Eskom
Good news | According to Eskom's latest forecast, South Africans can look forward to a load shedding-free summer. Image: iStock

Home » Eskom predicts a summer without load shedding

Eskom predicts a summer without load shedding

Good news | Eskom’s latest forecast shows that South Africans can expect a summer without load shedding.

07-09-25 12:03
Eskom
Good news | According to Eskom's latest forecast, South Africans can look forward to a load shedding-free summer. Image: iStock

South Africans can expect a summer season without load shedding, as Eskom announced it does not plan to implement rolling power cuts from this month through the end of March next year.

The announcement follows a winter period in which the power utility supplied electricity for 97% of the time, recording only 26 hours of load shedding over four evenings.

Delayed unit returns

“Eskom’s Summer Outlook for 1 September 2025 to 31 March 2026, forecasts no load shedding – a recovery from last summer’s 13 days of load shedding, when electricity was supplied 96% of the time due to delayed unit returns from planned maintenance.

“This summer represents an even greater improvement compared with the 176 days of load shedding during the 2023/24 summer, when electricity was available only 17% of the time,” the power utility said in a statement on Friday.

Eskom has added about 4,000 MW of extra capacity compared to last summer to meet rising demand. Eskom Chief Group Executive Dan Marokane praised the utility’s staff for their efforts in keeping the lights on.

“This positive projected load shedding-free Summer Outlook is the result of the progress achieved through the expertise and dedication of the Eskom Guardians over the past three years and the associated support from the government-led initiatives.

“It shows that our strategy is delivering on our commitment to energy security, supporting the country’s socio-economic programmes, and positioning Eskom as an investable, sustainable company ready to compete in the marketplace.

“The structural shift in the performance of the generation fleet has, at the same time, delivered cost efficiencies, with savings in diesel spend of approximately R16 billion in the last financial year alone. We are currently increasing our focus and capacity to drive further efficiencies across Eskom,” Marokane said.

‘Bullish’

Speaking during a media briefing at Megawatt Park on Friday, Energy and Electricity Minister Kgosientsho Ramokgopa said: “We are no longer within touching distance … we are touching it, the end of load shedding. We are close to that.

“We are very bullish about the outlook. This comes from the fact that these [Eskom] men and women have done a remarkable job of turning this organisation around,” he said.

He added that although the light at the end of the tunnel shines brightly, there are “other fronts” that are appearing including load reduction.

“There are households that are experiencing load reduction. We have just finalised and are polishing our strategy on ending load reduction. We know that from an Eskom side, it accounts for 549MW. If you put that into context, is that we are generating far more than what the demand.

“I am making that point to drive home the point that load reduction is not load shedding in another guise. It is a downstream isolated infrastructure challenge as a result of non-technical losses and the overload on the network.

“We are finalising that. I’ll be announcing that to the country in the next two weeks on how we are ending load reduction,” Ramokgopa said.