Eskom Holdings SOC Limited. Standard Presentation July 2014

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Transcription:

Eskom Holdings SOC Limited Standard Presentation July 2014

Disclaimer This presentation does not constitute or form part of and should not be construed as, an offer to sell, or the solicitation or invitation of any offer to buy or subscribe for or underwrite or otherwise acquire, securities of Eskom Holdings SOC Limited ( Eskom ), any holding company or any of its subsidiaries in any jurisdiction or any other person, nor an inducement to enter into any investment activity. No part of this presentation, nor the fact of its distribution, should form the basis of, or be relied on in connection with, any contract or commitment or investment decision whatsoever. This presentation does not constitute a recommendation regarding any securities of Eskom or any other person. Certain statements in this presentation regarding Eskom s business operations may constitute forward looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical fact included in this presentation, including, without limitation, those regarding the financial position, business strategy, management plans and objectives for future operations of Eskom are forward looking statements. Forward-looking statements are not intended to be a guarantee of future results, but instead constitute Eskom s current expectations based on reasonable assumptions. Forecasted financial information is based on certain material assumptions. These assumptions include, but are not limited to continued normal levels of operating performance and electricity demand in the Customer Services, Distribution and Transmission divisions and operational performance in the Generation and Primary Energy divisions consistent with historical levels, and incremental capacity additions through the Group Capital division at investment levels and rates of return consistent with prior experience, as well as achievements of planned productivity improvements throughout the business activities. Actual results could differ materially from those projected in any forward-looking statements due to risks, uncertainties and other factors. Eskom neither intends to nor assumes any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. In preparation of this document certain publicly available data was used. While the sources used are generally regarded as reliable the content has not been verified. Eskom does not accept any responsibility for using any such information. 2

Context of this presentation This presentation consists of a set of slides which provide an overview of Eskom and are based on information contained in the 2014 Integrated Report. Users are encouraged to add, delete or adapt slides to suit the requirements of their particular presentation. Figures are quoted in rands (SA), unless otherwise indicated. The exchange rate applied was that which applied at the end of the financial year (ch 2014). The presentation is updated annually to coincide with the release of Eskom s annual and interim financial results. The presentation is in a Power Point format and the design and colours have been specifically selected to complement our corporate identity, and for legibility. Comments, suggestions or requests may be directed to the Corporate Affairs Division. 3

Content of the presentation About Eskom Business performance Business update Financial performance Awards and recognition 4

About Eskom Strategic 100% state-owned electricity utility, strongly supported by the government Supplies approximately 95% of South Africa s electricity Performed 201 788 household electrification connections during the year, the highest in a single year since 2002 As at ch 2014: 5.2 million customers (2013: 5.0 million) Net maximum generating capacity of 42.0GW (2013: 41.9GW) 17.4GW of new generation capacity being built, of which 6.1GW already commissioned Approximately 359 337km of cables and power lines 46 919 employees, inclusive of fixedterm contractors, in the group (2013: 47 295) Moody s and S&P stand-alone credit ratings: b1 and b- respectively with a negative outlook Number of electrification connections Number 154 250 Generation capacity 30 September 2013 Hydro Pumped Storage Nuclear Gas 139 881 5 201 788 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 1.4% 3.4% 4.4% 5.7% 42.0GW of nominal capacity 85.1% Coal

Eskom s purpose, values and strategic objectives

Eskom s seven sustainability dimensions The changing environment requires a response that will ensure sustainability Eskom s mandate is comprehensive, focused on many dimensions of sustainability Core areas revolve around the tension of asset creation, operational sustainability, and financial sustainability Beyond that, Eskom also needs to ensure a positive wider impact on the environment, contribution to strategic transformation and social sustainability objectives as well as the contribution to a sustainable skills base Safety will continue to be the foundation for all our operations and is key to Eskom s performance and sustainability 7

Power station map 8

Electricity value chain 9

Board of Directors Mr Zola Tsotsi (Chairman) Mr Zola Tsotsi is a chemical engineer who was a corporate consultant at Eskom from 2000 to 2004 and a corporate strategy manager at the utility between 1997 and 2000. He has also headed the boards of the Lesotho Highlands Development Authority and the Lesotho Electricity Corporation and is the head of the Lesotho Electricity Authority Mr Collin Matjila (Acting Chief Executive) Mr CoillinMatjila has a track record of overseeing both large organisations and the electricity industry. The chief executive of Cosatu's investment arm, Kopano Ke Matla, Matjila is the former chairman of the National Energy Regulator of South Africa. Ms Tsholofelo Molefe (Finance Director) Appointed April 2011 BCompt Hons Certificate in Theory of Accounting ' University of South Africa, BA Hons Accounting and Finance ' University of East London (UK) CA(SA) Ms Boni Mehlomakhulu Dr. Mehlomakulu is currently the chief executive officer of the South African Bureau of Standards. She has a PhD in Chemical Engineering from the University of Cape Town. She was appointed to the Board in April 2010. 10

Board of Directors Mr Bernard Lewis Fanaroff Dr Fanaroff is currently the managing director of Fanaroff Associates CC and project director at SKA SA. He has a PhD in Radio Astronomy and Astrophysics. He was appointed to the Board in May 2010. Ms Neo Lesela Ms Neo Lesela, who has an industrial engineering degree from the University of Salford in the United Kingdom and formerly worked for South African Breweries and Tiger Brands. She then moved to Portnet (now the National Ports Authority) as a senior engineer, joined Cell C in 2002 as the head of project management and, in 2008, joined low-cost telecoms operator Smile Communications as general manager. Mr Mafika Mkhwanazi Transnet chairman Mafika Mkwanazi was formerly chief executive of the state-owned transport giant. He is currently also a chairman of Letseng Diamond and a director at Nedbank. He previously sat in the boards of SAA, Metrorail and Saatchi & Saatchi SA. Mr Phenyane Sedibe Mr Phenyane Sedibe, who is the owner of consultancy firm SPQ Consulting, has a master's degree in social policy. His specialty is small enterprise development, black empowerment and economic transformation. 11

Board of Directors Ms Lily Zondo Ms Zondo is currently General Manager: Business Risk Management at MTN SA. She has served on many audit committees, focusing on risk management frameworks and internal controls. Ms Chwayita Mabude Ms Chwayita Mabude an accountant with a background in financial management. Ms Yasmin Masithela Ms Yasmin Masithela, a corporate lawyer and consultant at Phukubje Pierce Masithela Attorneys, has worked for multinational Siemens, heading its project and export finance division. She has done extensive work in corporate law, financial services and local government and procurement law. Ms Bajabulile Luthuli Ms Luthuli is a chartered accountant and Director (Management Consulting) with South City Capital. She has extensive experience in audit and risk management 12

Board of Directors Ms Queendy Gungubele Ms Gungubele specialises in labour relations with her current position being a CCMA-accredited part-time commissioner and arbitrator. 13

Corporate structure 14

Executive Management Committee Collin Matjila Acting Chief Executive Erica Johnson Enterprise Development and Acting Customer Services Tsholofelo Molefe Finance Director Ayanda Noah Distribution Thava Govender Generation 15

Executive Management Committee Dr Steve Lennon Sustainability Matshela Koko (Acting) Technology and Commercial Mongezi Ntsokolo Transmission and Acting Human Resources Dan Marokane (Acting) Group Capital 16

Plant mix Type Number Nominal capacity Coal-fired 13 stations 35 726MW Gas/liquid fuel turbine 4 stations 2 409MW Hydroelectric Pumped storage Nuclear 6 stations 2 stations 1 station 600MW 1 400MW 1 860MW Wind energy 1 station 3MW TOTAL 27 stations 41 995MW 17

Power stations Station Location Nominal capacity MW Coal-fired stations (13) 35 726 Arnot Middelburg, Mpumalanga 2 232 Camden Ermelo 1 481 Duvha Witbank 3 450 Grootvlei Balfour 1 120 Hendrina Mpumalanga 1 798 Kendal Witbank 3 840 Komati Middelburg, Mpumalanga 791 Kriel Bethal 2 850 Lethabo Viljoensdrift 3 558 Majuba Volksrust 3 843 Matimba Lephalale 3 690 Matla Bethal 3 450 Tutuka Standerton 3 510 18

Power stations Station Location Nominal capacity MW Gas/liquid fuel turbine stations (4) 2 409 Acacia Cape Town 171 Ankerlig Atlantis 1 327 Gourikwa Mossel Bay 740 Port Rex East London 171 Hydroelectric stations (6) 600 Colley Wobbles Mbashe River 42 First Falls Umtata River 6 Gariep Norvalspont 360 Ncora Ncora River 2 Second Falls Umtata River 11 Vanderkloof Petrusville 240 19

Power stations Station Location Nominal capacity MW Pumped-storage (2) 1 400 Drakensberg Bergville 1 000 Palmiet Grabouw 400 Wind energy (1) Klipheuwel Klipheuwel 3 Nuclear (1) Koeberg Melkbosstrand 1 860 20

Key facts (as at ch 2014) Electricity sales Electricity sales (GWh) Sales within South Africa, GWh International sales, GWh Total sales, GWh Growth in GWh sales, % Total revenue, Rm Growth in revenue, % Customers, number Peak demand, MW 21 2014 2013 2012 205 525 202 770 211 590 12 378 13 791 13 195 217 903 216 561 224 785 0.6 (3.7) 0.2 136 869 126 663 112 999 7.4 16.4 24.8 5 232 915 5 013 446 4 852 722 34 977 35 525 36 543 GWh 224 785 (3.7)% 0.6% 217 903 216 561 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Electricity revenue (c/kwh) 7.4% Cents/kWh 16.4% 58.5 62.8 50.3 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14

Electricity sales Electricity sales by customer type Mining 14.1%, [14.6%] 6.8%, [6.8%] Rail 1.4%,[1.4%] Commercial & agricultural Residential 5.1%, [4.8%] International 5.7%, [6.4%] Municipalities 41.9%, [42.2%] Industry 25.0%, [23.8%] 22

Key facts (as at ch 2014) Electricity production by own stations 2014 2013 2012 Coal-fired, GWh 209 483 214 807 218 212 Hydroelectric, GWh 1 036 1 077 1 904 Pumped storage, GWh 2 881 3 006 2 962 Gas turbine, GWh 3 621 1 904 709 Nuclear, GWh 14 106 11 954 13 502 Wind energy, GWh 2 1 2 Total production, GWh 231 129 232 749 237 291 Electricity purchased by Eskom Foreign imports, GWh 1 12 378 13 791 13 195 Purchased from IPPs GWh 3 671 3 516 4 107 Demand-side management savings, MW 410 595 365 1. Foreign imports include wheeling of electricity 23

Key facts (as at ch 2014) Transmission and distribution equipment 2014 2013 2012 Transmission lines, km 29 924 29 297 28 995 Distribution lines, km 46 093 44 396 43 856 Reticulation lines, km 276 027 269 535 267 011 Underground cables, km 7 293 6 960 6 657 Transformer capacity, MVA Transmission 138 350 135 840 132 955 Distribution 93 829 89 959 72 910 Capacity expansion 2014 2013 2012 Generation capacity installed and commissioned, MW 120 261 535 Transmission lines installed, km 810.9 787 631 Transmission transformer capacity installed, MVA 3 790 3 580 2 525 24

Key facts (as at ch 2014) Environmental information 2014 2013 2012 Coal burnt in power stations, Mt 122.4 123.0 125.2 Specific water consumption by power stations, L/kWh sent out 1.35 1.42 1.34 Net raw water consumption, ML 317 052 334 275 319 772 Relative particulate emissions, kg/mwh sent out 0.35 0.35 0.31 Carbon dioxide emissions (CO 2 ), Mt 233.3 227.9 231.9 Radiation release, msv 0.0012 0.0019 0.0024 Employees 2014 Sept 2013 Employees, number 46 919 46 624 43 473 2012 25

Key facts (as at ch 2014) Developmental initiatives 2014 2013 2012 B-BBEE attributable spend, R billion 125.4 103.4 72.1 B-BBEE attributable spend, % 93.9 86.3 73.2 Electrification, homes connected 201 788 144 558 155 213 Corporate social investment, Rm 132.9 194.3 87.9 Jobs created through capital expansion projects cumulative 25 181 35 759 28 616 Eskom trainees / bursars (pipeline) 2 476 6 987 6 794 26

Staff profile (as at ch 2014) Employee profiles Racial equity in senior management, % of black employees Racial equity in professionals and middle management, % of black employees Gender equity in senior management, % of female employees Gender equity in professionals and middle management, % of female employees Actual 2013/14 Actual 2012/13 Actual 2011/12 59.3 58.32 53.90 70.6 69.57 65.69 28.8 28.21 24.31 34.9 34.60 32.43 27

Business performance 28

Income statement for the year ended ch 2014 Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability Group revenue of R139.5 billion (2013: R128.8 billion), an increase of 8.3% Revenue growth has been offset by escalating primary energy and operating costs Effective tax rate of 23.3% (2013: 26.5%) Embedded derivative gain is mainly due to changes in the USD:ZAR exchange rate and changes in interest rates Finance costs of R13.3 billion were capitalised during the year to ch 2014 (2013: R3.7 billion) Assets are accounted for at historic cost. If assets were valued at depreciated replacement cost, the loss after tax would be R12.5 billion No dividend was recommended Rm Audited year to ch 2014 Reviewed half-year to 30 Sep 2013 Audited year to ch 2013 1 Audited year to ch 2012 Revenue 139 506 77 815 128 775 114 847 Other income 962 197 1 126 712 Primary energy (69 812) (31 266) (60 748) (46 314) Operating expenses (including depreciation & amortisation) Net fair value loss on financial instruments Operating profit before embedded derivatives Embedded derivative gain / (loss) (58 293) (28 702) (57 602) (44 872) (620) (998) (1 655) (2 388) 11 743 17 046 9 896 21 985 2 149 1 868 (5 942) 334 Operating profit 13 892 18 914 3 954 22 319 Net finance (cost) / income 2 (4 772) (1 853) 3 003 (3 956) Share of profit of equity - accounted investees 43 26 35 41 Profit before tax 9 163 17 087 6 992 18 404 Income tax (2 137) (4 846) (1 856) (5 156) Discontinued operations 63-47 - Net profit for the period 7 089 12 241 5 183 13 248 1. Restated due to reclassification of Eskom Energie Manantali s.a as a discontinued operation 2. There was no remeasurement of the government loan during the year to ch 2014, as there was no change in the electricity tariff price path. In 2012/13 the effect of the remeasurement of the government loan was a R17.3 billion finance income for the year ch 2013

Maximise socio-economic contribution Transformation Electrification A total of 201 788 homes were electrified during the year to ch 2014 (2013: 139 881) Since inception of the electrification programme in 1991, more than 4.5 million homes have been electrified Committed R132.9 million to corporate social initiatives during the year to March 2014 (2013: R194.3 million) Corporate social investment Number of project beneficiaries 1 Number 652 347 531 762 357 443 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 1. Number of project beneficiaries impacted by Eskom s corporate social initiatives at year end

% of B-BBEE spend Procurement equity and localisation Transformation Procurement 1 from B-BBEE compliant entities Total measured procurement spend for the year was R133.5 billion of which R125.4 billion or 93.9% was attributable to B-BBEE, exceeding the target of 75% 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 73.2 2012 86.3 2013 93.9 2014 Target 75 Procurement from blackowned (BO), black womenowned (BWO) and black youth-owned (BYO) 2 entities % Procurement from BO entities % Procurement from BWO entities % Procurement from BYO entities % 14.6 3.3 n/a 2 22.1 4.7 32.7 7.2 1.0 1.0 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 1. Reflects the Eskom company s broad-based black economic empowerment (B-BBEE) expenditure 2. Measurement of the procurement from BYO entities only started in 2013

Procurement equity and localisation (continued) Transformation Local sourcing 54.6% local content in the new build contracts placed for the financial year (2013: 80.2%) Job creation As at ch 2014, the capacity expansion programme employs 25 181 people on new build project sites, down from 35 759 at the previous year end, due to the demobilisation of staff as work packages are completed Job creation Number 35 759 28 616 25 181 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Local skills development Since the inception of the capital expansion programme in 2005, a total of 8 930 (2013: 6 851) contractor employees have been trained in various trades 32

Employment equity Transformation Disability Racial equity 1 Gender equity 1 The Eskom group currently employs 1 305 (2013: 1 137) employees with recognised disabilities. Although the disability percentage of 2.77% is below the 3% target, it is above the government target of 2% % 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 53.9 65.7 2012 69.6 71.2 58.3 59.5 2013 2014 Racial equity in senior management (% of black employees) Racial equity in professionals and middle management (% of black employees) % 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 24.3 32.4 2012 34.6 35.8 28.2 28.9 2013 2014 Gender equity in senior management (% of female employees) Gender equity in professionals and middle management (% of female employees) 1. Reflects Eskom company numbers

Safety Becoming a high-performance organisation Employee and contractor fatalities Employee LTIR Fatalities ch 2014 ch 2013 ch 2012 Employees 5 3 13 Contractors 18 16 11 Employee lost-time incidence rate Index (Target: 0.36) 0.31 0.40 1 0.41 Causes of fatalities Causes of fatalities Vehicle Electrical contact Other Employees and contractors 7 2 14 Ingula incident On 31 October 2013, an accident at Ingula power station construction site resulted in the tragic loss of six lives, while a further seven sustained injuries. Although work on the inclined high-pressure shaft was stopped in terms of the Mines Health and Safety Act (1996) pending review by the Mine Health and Safety Inspectorate, work on other parts of the site continues. The statutory processes regarding this accident are in progress 1. Number revised from 0.39 to 0.40 due to the late reporting of incidents

Business update 35

Improve operations Generation Becoming a high-performance organisation Highlights Koeberg unit 2 ended a record run of 484 days when it was shut down for scheduled refuelling on 24 March 2014, marking a continuous run from one refuelling to another Challenges The increasing UCLF percentage is an indication of the deteriorating plant health and the high plant utilisation Balancing the need for adequate maintenance with the constrained system, asset creation, environmental requirements and available financial resources not performing sufficient maintenance reduces plant reliability and increases the risk of load shedding over the longer term Duvha Unit 3 was taken out of service on 30 March 2014 due to an overpressurisation incident. The incident is still under investigation 1. UCLF measures the lost energy due to unplanned production interruptions resulting from equipment failures and other plant conditions 2. EAF measures plant availability, plus energy losses not under the control of plant management Unplanned capability loss factor (UCLF 1 ) % Constrained 12.1 12.6 1.6 UCLF 3.4 10.0 5.1 2010 Energy availability factor (EAF 2 ) % 85.2 84.6 2010 Actual 6.1 2011 2011 8.0 2012 82.0 2012 8.7 2013 77.7 2013 Annual year-end target 11.0 2014 75.1 2014 80.0

Improve operations Transmission Becoming a high-performance organisation Highlights Good system technical performance achieved with zero major incidents, system minutes <1 performance at 3.05 compared to a target of 3.40, and a line fault performance of 1.73 compared to a target of 2.45 faults per 100km Challenges Performance vulnerabilities remain with ageing assets and unfirm networks Performance of Hydro Cahora Bassa 3 scheme energy imports remains a risk due to challenges regarding the reliability of high-voltage direct-current transmission lines System minutes 1 lost < 1 system minute 4.1 2010 2.6 2011 4.7 2012 3.5 2013 Number of major incidents 2 3 3.1 2014 2 3.4 1. System minutes is a measure of the extent of interruptions to customers. One system minute is equivalent to the loss of the entire system for one minute at annual peak 2. Major Incident is an interruption with a severity 1 system minute 3. Hidroelectrica de Cahora Bassa S.A. Actual Annual year-end target 1 2010 0 2011 1 2012 2013 0 2014

Improve operations Distribution Becoming a high-performance organisation Highlights Significant improvement in the SAIFI and SAIDI interruption performance due to: Additional customer network centres Maximisation of live-line work for planned maintenance Increased network visibility SAIFI (number/annum) 1 24.7 25.3 23.7 22.2 20.2 20.0 Challenges Managing the risk of increased exposure of employees and contractors to crime-related assault incidents Addressing the backlog in maintenance, refurbishment and reliability with particular focus on preventative maintenance for reticulation (low-voltage) networks Reducing the backlog in customer connections, by addressing material and contractor resource shortages 2010 54.4 52.6 2010 2011 SAIDI (hours/annum) 2 2011 2012 45.8 2012 2013 41.9 2013 2014 37.0 2014 45.0 1. SAIFI: System average interruption frequency index 2. SAIDI: System average interruption duration index Actual Annual year-end target

Being customer-centric Becoming a high-performance organisation Highlights Customers responded admirably when Eskom declared four power system emergencies and reduced demand by 600MW in November 2013, 340MW in February 2014 and 1 160MW in March 2014 Challenges Debt collection, especially from municipalities, is a challenge with arrear debt increasing significantly. Eskom is working closely with the shareholder, the Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (CoGTA) department and National Treasury at provincial and national level to address the systemic causes of municipal arrear debt Energy losses due to theft of equipment, illegal connections, meter tampering and illegal vending of pre-paid electricity remains a concern Weighted customer service index 1 85.1 2010 Actual Energy losses 2 84.4 2011 85.6 2012 ch 2014 88.7 86.8 86.6 2013 Annual year-end target ch 2013 2014 ch 2012 Distribution 7.13 7.12 6.32 Transmission 3 2.34 2.80 3.08 Total Eskom 8.88 9.08 8.65 1. Eskom uses a composite index to measure the service delivered to its residential, small and medium customers 2. Non-technical losses are estimated to be between 1.78% and 2.85% for the year to ch 2014 3. Transmission losses are all technical losses

Build strong skills Becoming a high-performance organisation Skills Eskom aims to grow human capital by retaining core, critical and scarce resources, and by effectively developing skills and talent Eskom s engineering, technician and artisan learners 2 598 2 847 844 835 2 383 815 2 273 2 144 1 962 2012 2013 2014 Engineering learners Technician learners Artisan learners Youth programme Training There are 4 325 learners in the youth programme as at ch 2014 7.87% of gross employee benefit costs spent on training in the year to ch 2014

00:00 03:00 06:00 09:00 12:00 15:00 18:00 21:00 Jan Apr Jul Oct Jan Apr Jul Oct Jan Apr Jul Oct Jan Apr Jul Oct Jan Apr Jul Oct Jan Keeping the lights on Leading and partnering to keep the lights on Highlights More planned maintenance was done during the past winter than the same period in the three preceding years, in line with the Generation sustainability strategy Challenges Adequate reserves available throughout the day to meet demand, but minimal reserves available at peak periods In order to keep the lights on, Eskom has had to run its generating plant at significantly higher load factors Four power system emergencies were declared during the year Increased costs due to the significant reliance placed on the open-cycle gas turbine (OCGT) fleet in the current year: R10.6 billion spent to produce 3 621GWh (2013: R5.0 billion; 1 905GWh) OCGT load factor of 17.16% (2013: 9.31%) against a budgeted load factor of 6.08%, based on the MYPD response budget Average monthly % operating reserves 60% Monthly Avg at 06:00 Monthly Avg at 15:00 50% Monthly Avg at Peak Monthly Avg at 22:00 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Summer and winter load profiles MW 36 000 Typical Summer Day Typical Winter Day 34 000 32 000 30 000 28 000 26 000 24 000 22 000 20 000

Integrated Demand Management Leading and partnering to keep the lights on Achieved total evening peak demand savings of 410MW (2013: 595MW) The average weekday evening peak impact of the power alert and power bulletin for all colours (green, orange and red) is 224MW, while the average impact for the red flightings in the evening peak on the worst constrained day is 294MW Eskom continues to improve the internal energy-efficiency of its facilities. Annualised energy savings of 19GWh were achieved from new IDM projects for the year ended ch 2014, exceeding the target of 15GWh MW 4 500 4 000 3 500 3 000 2 500 2 000 1 500 1 000 Cumulative verified demand savings 500 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Verified MW Eskom Target Going forward, it will be a challenge to utilise IDM as a key lever in managing demand, due to the reduction in funding allocated in the MYPD 3 determination

Deliver capacity expansion Leading and partnering to keep the lights on Highlights Return-to-service programme of 23 units (3 741MW) has been completed at a cost of R26 billion Despite outage constraints, refurbishment projects have progressed well Established the Medupi leadership initiative to address the demobilisation of workers Challenges Contract placed with a second contractor for the engineering and manufacturing of boilerprotection systems, to mitigate against the continued failure of control and instrumentation factory acceptance tests at Medupi Acquisition of servitudes over state-owned and tribal land, causing delays to transmission projects Progress on capacity expansion programme R billion 63.7% 38.1 66.9 73.3% 28.0 77.0 45.8% 64.2 54.3 56.2% 52.0 66.6 % completed Remaining Completed 58.3% 74.7% 10.8 6.6 15.1 19.4 2013 2014 2013 2014 2013 2014 Medupi Kusile Ingula R105.0 billion 2 R118.5 billion 2 R25.9 billion 2 Synchronisation dates of first units Medupi in the second half of 2014 (794MW) Ingula in the second half of 2015 1 (333MW) Kusile in the second half of 2015 (800MW) 1. Synchronisation date delayed after the accident at Ingula on 31 October 2013 2. Approved budget (excluding capitalised borrowing costs)

Deliver capacity expansion progress on Medupi Leading and partnering to keep the lights on Key milestones achieved at Medupi in the first quarter of 2014/15 Welding challenges which resulted in extensive delays to Unit 6 have been effectively resolved Hydrostatic pressure tests on the reheater and superheater circuits of the Unit 6 boiler were successfully conducted in April and May 2014 The boiler is now mechanically complete and ready to continue with acid cleaning Factory acceptance tests have been successfully completed on both the control and instrumentation of the balance of plant and the boiler-protection system in April and May 2014 This released a significant part of the plant to progress with critical commissioning activities Achieving these critical milestones ensures that Eskom remains on track for the targeted first synchronisation of Unit 6 by the second half of 2014 as previously reported 44

Deliver capacity expansion (continued) Leading and partnering to keep the lights on To date, the construction work that has been completed has added ~ 6 137MW of capacity, ~ 5 497km of transmission network and ~ 27 565 of MVAs Megawatts MW of capacity 0 290 1 351.0 1 043 1 770 453 315 535 261 120 6 137 17 384 Transmission Km line 659 237 430 480 418 600 443 631.3 787 811 5 497 9 756 Substations MVAs 5 280 1 090 1 000 1 355 1 375 1 630 5 940 2 525 3 580 3 790 27 565 42 470 2004/5 2005/6 2006/7 2007/8 2008/9 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14 Total Target 1 1. Refers to the target of the total capacity expansion programme

Environmental performance Reducing Eskom s environmental footprint and pursuing low-carbon growth Key performance indicator ch 2014 ch 2013 ch 2012 Environmental performance Relative particulate emissions, kg/mwh sent out Specific water consumption, L/kWh sent out Environmental legal contraventions per the operational health dashboard, number 0.35 0.35 0.31 1.35 1.42 1.34 2 2 1 5 Renewable energy: Sere wind farm The installation of 10 of a total of 46 wind turbines was completed at ch 2014 2, and a further 22 tower foundations laid. This 100MW renewable project is expected to be completed and commissioned in the 2014/15 financial year. This will assist in reducing Eskom s carbon footprint 1. Increased from previously reported figure (1) due to an additional legal contravention that was identified during the year for activities associated with the underground coal gasification (UCG) project, in October 2012 2. To date, the installation of a total of 27 of the 46 wind turbines has been completed. The transmission substation has been completed and the power evacuation line is being commissioned

Generation operational performance Highlights At the end of September 2013 both Koeberg units were online for 160 days simultaneously, surpassing the previous record which was set in 2004 The Generation Sustainability Strategy and the associated increased opportunity for maintenance has enabled several stations to significantly improve their emissions performance Unplanned capability loss factor (UCLF 1 ) % 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 5.1 2010 6.1 2011 8.0 2012 12.1 8.7 2013 11.5 2 8.1 Half year to 30 Sep 2013 10.0 Constrained UCLF Challenges The higher UCLF percentage is an indication of the deteriorating plant health of an ageing power station fleet Executing the generation sustainability strategy while keeping the lights on 95 85 75 65 55 Energy availability factor (EAF 3 ) % 85.2 84.6 80.0 82.0 77.7 78.4 1. UCLF measures the lost energy due to unplanned production interruptions resulting from equipment failures and other plant conditions 2. The 11.53% normal UCLF consists of constrained UCLF of 3.45% and underlying UCLF OF 8.08% (UCLF under Eskom s control). Constrained UCLF refers to emissions and short-term related UCLF due to system constraints to meet the Keep the lights on objective 3. EAF measures plant availability, plus energy losses not under the control of plant management 47 45 35 2010 Actual 2011 2012 2013 Half year to 30 Sep 2013 Annual year-end target

National emission standards Reducing Eskom s environmental footprint and pursuing low-carbon growth Eskom believes in a balanced approach to ensure environmental sustainability whilst supporting economic growth and access to affordable electricity New atmospheric standards come into effect in 2015. Eskom has received new atmospheric emission licenses for most of its power stations, except Kriel, where Eskom s request to increase the emissions limit and allow a grace period for when emissions exceed the limit of the new license, has been denied Eskom has embarked on an extensive retrofit programme to reduce emissions at the highest emitting power stations, but the execution of this programme will require long outages and a significant amount of capital (currently R72 billion in nominal terms) Despite the retrofit programme and Eskom s best efforts, there remains a risk that Eskom may not be able to fully comply with the new national emission standards, which come into effect in 2015 and 2020, for several reasons: Certain of the required technologies requires additional water which is not yet available Implementation of the required technologies requires plant outages of 120 to 150 days per unit; there is insufficient spare capacity to enable the required outages to be taken without impacting on the ability to meet national electricity demand Given the above, Eskom expects to achieve 57% compliance with the national emission standards by 2026 Eskom submitted an application in February 2014 for a five-year postponement from compliance to the standards for cases where compliance within the legislated timeframe is not possible. A response from the authorities is expected within six to nine months

Coal and water resources Securing future resource requirements Highlights Coal stock days at ch 2014 remains above target of 42 days, but has decreased to 44 days from the previous year (2013: 46 days) Komati water scheme augmentation project was declared operational on 5 June 2013 Mokolo Crocodile water augmentation project delivered water to Medupi for construction activities and commissioning of the first units Challenges Despite the overall coal quality being on target, coal-related load losses were experienced at Arnot, Matla and Tutuka power stations Production performance of some cost-plus mines continues to be a challenge Eskom mixes coarse coal with finer coal to prevent wet coal from coagulating on conveyors Although four medium-term contracts were signed for coal supply to Kusile power station during the commissioning phase, the conclusion of long-term coal and limestone supply agreements remains a focus area 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Coal stock days 18 44 53 2007/8 2012/13 2013/14 Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar 13 46 44

Coal road-to-rail migration Implementing coal haulage and the road-to-rail migration plan Eskom has been progressively migrating coal transport from road to rail over the past four years. Rail transport is safer, more environmentally friendly, less damaging to roads and more cost-effective than road transport by truck Mt Coal road-to-rail migration 10.1 8.5 7.1 5.1 11.6 11.5 Highlights Increase of 15% against previous year of coal transported by rail Challenges Both Eskom and Transnet experienced operational challenges regarding the rail transport of coal In June 2013, rail deliveries were affected by a series of derailments on the Transnet Freight Rail Natcor rail line 2010 2011 2012 2013 Actual Annual year-end target 1 2014 1. No target prior to 2012

Independent power producers (IPPs) Pursuing private-sector participation Highlights Total energy procured from short-term IPPs for the year is 3 671GWh at a cost of R3 266 million (average cost of 88c/kWh) The first project under the renewable energy independent power producers (RE-IPP) programme was commissioned on 15 November 2013, adding 7MW Eskom has successfully facilitated the connection of 21 RE-IPP projects (1 076MW) to the grid, of which 467.3MW is currently available to the system DoE approved an additional 1 457MW pursuant to the third bid submission, but no contracts have yet been signed Contracts were signed for 1 005MW under the DoE Peaker programme GWh Energy purchased from IPPs 4 107 3 516 3 671 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14

Maximise socio-economic contribution Transformation Electrification A total of 201 788 homes were electrified during the year to ch 2014 (2013: 139 881) Since inception of the electrification programme in 1991, more than 4.5 million homes have been electrified Committed R132.9 million to corporate social initiatives during the year to March 2014 (2013: R194.3 million) Corporate social investment Number of project beneficiaries 1 Number 652 347 531 762 357 443 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 1. Number of project beneficiaries impacted by Eskom s corporate social initiatives at year end

% of B-BBEE spend Procurement equity and localisation Transformation Procurement 1 from B-BBEE compliant entities Total measured procurement spend for the year was R133.5 billion of which R125.4 billion or 93.9% was attributable to B-BBEE, exceeding the target of 75% 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 73.2 2012 86.3 2013 93.9 2014 Target 75 Procurement from blackowned (BO), black womenowned (BWO) and black youth-owned (BYO) 2 entities % Procurement from BO entities % Procurement from BWO entities % Procurement from BYO entities % 14.6 3.3 n/a 2 22.1 4.7 32.7 7.2 1.0 1.0 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 1. Reflects the Eskom company s broad-based black economic empowerment (B-BBEE) expenditure 2. Measurement of the procurement from BYO entities only started in 2013

Procurement equity and localisation (continued) Transformation Local sourcing 54.6% local content in the new build contracts placed for the financial year (2013: 80.2%) Job creation As at ch 2014, the capacity expansion programme employs 25 181 people on new build project sites, down from 35 759 at the previous year end, due to the demobilisation of staff as work packages are completed Job creation Number 35 759 28 616 25 181 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Local skills development Since the inception of the capital expansion programme in 2005, a total of 8 930 (2013: 6 851) contractor employees have been trained in various trades 54

Employment equity Transformation Disability Racial equity 1 Gender equity 1 The Eskom group currently employs 1 305 (2013: 1 137) employees with recognised disabilities. Although the disability percentage of 2.77% is below the 3% target, it is above the government target of 2% % 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 53.9 65.7 2012 69.6 71.2 58.3 59.5 2013 2014 Racial equity in senior management (% of black employees) Racial equity in professionals and middle management (% of black employees) % 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 24.3 32.4 2012 34.6 35.8 28.2 28.9 2013 2014 Gender equity in senior management (% of female employees) Gender equity in professionals and middle management (% of female employees) 1. Reflects Eskom company numbers

Financial performance 56

Revaluation of assets proforma if aligned to regulatory asset base Rm Income statement (current year impact) Historical cost: For the year to ch 2014 After revaluation: For the year to ch 2014 Historical cost: For the year to ch 2013 After revaluation: For the year to ch 2013 Historical profit/(loss) for the year 7 089 7 089 5 183 5 183 Adjustments: Depreciation and amortisation expense - (13 887) - (15 534) Net impairment loss and other operating expenses - (40) - (105) Net finance cost - (13 290) - (3 678) Income tax - 7 621-5 409 Profit/(loss) for the year 7 089 (12 507) 5 183 (8 725) Equity (cumulative impact) Historical closing equity balance 119 784 119 784 109 139 109 139 Adjustments: Additional cumulative comprehensive loss - (82 746) - (63 150) Revaluation of property, plant and equipment - 279 761-252 781 Deferred tax on revaluation - (78 333) - (70 779) Adjusted closing equity balance 119 784 238 466 109 139 227 991 Statement of financial position (cumulative impact) Property, plant and equipment 401 373 566 209 341 429 506 502 Ratios Electricity operating costs, cents per kwh (company) 59.67 66.06 54.15 61.37 Interest cover, ratio (group) 0.77 0.00 0.22 0.65 Debt:equity, ratio (group) 2.06 1.03 1.84 0.88

Sales and revenue Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability Sales were 9 490 GWh lower than forecast in the NERSA tariff application GWh Electricity sales Local sales of 205 525GWh (2013: 202 770GWh) 224 785 International sales of 12 378GWh (2013: 13 791GWh) (3.7)% 0.6% 216 561 217 903 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Electricity sales by customer type 1 Electricity revenue Commercial & agricultural 6.8%, [6.8%] Mining 14.1%, [14.6%] Rail 1.4%,[1.4%] Residential 5.1%, [4.8%] International 5.7%, [6.4%] Cents/kWh 50.3 16.4% 58.5 7.4% 62.8 Municipalities 41.9%, [42.2%] Industry 25.0%, [23.8%] Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 1. Percentages reflected for the sales achieved in the year to ch 2014 Numbers in brackets are those for the year to ch 2013

Electricity operating expenses 1 Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability The electricity operating cost per kwh sold is 59.67c/kWh 2 compared to the target of 52.67c/kWh The 13.2% variance on the cost per kwh is mainly attributed to the OCGT spend in the current year of R10.6 billion (originally budgeted at R3.6 billion), along with the increase in maintenance costs in line with the generation sustainability strategy The employee benefit cost includes direct and indirect expenditure for the 42 923 Eskom employees (group: 46 919) Included in other operating expenses is the impairment on arrear debt of 1.10% of revenue (2012/13: 0.82%) R million Electricity operating expenses 41.28 46 314 10 979 9 098 8 681 54.14 60 748 59.67 69 812 12 972 15 341 12 917 10 602 9 787 11 934 17 722 20 776 22 384 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Primary energy costs Other operating expenses, including impairments Repairs and maintenance Depreciation and amortisation expense Employee benefit expense Cents/kWh 1. Reflects only company expenses 2. Cents/kWh figures are calculated based on total electricity sales numbers for year

Analysis of primary energy costs Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability Primary energy costs have increased significantly Given the tight reserve margin, more expensive OCGT stations were operated far above previous load factors to ensure continuity of supply GWh 4 000 3 500 3 000 OCGT annual production 3 619 Rm ch 2014 ch 2013 ch 2012 Own generation costs, excluding OCGT costs 1 43 625 39 371 30 997 Open-cycle gas turbine (OCGT) costs 10 561 5 009 1 490 2 500 2 000 1 500 1 000 500 0 1 151 2008 136 49 2009 2010 197 2011 708 2012 1 905 2013 2014 Environmental levy 8 530 7 971 6 208 OCGT annual costs International electricity purchases Independent power producers 3 311 2 070 1 858 3 266 2 956 3 250 Other 2 519 3 371 2 510 Total cost of electricity generation 69 812 60 748 46 314 R million 12 000 10 000 8 000 6 000 4 000 2 000 0 2 004 2008 233 82 434 2009 2010 2011 1 490 2012 5 009 2013 10 561 2014 1. Includes the cost of coal, uranium, water and liquid fuels that are used in the generation of electricity 2. Includes demand market participation, co-generation and power buybacks

Analysis of primary energy costs (continued) Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability Primary energy costs increased by 14.2% from 28.05 c/kwh as at ch 2013 to 32.04 c/kwh for the year to ch 2014 Primary energy costs (c/kwh) 1 Primary energy costs as at ch 2013 28.05 20.60 Cost of coal burnt increased by 5% 19% of the increase 2.7% 0.74 OCGT 2 costs increased by R5.6bn (111%) 64% of the increase 9.1% 2.54 Power buyback costs (32%) of the increase (4.5%) (1.27) Other items in aggregate 49% of the increase 6.9% 1.98 14.2% Primary energy costs as at ch 2014 32.04 1. Primary energy costs in c/kwh based on electricity sales 2. Open-cycle gas turbine (OCGT) 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 Cents / kwh

Hedging policy Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability Embedded derivatives Loss in 2012/13 was mainly due to the decision at ch 2013 to account for the full term of the underlying negotiated pricing agreement contracts Profit in the current year is mainly as a result of the changes in the USD/ZAR exchange rate and interest rates Eskom submitted an application to NERSA to review the last remaining negotiated pricing agreement Foreign currency and commodity hedging Foreign currency and commodity exposures are hedged Use forward exchange contracts with short maturities and roll-over at maturity as well as cross-currency swaps 78% of total debt at ch 2014 has a fixed interest rate component R110.2 billion exposure to foreign currency Gain/(loss) on embedded derivatives R million 10.25 334 7.68 11.82 (5 942) 9.21 14.57 2 149 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Net fair value loss on financial instruments R million (2 388) (1 655) ( 620) Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Rand versus Euro and USD exchange rates Exchange rates Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Rand:Euro Rand:USD 10.57

Group audited financial position property, plant and equipment growth through debt raised Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability R million 600 000 Assets 500 000 400 000 300 000 200 000 100 000 Other assets, R23 765m Working capital, R25 911m Liquid assets, R40 480m Property, plant and equipment, and intangible assets, R292 209m Other assets, R30 579m Working capital, R29 204m Liquid assets, R27 970m Property, plant and equipment, and intangible assets, R344 271m Other assets, R37 863m Working capital, R32 158m Liquid assets, R30 583m Property, plant and equipment, and intangible assets, R404 389m 0 R million 600 000 500 000 400 000 300 000 200 000 100 000 0 Mar-2012 Mar-2013 Mar-2014 Net debt to equity ratio: 1.57 Equity, R103 103m Other liabilities, R62 753m Working capital, R33 942m Debt securities and borrowings, R182 567m Equity and liabilities Net debt to equity ratio: 1.84 Equity, R109 139m Other liabilities, R76 983m Working capital, R42 946m Debt securities and borrowings, R202 956m Net debt to equity ratio: 2.06 Equity, R119 784m Other liabilities, R84 782m Working capital, R45 607m Debt securities and borrowings, R254 820m Mar-2012 Mar-2013 Mar-2014

Balance sheet Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability R million Capital expenditure 1 58 815 60 133 59 803 Debt securities and borrowings R million 254 820 202 956 182 567 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Liquid assets at period end R million 40 480 21 030 27 970 30 583 10 907 17 350 19 450 19 676 10 620 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Cash and cash equivalents Investment in securities Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Debt and borrowings maturity profile 2 One to 10 years 3 40.2% Within one year 2 5.8% More than 10 years 54.0% 1. Excluding capitalised borrowing costs 2. Represents the repayment of nominal capital and interest in the strategic and trading portfolio. Data as at ch 2014 3. Reflects the 10 financial years starting 1 April 2014 and ending on ch 2024

Funding plan from 1 April 2010 to ch 2017 Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability This plan was based on the assumption of a 16% MYPD 3 increase and will need to be extended Source of funds Funding sourced R billion Currently secured R billion Draw-downs to date R billion Supported by government R billion Bonds 90.0 65.4 65.4 42.6 Commercial paper 1 70.0 70.0 40.0 0.0 Export Credit Agencies 32.9 32.9 21.7 0.0 World Bank 27.8 27.8 12.0 27.8 African Development Bank 20.9 20.9 16.2 20.9 Development Bank of Southern Africa 15.0 15.0 9.0 0.0 Shareholder loan 20.0 20.0 20.0 20.0 Other / new sources 23.4 19.6 4.5 5.0 Totals 300.0 271.6 188.7 116.2 Percentages 90.5% 2 69.5% 3 42.8% 3 1. Commercial paper is issued for up to one year and then redeemed and re-issued for the same net amount. The commercial paper is thus by definition not fully secured for the full period, however, Eskom s long-term observations and past trends support a high level of confidence that Eskom will be able to roll over the redemptions each year. For this reason, the gross value of the commercial paper is shown under the secured column in the borrowing programme table above 2. As a percentage of the R300 billion funding sourced 3. As a percentage of the currently secured total

2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041 2042 2043 2044 2045 2046 2047 2048 2049 2050 2051 2052 2053 Debt maturity profile Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability Eskom has to be responsible in managing its debt profile The R255 billion of borrowings at ch 2014 will be repaid by 2052 Strategic and trading portfolio nominal and interest cashflows as at ch 2014 R billion 40 350 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 300 250 200 150 100 50 - - 1. Annual cash flows from 2044 to 2052 are below R50 million Capital Interest Cumulative Nominal Capital Total 1

Debt maturity and leverage Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability Gross debt / EBITDA 1 ratio Debt service cover ratio 16.20 3.50 10.96 2.01 2.50 6.46 1.21 3.00 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Investment grade target FFO as a % of gross debt 20.00 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Target 3.27 Interest cover ratio 2 15.15 8.04 9.73 0.77 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Investment grade target 0.22 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 1. Earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amoritisation 2. In 2012/13 the effect of the remeasurement of the government loan (income of R17.3 billion) impacted the interest cover ratio

Eskom credit ratings as at ch 2014 Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability As a significant portion of Eskom s debt is guaranteed by government, its headline credit rating has been uplifted, but remains closely linked to that of the sovereign Rating Standard & Poor s Moody s Fitch RSA government Foreign currency BBB 1 Baa1 BBB Local currency A- 1 Baa1 BBB+ Outlook Negative Negative Stable 2 Eskom Holdings SOC Limited Foreign currency BBB 4 Baa3 - Local currency BBB 4 Baa3 BBB+ Standalone b- b1 B Outlook Negative 4 Negative Stable 3 Action date 14 Oct 2013 19 Jul 2013 11 Jan 2013 Affirmation date 14 Oct 2013 19 Jul 2013 12 Dec 2013 1. On 13 June 2014, Standard & Poor s downgraded the sovereign foreign currency and local currency ratings (from BBB to BBB- and from A- to BBB+ respectively). This is expected to result in an adjustment to the Eskom headline and standalone credit ratings 2. On 12 June 2014, Fitch revised the sovereign outlook to negative, which is expected to result in an adjustment to the Eskom headline and standalone credit ratings 3. On 18 June 2014, Fitch affirmed Eskom s BBB+ rating, but revised the outlook to negative 4. On 20 June 2014, Standard & Poor s downgraded the foreign and local currency ratings from BBB to BBB-, and also put Eskom on CreditWatch

Summary of cash flows Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability R million Operations Investing 33 616 (55 835) Financing 44 142 (8 014) (9 070) 5 748 (159) 19 676 10 620 (1 372) 2013 cash and cash equivalents Cash generated by operations Capex expenditure (incl future fuel) Other investing Debt raised Debt repaid Net interest repayments Investment in securities Other financing activities 2014 cash and cash equivalents

Appropriate return on assets Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability Eskom requires a rate of return on assets that will enable it to maintain and replace the current asset base An appropriate rate of return on assets is a key building block towards costreflective tariffs Ideally, the rate of return on assets should at least equal the cost of capital The pre-tax real rate of return on assets was negative 0.53% compared to the pre-tax real cost of capital of 7.65% Continuing with inadequate returns will result in a further erosion of Eskom s financial position It is therefore imperative that the price of electricity migrates to cost-reflectivity Rate of return on assets 1 vs cost of capital (pre-tax real rates) % 7.65% 7.65% (0.47%) (0.53%) Mar-2013 Rate of return on assets Mar-2014 Cost of capital 1. Rate of return on assets calculated on closing balance of assets (revalued using the depreciated replacement cost method) and liabilities, excluding financial assets and liabilities

Financial sustainability Ensuring Eskom s financial sustainability Critical for Eskom is ensuring a balance between security of supply, asset creation, financial sustainability and environmental compliance and to responsibly manage the trade-offs that are required Revenue shortfall of R225 billion created by the MYPD 3 determination has serious consequences for Eskom s business and future sustainability Key to success is to ensure an appropriate return on assets in the long term and to obtain adequate funding to address liquidity in the short term Eskom s response to the liquidity challenges and long-term financial sustainability includes: Investigating alternative sources of funding, including possible equity or quasi-equity instruments Exploring additional borrowing options, although the ability to borrow sufficient funds at affordable levels is constrained by credit ratings. Given the recent sovereign ratings downgrade, Eskom is at risk of a further downgrade Reprioritisation of capital expenditure within the R251 billion budget. However, this could negatively affect operational sustainability and impact security of supply Applied to NERSA for a regulatory clearing account (RCA) adjustment, to claw back prudently incurred expenditure and lost revenue due to lower demand than forecast in the MYPD 2 application Business productivity programme launched to reduce cost, increase productivity and enhance efficiencies Financial sustainability cannot be achieved through efficiencies and savings alone cost-reflective tariffs remain a key imperative

Awards and recognition 72

Awards and recognition Eskom brand Sunday Times Operation Khanyisa 13th Annual Oliver Empowerment awards Mail & Guardian newspaper Finweek Eskom was voted as the Most desired company to work for by the Sunday Times newspaper. Awards were also received in the categories Community Upliftment (second place), and Top company that does the most to look after the environment and natural resources (second place) The campaign received an Orchid from Independent Newspapers for its innovative approach to public sector advertising, as well as a Loerie advertising award in the Ubuntu category The Star Award from Crime Line was received for the second year Eskom was the recipient of two accolades at the event held on 25 April 2014, namely the Socio-economic Development award for the Eskom Development Foundation contractor academy, and the Enterprise and Supplier Development award for Group Commercial supplier development and localisation Eskom was voted as the Top Engineering Company by engineering students, and the second best by MBA and Professionals Eskom was named the fourth most popular brand in South Africa 73

Awards and recognition Our Guardians Institute of Personnel Management SA Human Rights Commission Stars of Africa African Utility Week Visionary CIO of the Year Boss of the Year General Counsel of the Year Eskom s human resources function was announced as the winner in the Human Resources Team of the Year category. The Acting chief Advisor for Strategy at the EAL won the HR Practitioner of the year award for her outstanding contribution to the field Eskom was awarded the Golden Key Award for best practice by a public institution Eskom received the Stars of Africa 2013 Gold award in the Eskom Contractor Academy: Incubation category Dr Steve Lennon received a lifetime achievement award for his outstanding contribution to the utilities industry at the African Utility Week s Industry awards Eskom chief information officer (CIO), Sal Laher, was the winner of the prestigious Visionary CIO of the Year award. The award recognises an executive in all industries across South Africa who has demonstrated vision and leadership in using technology to support and grow business Ayanda Nakedi, Senior General Manager of the Renewables business unit was awarded the 2013 Boss of the Year award At the African Legal awards, Willie du Plessis, General Manager (Legal Specialist), was awarded the General Counsel of the Year award 74

Awards and recognition Integrated reporting Nkonki SOC Integrated Reporting Investment Analysts Society of Southern Africa Association of Chartered Certified Accountants Ernst & Young Excellence in Integrated Reporting Chartered Secretaries Southern Africa and JSE Limited Annual Report award In June 2013, Eskom emerged as the overall winner of the Nkonki SOC Integrated Report Awards 2013. Eskom also scooped several other awards in categories related to governance and the application of King III At the 28th annual Investment Analyst s Society awards, Eskom emerged as the winner for the best presentation in the market cap above R30 billion category Eskom s integrated report was the winner in the resources category Eskom was adjudged an Excellent Integrated Reporter at the Ernst & Young 2013 inaugural Excellence in Integrated Reporting Awards event In November 2013, Eskom emerged as the joint winner, alongside Transnet, in the state entities category 75

Awards and recognition Processes Institute of Management Consultants South Africa SAP AG Enterprise Mobility Forum Eskom s Group IT division received the award for the SAP project implementation Eskom achieved its independent SAP Centre of Excellence accreditation from SAP globally, with a score of 192 out of 200, making it one of only four companies to achieve this level of accreditation Eskom won two Mobility awards one for best enterprise solution for Distribution s handheld solution for field workers and the second for best return on investment for a mobility solution Sustainability Department of Water Affairs Eskom was named as the runner-up in the 2013 Water Conservation and Water Demand Management Sector awards (mining, industry, power) 76

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