be
commissioned. In local government, for instance, a policy must be determined to
return the c-suite roles of Town Secretary, City or Town Planning, Town
Engineering, and Treasury. In municipalities, a state's true nature and
government meet with society; the household experience defines the stability of
a democratic order.
The most significant and
instructive event in a post-de Ruyter ESKOM experience is a renewed commitment
by home-grown competence and leadership to take up its rightful place in areas
of engineering, commerce, management and leadership, and modern political
leadership that does not feed on the belief that South Africa does not have
talent. Less choked by the GNU context, President Ramaphosa should now
accelerate the commissioning of appropriate talent into the public
sector.
The brute truth is,
notwithstanding our discontent about the RSA education occurrence and its
challenges of producing 'some' of the skill the economy requires, there are
scaffolds of talent we can stand on to build. In our diverse nature, we have
all been trained to love the implementation muscle of our development needs.
Nevertheless, we must supplement the doing more with national interest
narrative approaches from history and the qualitative methods of other
vocational requirements, especially politics. As we open space for
professionals to take charge of executing the lawful policies of the government
of the day, there is extraordinarily little acknowledgement in conventional
politics of the predictable (whether ‘rational’ or ‘behavioural’) adjustments
politicians will have to make in response to changes that might be misconstrued
as intended to constrain their actions.
The professionalisation
winds of change drive the continuing transformations of the public
administration and management and are, paradoxically, making our increasingly
politicians-run world "a politiciocracy", ever less mechanistic and
predictable. Equally, professionals have yet to succeed in one important lesson
from recent experience. That is the need for a science that can alter South
Africa to engage with itself, participate in debate and promote public
conversation about what politicians should do to make their professional
vocations meaningful without being a professional liability. The tracks dealing
with capable states in the National Dialogue will hopefully engage on this
matter. Otherwise, we will again be on a "umxoxo" journey. CUT!!!
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