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Andrew Watson: The 'most influential' black footballer for decades lost to history

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  By Andrew Aloia BBC Sport Last updated on 11 October 2021 11 October 2021 . From the section Football Watson was a trailblazer who helped transform how football was played There are two murals of black footballers facing one another across an alleyway in Glasgow. One helped shape football as we know it, the other is Pele. Andrew Watson captained Scotland to a 6-1 win over England on his debut in 1881. He was a pioneer, the world's first black international, but for more than a century the significance of his achievements went unrecognised. Research conducted over the past three decades has left us with some biographical details: a man descended of slaves and of those who enslaved them, born in Guyana, raised to become an English gentleman and famed as one of Scottish football's first icons. And yet today, 100 years on from his death aged 64, Watson remains something of an enigma, the picture built around him a fractured one. His grainy, faded, sepia image evokes many differen

How much Eskom wants to charge normal households, and those with solar

 If you want access to the grid, prepare to pay fixed monthly charges …

Eskom says its Homeflex tariff will support ‘more optimal operation of the power system’. Image: Shutterstock

In January, Eskom filed a contentious tariff proposal with the National Energy Regulator of South Africa (Nersa).

Within it were a number of proposed changes that will have wide ramifications for all users of electricity, even if they are not directly supplied by Eskom.

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Two changes in particular will see tariff structures change across the country. First, Eskom wants to change the times of its peak and off-peak periods – an hour of peak ‘moves’ from the morning to the evening. It also wants to remove the incline block tariff (IBT) structure for residential customers it supplies directly, such as greater Sandton and Soweto.

Then, it proposes that residential customers who have their own solar or renewable installation and want to have access to the grid will be forced onto a new tariff, called ‘Homeflex’.

It says this tariff is “mandatory for all customers with grid-tied generation”, whether they are feeding back to the grid or not.

The major difference between Homeflex and the ‘standard’ Homepower tariff is that the former introduces time-of-use (TOU) tariffs that have very low off-peak tariffs and very steep peak tariffs.

The time-of-use kicker

Eskom will pay the customer the same rate for any energy sold back to the grid that the tariff charges for consumption at that point in time. For example, it will ‘pay’ the winter daytime rate if a customer is feeding back solar to the grid during daytime in winter.

For a customer with solar, this effectively means they are not able to offset the sharply higher peak tariff by feeding excess power back to the grid during the day (where there is a much lower off-peak tariff).

Effectively, those with solar systems will be feeding additional power back at 58.46c but paying R1.46 per kWh at night when they need power from the grid.

For a standard 16kVA single-phase supply (80A), the charges proposed are the following:

Homeflex charges
Summer
Peak c/kWh145.57c
Standard c/kWh81.85c
Off-peak c/kWh58.46c
Winter
Peak c/kWh350.77c
Standard c/kWh87.69c
Off-peak c/kWh58.46c

* Offset rates (for excess power fed back to the grid) are identical to the above.

(The utility also says the tariff “cannot be offered to customers who are on a prepaid smart meter due to current technological constraints”.)

Quite how the utility aims to implement this across the customers it supplies directly remains an unanswered question and, by definition, not part of the tariff filing.

Unbundling of charges

Eskom also proposes the unbundling of charges on both Homeflex and Homepower into two separate ones: energy charges and network charges (something done by City Power and many other metros).

Customers will therefore pay certain fixed charges regardless of their power consumption.

The utility proposes a rand-per-day “service and administration charge for each [point of delivery], which charge shall be payable every month whether any electricity is used or not, based on the applicable daily rate and the number of days in the month”.

Additionally, it proposes a network demand charge and ancillary service charge “based on the active energy measured at the point of delivery”.

The proposed additional (unbundled) charges are as follows:

Homeflex 4/Homepower 4ChargeTotal for 30-day month
Network capacity chargeR6.53 per dayR195.90
Service and administration chargeR4.77 per dayR143.10
TotalR339.00
Ancillary service charge (c/kWh)0.2186c
Network demand charge (c/kWh)15.45c

For a larger supply, the proposed additional charges are higher:

 Network capacity chargeService and administration chargeTotal for 30-day month
Homeflex 1/Homepower 1

Dual-phase 32kVA three-phase supplies (80A per phase)
Three-phase 25kVA three-phase supplies (40A per phase)

R13.74 per dayR4.77R555.30
Homeflex 2/Homepower 2
Dual-phase 64kVA three-phase supplies (150A per phase)
Three-phase 50kVA three-phase supplies (80A per phase)
R23.83 per dayR4.77R858.00
Homeflex 3/Homepower 3
Dual-phase 100kVA three-phase supplies (225A per phase)
Three-phase 100kVA three-phase supplies (150A per phase)
R58.81 per dayR4.77R1907.40

In its tariff filing, Eskom says “for the average-consumption customer who converts from the existing Homepower tariff to the Homeflex tariff, the impact of this tariff conversion may be positive or negative (depending on the load profile)”.

“Customers who respond to the TOU [time of use] signals will experience a positive impact.”

Elsewhere in the filing, it says “affluent” households on Homepower 3 have an average monthly consumption of 3 404kWh.

In its application, Eskom says the Homeflex tariff “is a dynamic tariff for the residential urban sector that supports a more optimal operation of the power system”.

The right ‘economic signals’

It adds: “Eskom identified the need for a residential time-of-use tariff to provide the right economic signals that promote economic efficiency and sustainability for Eskom and the customer long ago.”

Read: Court allows Eskom to claw back R69bn over three years

It says the proposed tariff will also help to optmise the system and “protect future revenue”.

It says “there is a need to get fair compensation for the use of the grid and to incentivise customers to stay connected to the grid” but that the “current IBT structure does not provide a TOU signal or a signal for net billing; PV [solar photovoltaic], for example, reduces sales, but not peak consumption and peak demand”.

Nersa was expected to pronounce on the tariffs earlier this month. In theory, these are to be implemented from April 1 for Eskom-direct customers and on July 1 for municipalities that bulk-buy power from the utility.

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