Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 638South Africa
Afriforum NPC v National Energy Regulator of South Africa and Others (2024/061993) [2024] ZAGPPHC 638 (8 July 2024)
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Afriforum NPC v National Energy Regulator of South Africa and Others (2024/061993) [2024] ZAGPPHC 638 (8 July 2024)
Afriforum NPC v National Energy Regulator of South Africa and Others (2024/061993) [2024] ZAGPPHC 638 (8 July 2024)
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sino date 8 July 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2024/061993
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
8 July 2024
In
the matter between:
AFRIFORUM
NPC
Applicant
and
NATIONAL
ENERGY REGULATOR OF SOUTH AFRICA
First Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN LOCAL GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION
Second Respondent
ESKOM
HOLDINGS SOC LIMITED
Third Respondent
RAND
WEST MUNICIPALITY
Fourth Respondent
MUNICIPALITIES
LISTED IN ANNEXURE “FA3” TO THE
Fifth to the 178th
FOUNDING
AFFIDAVIT
Respondents
Summary
Energy
– lawfulness of NERSA’s methodology employed to determine
tariff increases sought by municipalities – requirement
that
municipalities charge for the cost of supply of electricity –
requirement of a cost of supply study – ensuring
municipalities
charge only for the cost of supply – section 172 of the
Constitution and a just and equitable remedy –
rule of law –
testing State's allegation of budgetary constraints – extension
of a period provided for in legislation
as a just and equitable
remedy – variation of order as an avenue to provide an
opportunity for municipalities and NERSA to
comply with their
statutory obligations – the ambit of the state’s
obligation must guide the determination of the budget
- If the budget
is premised on a misconception of the State's duties, then it is no
answer to say that its duties cannot be achieved
due to budgetary
constraints - the State ought to have budgeted in line with its
obligations.
JUDGMENT
DE VOS AJ
Introduction
[1]
The case concerns the tariffs people and businesses (“end-users”)
pay for electricity. Municipalities calculate the tariffs. The
National Energy Regulator of South Africa (“NERSA”),
as
custodian and enforcer of the regulatory framework, must consider and
approve the tariffs calculated by the municipalities.
Both the
application by municipalities and the approval by NERSA, must be
based on the cost of supply of electricity.
[2]
The controversy is whether the methodology used to determine tariff
increases
is based on the cost of supply of electricity. The
applicant (“Afriforum”) contends, in the interests of the
end-users,
that the method employed by NERSA to approve the increase
in tariffs is not premised on the cost of supply and is, therefore,
unlawful.
The third respondent, the South African Local Government
Association (“SALGA”), makes common cause with the
applicant
in this regard.
[3]
The context
of the application is what Afriforum terms "the longstanding
practice of NERSA to approve municipalities' electricity
tariffs in
accordance with a method that deviates from the regulatory
prescripts”.
[1]
NERSA
itself considered and investigated the matter, and the conclusion
reached is that the failure to set cost-reflective tariffs
means,
practically, for end-users, that “tariffs are increasingly
unaffordable.”
[2]
[4]
The case
also has to be placed within its litigation context. The present case
is the second application in which NERSA's methodology
is challenged
for its failure to be based on the cost of supply. In
Nelson
Mandela Bay Business Chambers NPC and Another v National Energy
Regulator and Others
(“
Nelson
Mandela Bay judgment
”),
[3]
Her Ladyship Justice Kubushi declared NERSA’s previous
methodology unlawful. NERSA’s previous methodology involved
benchmarking municipalities’ applications for tariff increases.
If the tariff increase sought by a municipality fell within
specific
parameters, NERSA approved the application; if it fell outside the
parameters, NERSA denied the application ("benchmarking
methodology"). Her Ladyship Justice Kubushi declared the
benchmarking methodology unlawful as it was not based on the actual
cost of supply. The municipalities and NERSA requested time to get
their houses in order. The Court declared the methodology unlawful
but suspended the order for twelve months to permit the
municipalities and NERSA to employ a method which is based on the
cost
of supply. The twelve-month grace period expired on 17 October
2023.
[5]
Afriforum contends that despite this grace period, NERSA is still
employing
a method which is unlawful in that it does not ensure that
end-users pay for the costs of supply.
[6]
The
obligation to base tariff increases on the cost of supply is
longstanding and predates the judgment in
Nelson
Mandela Bay
.
The Electricity Pricing Policy (“Policy”)
[4]
mandated municipalities to base tariffs on the cost of supply. The
Policy also determined the methodology to determine the cost
of
supply. The Policy requires that municipalities “shall conduct
a cost of supply study”. The Policy, and so the obligation
to
conduct a cost of supply study, is almost twenty years old. None of
the parties before the Court dispute the obligation to base
the
tariffs on costs of supply studies. NERSA has approved a framework to
assist municipalities in conducting the necessary cost
of supply
study. This framework similarly mandates municipalities to conduct a
cost-of-supply study.
[7]
The cost of supply study serves a dual function. The first is to
ensure that
municipalities efficiently distribute electricity. If
municipalities are charging more than the cost of supply studies
indicate
is necessary, they are not providing services efficiently.
Municipalities' licenses are subject to them being efficient
licensees.
A cost-of-supply study allows NERSA to test the efficiency
of the municipality’s electricity distribution. The second is
to ensure a standardised and transparent process that end-users can
engage with. These twin principles of efficiency and transparency
underpin the requirement of a cost-of-supply study.
[8]
All three
arms of government have been clear and congruent regarding what
methodology NERSA must employ. The Executive has set the
Policy that
requires a cost-of-supply study. Parliament has, through the
Electricity Regulation Act (“ERA”)
[5]
determined that NERSA’s methodology must comply with the
Policy. In addition, Parliament enacted the Local Government
Municipal
Systems Act
[6]
which requires that tariffs must reasonably reflect the costs
associated with rendering the services.
[7]
The Judiciary, in the form of a final judgment from this Court, has
declared that NERSA must desist from benchmarking and
use a
cost-of-supply approach. NERSA itself has adopted a framework that,
in line with this consistent position from all components
of the
State, requires a cost-of-supply study.
[9]
Despite this consistency and clarity, NERSA changed tack in January
2024. In
January 2024, NERSA no longer required a tariff increase
application to be accompanied by a cost of supply study. Instead,
NERSA
introduced another methodology that tested tariff increase
applications against certain assumptions ("assumption
methodology").
If the tariff applications fell "outside"
certain "assumptions", NERSA would not approve the
increase. If it
fell within these "assumptions", it would
be approved. This change, contends Afriforum is unlawful as it
deviates from
the requirement to conduct a cost of the supply of
study. In addition, insofar as it tests an application for a tariff
increase
against certain assumptions – or parameters - the
assumption methodology holds echoes of a benchmarking methodology.
[10]
SALGA made common cause with Afriforum on this point. SALGA also
pointed out that NERSA's position
was inconsistent and changed not
only between its notices to municipalities but also in its answering
affidavit and the position
it adopted in an undertaking to the Court
the day before the hearing.
[11]
SALGA and Afriforum's contentions persuaded the Court that NERSA’s
methodology altered and departed
from the requirement to conduct a
cost of supply study. The Court declared NERSA’s methodology
unlawful.
[12]
The Court then had to contend with an appropriate remedy. Despite the
clarity of what the law required
of the municipalities and NERSA, an
appropriate remedy was vexing. At the time of the hearing, sixty-six
municipalities had complied
with the obligation to conduct a
cost-of-supply study. Their applications could, therefore, be
lawfully considered by NERSA based
on a cost-of-supply study.
However, SALGA pressed the interests of those municipalities that had
not conducted a cost of supply
study (“the non-compliant
municipalities”). SALGA’s position was that the
non-compliant municipalities had already
approved their budgets based
on unlawful methodology. If they are prevented from implementing
these budgets, it would result in
financial hardship. SALGA pleaded
that it would lead to the bankruptcy of many municipalities. SALGA
suggested, from a position
of pragmatism, that the Court permit these
non-compliant municipalities to apply for tariff increases based on
the unlawful method
and that the Court give them a year to get their
houses in order.
[13]
The Court anxiously considered this aspect of the case. The Court
reflects the full consideration below.
The main factors that weighed
with the Court are that the proposed relief from SALGA, motivated
understandably by pragmatism, requires
the Court to sanction an
illegality to continue. Despite the obligation being twenty years
old, despite a grace period of twenty
months to comply with the law
and in the face of the
Nelson Mandela Bay
judgment. Whilst the
suggestion from SALGA is practical, principally, it requires the
Court to deviate from the precepts of the
rule of law. SALGA has not
pointed the Court to any law that empowers it to deviate from the
Policy, the Electricity Regulation
Act, the Municipal Systems Act or
the
Nelson Mandela Bay
judgment. The municipalities have not
told the Court why there has been non-compliance with the law. The
Court is being asked to
permit illegality to continue in direct
conflict with a legal precept in the absence of a judicial power to
do so, absent an explanation
from the non-compliant municipalities.
The Court declined to do so.
[14]
It weighed
with the Court that the Constitutional Court in
Blue
Moonlight
[8]
held that ordinarily, a budgetary constraint which has resulted from
an unlawful premise cannot be a justification to permit an
unlawful
act. The same principle finds application in this matter. If the
municipalities unlawfully determined their budgets, budgetary
restraints cannot determine the legal position. Municipalities cannot
escape their obligations because they have failed to budget
premised
on these obligations. The municipalities’ legal obligations
must inform the budget, not the reverse. If not, then
all legal
obligations owed by the State would be subject to budgetary
determinations rather than determined by Parliament.
[15]
The Court
also considered the facts that SALGA had pleaded. SALGA pleaded
conclusions of bankruptcy, but these were largely devoid
of primary
facts. The Court was not persuaded, premised on the authority from
the Constitutional Court in
Blue
Moonlight
,
Khosa
,
[9]
Lawyers
for Human Rights
[10]
and
Mlungwana
[11]
that a sufficient case had been made out. At the level of principle,
an ipse dixit from municipalities that it cannot comply with
the law
cannot, without more, be the reason to permit an unlawful act to
continue.
[16]
In addition, the limited primary facts that SALGA presented to the
Court were under closer scrutiny,
contradicted by SALGA. SALGA gave
examples of non-compliant municipalities that would be bankrupted,
such as eThekwini Municipality,
which would suffer an alleged R 1.9
billion deficit. eThekwini, however, is, on SALGA's version, a
compliant municipality and is
entirely unaffected by the relief
granted by this Court. The Court is therefore not persuaded, even on
a factual level, that SALGA
has made out a sufficient case of alleged
bankruptcy.
[17]
The Court was not persuaded that it would be just and equitable to
permit non-compliant municipalities
to continue charging unlawful
tariffs, particularly where there was already an order in place
providing them a year to address
their non-compliance. The Court was
also not persuaded that it would be just and equitable to grant a
remedy in contradiction of
the determinations of all three arms of
government. It would also not be just and equitable to grant a remedy
that created two
categories of municipalities: those who had to
comply with the law and others who did not have to. For these
reasons, more fully
set out below, the Court declined the suggested
relief by SALGA to permit the non-compliant municipalities to
increase their tariffs
in line with the unlawful method.
[18]
However, in light of the seriousness of SALGA’s allegation, the
Court extended the period within
which municipalities could bring
themselves within the law and apply for tariff increases. Of course,
if a municipality cannot
comply within the extended period, it can
approach a court to explain its positions and seek a variation of
this period. The obligation,
however, is on a municipality to explain
its non-compliance with its obligations and request a variation of
the period.
[19]
The parties requested clarity as a matter of extreme urgency. The
matter was heard on Wednesday, 26
June 2024, on the normal urgent
court roll amidst twenty other matters on this Court’s roll,
and the parties requested an
order by Friday, 28 June 2024. The
reason for the extreme time pressure is that the parties needed to
know their respective obligations
before 1 July 2024, the
commencement of the municipal financial year. In these circumstances,
the Court granted an order in the
terms set out at the end of this
judgment.
[20]
At the outset, the Court sets out the limited scope of the challenge.
The case is limited to tariff
increases. The Court has to consider
whether the methodology used by the State to increase the tariffs for
the new financial year
aligns with the requirement that end-users pay
for the cost of supply. The case is also limited to a determination
of the tariffs
which municipalities are entitled to charge end-users.
Eskom generates electricity, and municipalities distribute or
reticulate
it. There are instances where Eskom distributes, and
municipalities generate or a combination of these, but for the most
part,
that is the structure. NERSA determines the tariffs which both
Eskom and the municipalities are entitled to charge. The challenge
before the Court considers increases in municipal tariffs and not
Eskom's tariff increases. Further, municipalities are entitled
to
charge the costs of supply plus a reasonable margin of return. The
current dispute is not concerned with the reasonable margin
of return
but rather with determining the actual cost of supply.
[21]
I set out the reasons for the order in what follows. The reasons are
also provided urgently, as it
is expected that the parties would want
to consider their positions and require the reasons to do so.
The
parties
[22]
The applicant is Afriforum NPC, a non-profit company and
non-governmental organisation. Its Memorandum
of Incorporation
identifies its main purpose as the promotion of and advocacy for
human rights. Afriforum's members are largely
residents and
ratepayers. They are also largely users of electricity, largely
municipal electricity. Many of its members are large-volume
users of
electricity, including in the industrial and corporate spheres.
[23]
Afriforum contends, however, that its interest in the matter extends
beyond that of its members. It
pleads that the subject matter of the
application involves constitutional rights and obligations, the
legality principle and the
rule of law. As the subject matter of the
application involves the rule of law and the legality principle, it
involves a broader
public interest. Afriforum pleads that almost
every person in South Africa is affected by this application, but
very few are aware
of how their rights are affected and not all have
the means to access the Court for relief. Afriforum uses the
application to protect
its members' interests as well as the public
interest.
[24]
The first
respondent is the National Energy Regulator of South Africa (NERSA),
a juristic person established in terms of section
2 of the National
Energy Regulator Act 49 of 2004 (NERA).
[12]
It is the custodian and enforcer of the regulatory framework
requiring the approval of municipal electricity tariffs, enjoined
to
“ensure that the interests and needs of present and future
electricity customers and end users are safeguarded and met”.
[13]
It must regulate electricity prices and tariffs,
[14]
which tariffs “must enable an efficient licensee to recover the
full cost of its licensed activities, including a reasonable
margin
or return”.
[15]
Municipal tariffs are to be approved on an annual basis.
[16]
Section 4 of NERA places on NERSA the obligation to undertake
the functions set out in section 4 of the Electricity Regulation
Act
4 of 2006 (ERA). That provision places the obligation on NERSA to
regulate prices and tariffs, including those of municipalities.
[25]
SALGA is cited in this application because of the interest it has in
the relief which the applicant
seeks because of its "role as
representing, promoting and protecting the interests of local
government." SALGA's participation
in this application must be
seen in the light of its role in representing, promoting, and
protecting the interests of local government,
which is the
municipality cited as a further respondent in this application.
[26]
The fourth to 178
th
respondents are municipalities.
Although they did not attend the hearing to argue the matter, some
did file affidavits, which focused
on the issue of remedy.
Cost
of supply requirement
[27]
The
Constitution empowers municipalities to provide electricity to
end-users. Specifically, municipalities, as the local sphere
of
government, have to ensure the sustainable provision of services to
communities and must strive to achieve these objectives
within their
financial and administrative capacity.
[17]
In addition, municipalities have executive authority over and the
right to administer the reticulation of electricity.
[18]
[28]
The process through which a municipality must apply to set its
tariffs is similarly regulated by legislation.
Section 15(2) of the
ERA prohibits licensees like municipalities from “...charg[ing]
a customer any tariff ... other than
that determined or approved by
NERSA". ERA then sets a substantive requirement for the fees
municipalities may charge for
the electricity supply. Section 15(1)
of ERA provides that NERSA’s setting or approval of prices,
charges, and tariffs and
the regulation of revenues “(a) must
enable an efficient licensee to recover the full cost of its licenced
activities, including
a reasonable margin or return”. All
parties accept that the text in section 15(2) that the “full
cost of its licensed
activities” means that municipalities can
only charge for the actual cost of supplying electricity. In section
27(h), ERA
further mandates that each municipality “must
exercise its executive authority and perform its duty by executing
its reticulation
function in accordance with relevant national energy
policies”.
[29]
The
applicable energy policy is the South African Electricity Supply
Industry: Electricity Pricing Policy (“Policy”).
[19]
The Policy was central to the judgment by Her Ladyship Justice
Kubushi. The objectives of the Policy are that “electricity
prices should reflect efficient market signals, accurate cost of
supply and concomitant price levels.” The Policy recognises
that the Local Government Municipal Systems Act
[20]
requires that “tariffs must reasonably reflect the costs
associated with rendering the services, including capital, operating,
maintenance, administration and replacement costs, and interest
charges.”
[21]
[30]
Chapter 8 of the Policy deals with "Distribution pricing".
Under this chapter, the critical
principle for "distributing
pricing, namely that tariffs must be cost reflective and in support
of cost reflectivity".
The policy position under section 8.1 is
as follows:
“
8.1 Cost of
Supply Studies
The industry’s Cost
of Supply methodology and some models to calculate these costs have
existed for more than ten years. It
has nevertheless only been
applied by a few utilities, thus leaving the extent of
cross-subsidies largely unknown.
Policy Position: 23
Electricity distributors
shall undertake COS studies at least every five years, but at least
when significant licensee structure
changes occur… This must
be done according to the approved NERSA standard to reflect changing
costs and customer behaviour.
The cost of service methodology used to
derive tariffs must accompany applications to the regulator for
changes to tariff structures.”
[31]
Clause 8.1
sets out important contextual aspects. Models to calculate the supply
cost have existed for more than ten years. The
failure to implement
the cost of supply study means that municipalities have charged
unidentified surcharges. Centrally, the obligation
of municipalities
to conduct cost-of-supply studies is clear. The Policy states that
municipalities "shall undertake COS studies".
It is
repeated as the "cost of service methodology used to derive
applications must accompany applications to NERSA. The COS
studies
must be done according to a NERSA-approved standard. The requirement
that it must be done in terms of a standard procedure
is repeated in
the definitional section. The Policy contains a specific definition
of cost of supply, which is the "standard
procedure for deriving
and allocating costs of supply, used for the design of tariffs."
[22]
[32]
Policy Position 29 requires that “tariff structure and levels
shall be aligned with the results
from the COS studies in which the
resultant income will equal the revenue requirement”.
[33]
The Policy and legislative framework requires a cost-of-supply
study.
The
obligation is not disputed
[34]
In their pleadings before this Court, all parties accepted the
legislative mandate to employ a cost-of-supply
methodology and the
requirement of a cost-of-supply study.
[35]
SALGA
accepts the obligation of municipalities to conduct cost-of-supply
studies.
[23]
In its written
submissions, SALGA submits that it is common cause between the
parties that “NERSA must consider the cost
of supply studies of
each licensee when it considers application for the approval of
tariffs.”
[24]
SALGA
submits that the correct position is that "municipal electricity
tariffs must be based on cost of supply studies conducted
by
municipalities and submitted to NERSA when municipalities apply for
the approval of new tariffs for the next financial year."
[25]
Afriforum similarly contends that there is a duty to employ a
cost-of-supply approach, which requires a cost-of-supply study.
[36]
NERSA,
also, accepts this obligation. In its pleadings, NERSA relied on the
Policy, in particular, Policy Positions 23
[26]
and 29. NERSA's synopsis of its case is that the framework NERSA uses
is focused on the cost of supply.
[27]
NERSA pleads that “there are no assumptions regarding the
efficient costs of a municipality and each is required to support
its
respective application with actual cost of supplies studies”.
[28]
[37]
In accordance with its acceptance of this obligation, NERSA approved
and adopted a Cost-of-Supply Framework
(Annexure FA5) and a
Cost-of-Supply Framework and Pricing Methodology (Annexure FA6). Both
frameworks require a cost-of-supply
study.
COS
Framework
[38]
The Cost of Supply Framework identifies Policy Position 23, which
provides that "electricity distributors
shall undertake Cost of
Supply studies". The framework then states that NERSA "developed
a COS framework to be used by
all licensed electricity distributors
in South Africa. The framework will be used as a guideline to
licensees when developing their
COS studies." The framework was
published for written comment and public hearings were held for
further comments on the framework.
NERSA considered all comments when
developing the final COS framework.
[39]
The
framework identifies the background. It states, "A Cost of
Supply (COS) study is one of the most important considerations
in
establishing and designing electricity rates that are implemented to
provide the service required by customers and recover costs
incurred
by licensees".
[29]
NERSA states that it “has developed the COS Framework in order
to promote sustainability of the electricity supply
industry while
protecting customers against unduly high prices”.
[30]
[40]
As to the
scope, "the framework is meant to assist all licensed
electricity distributors in performing their cost of supply
studies".
[31]
The
framework “aims at assisting all licensees, with a focus being
placed on smaller licensees that have limited capacity
and experience
data base challenges. Licensees that have advanced capacity and data
warehouses can expand the adopted approach
to a level that will meet
their specific needs.”
[32]
The "framework serves as a regulatory standard that will guide
licensees to develop their individual COS studies and
submit the to
the Energy Regulator for consideration. All licensees are required to
submit their COS studies to the Energy Regulator."
[33]
The COS Framework then creates four steps to guide the licensees in
conducting a cost-of-supply study.
[41]
The COS
Framework is not dated. It appears that this was the framework or its
precursor, was already in existence before Kubushi
J
[34]
-
“
In support of the
EPP, that is, Policy Position 23 that states that electricity
distributors shall undertake COS studies at least
every five years,
NERSA developed a COS Framework to be used by all licenced
electricity distributors in South Africa. The framework
is to be used
as a guideline to licensees when developing their COS studies.”
[42]
However, the attack before Her Ladyship Justice Kubushi focused on a
different methodology, not this
COS Framework.
[43]
The COS
Framework has been adopted by NERSA “to assist licensees in
undertaking COS studies”.
[35]
NERSA then adopted a second document, again enforcing the obligation
to ensure municipalities undertook a cost-of-supply
study.
COS
Framework and Pricing Methodology of October 2023
[44]
The
Framework and Pricing Methodology
[36]
refers to the COS Framework, which has been adopted. The Framework
and Pricing Methodology does not state that it overrides or
replace
the COS Framework. They are, however, on the issue in dispute in this
matter, not in conflict with each other. They both
require
municipalities to conduct costs of supply studies and for NERSA to
consider the application based on the study.
[45]
Specifically,
the Framework and Pricing Methodology requires “cost of supply
studies."
[37]
and for
NERSA to “assess the study submitted”.
[38]
The Framework and Pricing Methodology, created by NERSA, identifies
the need to conduct a cost of supply study and its purpose
–
“
The purpose of the
COS study is to ensure that licensees recover all the costs
associated with supplying a customer.”
[39]
[46]
The
Framework and Pricing Methodology repeat the same four steps referred
to in the COS Framework. The first phase of the third
step commences
with conducting a cost of supply study.
[40]
[47]
It is not
for the Court to test these frameworks. They have been set and
determined by NERSA, in line with section 15(2) of ERA,
in compliance
with
Nelson
Mandela Bay
and in giving effect to the Policy. However, both of these documents
were authored and adopted by NERSA and set the standard for
applying
electricity tariff increases. Both of them require municipalities to
provide cost-of-supply studies. NERSA’s acceptance
of this
position is apparent from its letter to all municipalities on 17
November 2023, in which it states that “the practical
effect of
the [
Nelson
Mandela Bay
judgment] is that, all tariff applications from 2024/2025 FY should
be supported by a COS study otherwise the breach becomes a
contempt
of court."
[41]
[48]
The Court concludes that there is an obligation to use a
cost-of-supply approach, which requires a
cost-of-supply study. In
light of the fact that NERSA accepted the obligation and enacted a
framework to give effect to the obligation
to conduct a cost of
supply study, the Court need not be concerned with overstepping into
the realm of the executive.
[49]
The applicant and SALGA contend that NERSA’s initial position,
as set out in the notice of 17
November 2023, which demanded the cost
of supply studies, was lawful. The applicant referred to NERSA’s
initial position
as being “on a good path”. However, in
January 2024, NERSA changed tack and did away with the requirement
that municipalities
must base their tariff increase applications on a
cost of supply study; instead, it introduced a new methodology. SALGA
and the
applicant contend that this new methodology – this
change in tack - breaches NERSA's obligations.
[50]
NERSA contends that there is no real "new methodology" and
that the applicant and SALGA are
engaged with a distinction without a
difference. The Court considers this allegation that there was no
change from a good to a
bad path.
Did
NERSA deviate from the good path?
[51]
Part of the
good path, contends Afriforum, was NERSA’s position as set out
in a notice dated 17 November 2023,
[42]
NERSA said the following to municipalities:
"2. NERSA's approach
of using benchmarking and guidelines has been reviewed, set aside,
and declared unlawful by the High Court
in the Nelson Mandela Bay
Chamber of Business and others. The judgment allowed NERSA to revise
the Municipal Tariff Guideline to
make it compliant with section 15
of the Electricity Regulation Act.
3. The above judgment was
delivered when NERSA, SALGA and Sustainable Energy Africa made
available to all municipal licensees a
simplified cost of supply
(COS) tool. This simplified tool shows a link between the required
revenue and the cost associated with
supplying a category of
customers, the classification of costs between fixed and variable,
and energy-related, demand-related,
and customer-related costs.
This
simplified tool does not replace the need to conduct a fully-fledged
COS.
4.
The practical
effect of the judgment is that all tariff applications from 2024/25
FY should be supported by a COS study; otherwise,
the breach becomes
a contempt of Court.
The municipality is therefore reminded to
undertake such a study, and if it is unable to do so, the NERSA's
approved COS model should
be used as a guide to perform the study and
submit it to the Energy Regulator for consideration (attached).
5.
NERSA is committed
to supporting licensees when developing, implementing and submitting
their COS studies, and is looking forward
to ongoing engagements and
co-operation in this regard. NERSA, along with its partners such as
Sustainable Energy Africa (SEA),
is available to assist struggling
municipalities with the COS model and the report that should be
submitted with the model.
6. NERSA will not be
issuing a guideline and benchmark letter for 2024/25 FY; licensees
are required to submit three-year budget
projections in a D-form
format that will [be] shared with licensees ...
7.
Licensee are
requested to supply their completed COS studies and their budget
projections before 1 March 2024
to allow sufficient time for
NERSA to consider the 2024/25 FY tariff applications.” (Own
emphasis)
[52]
The 17 November 2023 notice required municipalities to conduct a
cost-of-supply study. What is clear
from the notice is that NERSA
required municipalities to "supply their completed COS studies
and their budget projections
before 1 March 2024 to allow sufficient
time for NERSA to consider the 2024/25 tariff applications."
[53]
However,
after this notice, Afriforum submitted that NERSA deviated from the
good path. In a notice dated 29 January 2024.
[43]
It said the following to municipalities:
"On 17 November
2023, NERSA issued a letter informing electricity distributors that
the guideline and benchmarks that had been
supplied in the past will
no longer be published for annual electricity distributor tariff
price increases; each distributor's
tariff will be based on its
costs.
In that regard, a revenue
requirement template has been developed for municipalities to
complete their 2023/2024 projections and
revenue requirements for the
2024/25 financial year.
Licences are required to
complete the attached
template
with projections for 2023/24
year end and revenue requirement for 20234/25.
The increase in
revenues should be aligned to the following assumptions
...
Municipalities
applying for an increase that is outside the above assumptions will
have to justify their increases to the Energy
Regulator, and the
approval will be based on the following requirements
...
It is important to note
that the completion of this revenue requirement template is not an
automatic increase in tariffs. Distributors
are requested to submit
their 2024/25 tariff applications in line with the average price
increase calculated by the template by
1 March 2024 by the provisions
of Section 16(2) of the Electricity Regulation Act ... before
implementation."
[54]
NERSA's notice of 29 January 2024 required municipalities to complete
"the attached template with
projections for 2023/24-year end and
revenue requirement for 2024/25" with an advisory note that the
"increase in revenues
should be aligned to the following
assumptions" listed therein. This will be referred to as the
assumptions methodology. The
position was that if the increase fell
within specific parameters set by assumptions, the application would
be approved. If it
fell outside the parameters, it would not be
approved.
[55]
SALGA submits that NERSA either changed its position or sought to
modify it. Either way, it contradicted
what it said in the notice
dated 17 November 2023. What is also clear from NERSA's notice dated
29 January 2024 is that the submission
of cost of supply studies for
purposes of tariff applications was no longer required. In terms of
this notice, NERSA requires municipalities
"to complete the
attached template with projections for 2023/24 year-end and revenue
requirement for 2024/25", considering
that the "increase in
revenues should be aligned to the following assumptions" listed
therein and not by the outcome
of the cost of supply studies which
NERSA said municipalities must conduct and submit by 1 March 2024.
[56]
SALGA
submits that there were then further confusing changes to NERSA’s
methodology. First, SALGA points to NERSA’s
pleaded case. In
its answering affidavit,
[44]
NERSA confirms that “each municipal application is being
considered individually and each municipality is expected to (and
must) set out its own costs of supply in its tariff application.”
SALGA contends that this is completely different from the
position
set out in NERSA’s notice to municipalities dated 29 January
2024.
[57]
Second, SALGA points to a letter dated 25 June 2024 addressed to the
applicant and SALGA to clarify
matters; NERSA advised as follows:
“
10.9 In order for
NERSA to determine the rates applicable for the 2024/25 FY, NERSA
requires the FY2024/25 cost data as highlighted
above. As explained
in the answering affidavit, due to the fact that the latest audited
cost data available for municipalities
relates to 2022/23 FY,
licensees were required to project year-end data for 2023/24 FY based
on the year-to- date actual data,
and to make assumptions about the
anticipated increases forecasts in expenses for the 2024/25 FY. The
average increase in these
costs is then used to adjust tariffs,
subject to prudency and efficiency testing – and any
adjustments are tested for reasonableness
in the context of the
individual licensee.”
[58]
SALGA submits that this is again confusing as it is not clear exactly
when NERSA communicated its position
quoted above to municipalities.
What is clear is that that position is different from that set out in
its notice dated 17 November
2023 and wider than that set out in its
notice dated 29 January 2024. SALGA’s submission states,
"Either way, it is
confusing, and it is wrong in law.”
[59]
Third, SALGA points to the contents of the without prejudice letter
presented to the Court on 28 June
2024, in which NERSA requests
information from municipalities to determine the tariff increase
itself. SALGA submits that NERSA’s
list of information in the
letter of 28 June 2024 is different, yet again, from the information
NERSA referred to in its letter
of January 2024.
[60]
The Court considered this correspondence. From the correspondence, it
is clear that the initial position
of NERSA was for municipalities to
submit a cost-of-supply study. However, in January 2024, NERSA
changed its methodology and provided
an alternative to the cost of
supply study. The Court is bolstered by this conclusion as NERSA
explains the mischief which led
to the change. NERSA pleads that the
position it adopted in January 2024 was motivated by a “decrease”
in municipal
tariff applications accompanied by cost of supply
studies:
“
Following the
court decisions, NERSA found itself without a tool to approve
municipal tariffs. As a result, NERSA revised its costs
of supply
framework approved by the Energy Regulator on 26 October 2023.
Municipalities were then expected to submit the Cost of
Supply
studies and the 2024/2025 tariff applications based on the COS
findings.
In the wake of these
changes, NERSA is grappling with the challenges of municipalities
adhering to the above requirements. This
has led to a significant
decrease in the submission of rate tariff applications based on COS."
[61]
Implicit in this is NERSA's concession that it altered its
requirement—to no longer require a
cost of supply study—in
response to municipalities' non-compliance with the requirement.
[62]
I am fortified in my conclusion that NERSA changed its methodology
based on two letters attached to
its answering affidavit in January
2024. These letters were from Knysna Municipality (which had a tariff
application but no COS
study) and Kannaland Municipality (which had
provided neither a COS Study nor a tariff application). NERSA
explains that it has
identified certain cost information, "which
will be used to enable you to calculate the average percentage
increase required
on tariffs. These costs will be tested for prudency
and efficiency on a case-by-case basis"
which
costs include:
a)
bulk
purchase costs indicating purchases;
[45]
b)
network operating costs;
c)
retail operating costs;
d)
general and other expenses relevant to the
licensee;
e)
licensee’s estimated reasonable
return supported by motivation for such return; and
f)
sales forecasts are shown in MWh and rand
value.
[63]
NERSA's position in January 2024, as conveyed to these
municipalities, does not require a cost of supply
study. In fact, the
information requested from municipalities was to replace the need to
conduct a cost of supply study.
[64]
Furthermore,
NERSA, at the hearing of the matter, tendered a solution that
permitted licensees to follow either its cost-of-supply
study
framework or the cost-breakdown approach. This solution did not
require a cost-of-supply study. Even on NERSA’s version,
paragraph 3 of the “without prejudice letter” to the
Court indicated that “each municipality is expected to submit
a
tariff application supported by a cost of supply study
or
cost data to determine the costs of supply". Paragraph 5 states
that "Municipalities were expected to submit tariff
applications, supported by a cost of supply study and a tariff
application
or
cost breakdowns.” Paragraph 10 “Broadly, tariff
applications are classified into the following categories: based on
COS studies
or
based
on the cost breakdown structure.
[46]
The position, even at the hearing of the matter was that NERSA would
accept a cost breakdown structure, in the place of a cost
of supply
study.
[65]
Similarly,
NERSA's written submission states that "the ideal position is
that all applications should be supported by a COS
study. However, if
a municipality is unable to conduct a COS study, for whatever
reasons, it should utilise NERSA's approved COS
model and reporting
and submit this to NERSA for consideration."
[47]
[66]
It is clear that the new model (whether it is a cost breakdown or an
assumption methodology) does not
require a cost-of-supply study.
NERSA's motivation for using the latter methodology/ies is that some
municipalities did not conduct
a COS study. The new methodology
eliminates this requirement.
[67]
The Court therefore rejects NERSA’s submission that the new
methodology (cost-breakdown methodology
introduced in January 2024)
is no different from one that requires a cost-of-supply study (COS
Framework and the methodology used
in October 2023).
Is
the new methodology lawful?
[68]
NERSA’s
submission was that the methodology had not changed. NERSA's positive
assertion is that the approach based on cost
breakdown is no
different to a guideline and benchmark approach
[48]
and that it is premised on “the actual costs of
municipalities”.
[49]
NERSA’s written submissions state that its methodology “does
not violate the Policy”.
[50]
[69]
The new method does not require a cost-of-supply study; it is
explicitly introduced to replace the
cost-of-supply study. To this
extent, the new methodology is at odds with the Policy and NERSA’s
frameworks, which require
cost-of-supply studies.
[70]
Aside from this, the new methodology uses historical costs to inform
the application. NERSA requires
a breakdown of these costs in place
of a supply of cost studies. This list of historical costs does not
appear in either the COS
Framework or the COS Framework and Pricing
Methodology. It is not only a difference of name but a substantially
different methodology.
They are not only different; they are
different on the significant issue of requiring a cost-of-supply
study.
[71]
The Court, therefore, rejects NERSA's submission that its methodology
does not derogates from the COS
framework adopted (and which is being
followed by NERSA). The COS framework itself requires cost-of-supply
studies. They cannot
be the same. The derogation is on an issue of
substance, the core requirement of the COS Framework premised on
Policy Position
23.
[72]
It is not for the Court to set out the framework within which
cost-of-supply studies must be undertaken.
NERSA did so, and it
accepted that a cost of supply study was required. However, when
faced with non-compliance, rather than enforcing
compliance, it
decided to act outside the law and use a new unlawful methodology.
This is at odds with its duties as a regulator.
On this basis,
the Court declares the new methodology introduced by NERSA unlawful.
[73]
The Court also accepts that the assumptions methodology tested the
application against certain assumptions.
This approach – rather
than based on a cost of supply methodology falls into the same
category as the benchmarking methodology.
On this basis also, NERSA’s
methodology is unlawful.
The
non-compliant municipalities
[74]
SALGA and the applicant dovetailed on setting aside NERSA's
methodology. However, they parted ways
on one aspect: what to do with
municipalities which had not conducted cost-of-supply studies and had
sought tariff increases from
NERSA. SALGA sought to find a pragmatic
way through. SALGA's concern was the financial impact on
municipalities if they were not
permitted to charge the tariffs,
which NERSA had approved on the unlawful methodology. SALGA sought to
alleviate this hardship
by a proposal that the Court suspend the
declaration of invalidity for another 12 months. To some extent, it
is a repeat of the
order of Her Ladyship Justice Kubushi.
[75]
SALGA pleaded and submitted that municipalities have not budgeted
based on the cost of supply studies.
However, if municipalities are
not permitted to use their budgets as they are now—premised on
the absence of cost of supply
studies—they would be rendered
bankrupt. The allegation must and does weigh heavily with the Court.
The Court turns to precedent
from the Constitutional Court in dealing
with instances where municipalities and the State contend they cannot
comply with their
statutory obligations due to budgetary constraints.
[76]
The Constitutional Court in
Blue Moonlight
dealt with a
challenge to the City's housing policy. The Policy differentiated
between persons who would be rendered homeless due
to eviction by the
State and those who were rendered homeless by natural disasters such
as fires or floods. The City contended
that its budget was incapable
of assisting both those left homeless as a result of a natural
disaster and an eviction. The Constitutional
Court declared that
distinction to be unconstitutional despite the concerns with
budgetary constraints.
[77]
The
Constitutional Court held that the Court’s determination of the
lawfulness of the City’s conduct “cannot be
restricted by
budgetary and other decisions that may well have resulted from a
mistaken understanding of constitutional or statutory
obligations”.
The Court declared that “it is not good enough for the City to
state that it has not budgeted for something,
if it should indeed
have planned and budgeted for it in the fulfilment of its
obligations.”
[51]
[78]
The Constitutional Court rejected the argument that the State need
not comply with its obligations
as its budget cannot fund the extent
of its obligations – as properly determined by a court. It is
the ambit of the obligation
which must guide the determination of the
budget, not the size of the budget which determines if it must comply
with its obligations.
If the budget is premised on a misconception of
the State's duties, then it is no answer to say that the duties
cannot be achieved
due to budgetary constraints. The State ought to
have budgeted in line with its obligations.
[79]
The inverse cannot be correct: that the State's obligations are
circumscribed by its budget when the
State ought to set the budget
premised on its obligations. If not, the State can escape its
obligations by setting a budget premised
on a derogation of its
obligations and then turn around and rely on its budget to justify
non-compliance with its obligations.
Such a position would be the
antithesis of the rule of law as it would subject the rule of law to
the State's determination of
its budgets.
[80]
Of course, one can imagine if a party is litigating the scope of a
right with an internal limitation,
such as being subject to the
progressive realisation of the right, in such a case, financial
constraints on the State are weighed
differently. Here, the Court is
not dealing with a socio-economic right – the scope of which is
to be determined subject
to the progressive realisation of a right,
but rather an obligation owed by the State. Here the Court is
faced with an express
obligation – with no limitation premised
on the state’s budget.
[81]
Premised on the approach followed by the Constitutional Court in
Blue
Moonlight
, the Court declines to accept budgetary constraints as
a justification for non-compliance with a duty, particularly in
circumstances
where the budgetary constraints are premised on an
incorrect approach to the State's obligations. More so, when all
state parties
accept the ambit of the obligation and rely solely on
their budgets as justification for non-compliance.
[82]
The approach in
Blue Moonlight
involved challenging the
State's obligations as a policy. Therefore, the application of the
principle in
Blue Moonlight
is appropriate in this case.
[83]
The
approach of the Constitutional Court in
Blue
Moonlight
was not an isolated moment, and the Constitutional Court has
consistently followed it in various contexts. I consider the context
and authority in these subsequent cases with care. In
Lawyers
for Human Rights v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
[52]
the State sought to justify a limitation of the rights in sections
12 and 35(2) of the Constitution. The case concerned the
right of
persons detained under the Immigration Act to be brought before a
court of law within 48 hours of their arrest. In justification
of the
breach of these rights, the State raised the issue of increased costs
resulting from judicial reviews involving appearances
in Court.
[53]
Regarding financial resources, the State alleged that there will be a
need to employ a "massive number of additional magistrates
who
will be required to consider these warrant confirmations".
[54]
[84]
The
Constitutional Court held that a limitation of rights like physical
freedom cannot be justified based on general facts and estimates
of
an increase in costs.
[55]
The
mere “increase in costs alone cannot be justification for
denying detainees the right to challenge the lawfulness of
their
detention”. Moreover, the Court held that section 34(1)
requires that the arrested foreigners be informed of the right
to
challenge the decision to deport them on appeal and ask that a court
warrant confirm their detention. If each foreigner decides
to
exercise these rights, increasing costs would be unavoidable.
Therefore, the “State must have budgeted for these costs
which
are necessitated by the implementation of the
Immigration
Act.”
The
Constitutional Court held that “the reasons advanced by the
State here are woefully short of justifying the limitation”.
[56]
[85]
In
Khosa
and Others v Minister of Social Development and Others, Mahlaule and
Another v Minister of Social Development
[57]
The applicants, permanent residents, challenged the limitation of
social assistance for South African citizens. The respondents
sought
to deny the benefit to permanent residents because this would impose
an impermissibly high financial burden on the State.
[58]
The respondents relied on an affidavit deposed to by Mr Kruger, the
Chief Director of Social Services in the National Treasury,
for this
point. Mr Kruger says that if provision has to be made for the
expenditure necessary to give effect to the High Court
order, the
costs will be large and will “result in shortfalls in
provincial budgets, particularly in the poorer provinces."
Despite this, the Court refused to view alleged "shortfalls in
provincial budgets” as a basis to justify a limitation
of a
right.
[86]
In the
third case, which applied the approach of the Constitutional Court,
the Court expressed itself at the principle level. In
Minister
of Home Affairs and Others v Tsebe and Others
[59]
the Constitutional Court said –
“
We as a nation
have chosen to walk the path of the advancement of human rights. …
This
path that we, as a country,
have
chosen for ourselves is not an easy one. Some of the consequences
that may result from our choice are part of the price
that we must be
prepared to pay as a nation for the advancement of
human
rights and the creation of the kind of society and world that we may
ultimately achieve if
we
abide by the constitutional values that now underpin our new society
since the end of apartheid.”
[60]
[87]
Whilst this
was not in the context of budgetary constraints being used to justify
the limitation of rights, it was adapted and applied
by the
Constitutional Court in
Mlungwana
and Others v S and Another
[61]
in the context of budgetary constraints, a justification was raised.
In
Mlungwana,
the
Constitutional Court dealt with the right to protest and the absence
of a notice, and the gathering held more than 15 people.
In that
context, the respondents invoked a lack of resources. They argued
that the police lack “resources to such an extent
that the risk
of unnotified gatherings must be mitigated through one of the
harshest possible ways—criminalisation and punishment."
The justification was made in the context of justifying an
infringement of the right to protest. In this context, the
Constitutional
Court held –
“
Ordinarily, a lack
of resources or an increase in costs on its own cannot justify a
limitation of a constitutional right. The reason
for attaching less
weight to a lack of resources as a purpose for limiting rights is
beyond question. Respecting, promoting, and
fulfilling human rights
comes at a cost, and that cost is the price the Constitution mandates
the State to bear.”
[88]
The Court accepted the principle in
Tsebe
that respecting,
promoting and fulfilling human rights comes at a cost which the State
must bear and held that this is especially
so when, as in that case,
the State has not provided evidence demonstrating exactly to what
extent costs will increase. The Court
held that it is left none the
wiser about what would happen if the incentive for giving notice were
removed entirely or if other
ways of incentivising notice were
adopted by the Legislature.
[89]
I have considered the differing contexts of these judgments compared
to the one before the Court. Save
for
Blue Moonlight
, these
cases all dealt with a section 36 analysis and tested whether the
justification of a lack of funds was a reasonable justification
for
limiting a fundamental right. There is room in our constitutional
dispensation under section 36 for the State to justify a
breach of a
human right. Rights are, as often stated, not unlimited.
[90]
In this case, however, it is not a breach of a right that the State
seeks to justify through reliance
on section 36 of the Constitution.
It is the breach of law of an obligation in terms of statute and
Policy. In these circumstances,
there is no similar option available
to the State to justify its non-compliance with a statutory provision
as section 36 offers
to justify the limitation of a fundamental
right. NERSA has breached a statute; it cannot justify that breach
regarding a lack
of funds as would be available to it under a section
36 analysis. It must agitate for its amendment if it cannot comply
with the
law. However, a court cannot ignore the law and permit an
illegality to continue.
[91]
In light of the case law considered and the core principle in
Blue
Moonlight
, the Court does not accept that a budgetary constraint
can be used as the basis to deviate from what the statute requires of
the
State. On this basis, the Court did not accept the pragmatic
solution tendered by SALGA.
[92]
In addition to this principled position, the Court also engages with
the facts of this matter.
Has
a factual case of bankruptcy been made out?
[93]
The Constitutional Court cases referred to above involved some
engagement with the factual allegations
made by the State about
financial restraints. In these cases, the State pleaded with some
particularity what the impact on their
budgets would be. Despite
this, the Constitutional Court in
Lawyers for Human Rights
,
Khoza
and
Mlungwana
noted that there was no clear
evidence to show what the actual costs involved would be and decried
the paucity of information before
the Court. The Court in
Blue
Moonlight
held in this regard:
“
The City provided
information relating specifically to its housing budget, but did not
provide information relating to its budget
situation in general. We
do not know exactly what the City’s overall financial position
is.”
[94]
The Court must regard the information which SALGA has placed before
the Court. With this in mind, the
Court carefully considered the
pleaded case by SALGA and the three municipalities who filed
affidavits. The allegation is that
if the non-compliant
municipalities are not permitted to charge the tariffs in terms of
the budgets approved by the municipal councils
– premised on
the unlawful method - then the –
“
municipalities
will be rendered bankrupt because they cannot afford to supply
electricity at 2023/2024 tariffs when Eskom is charging
them
according to its increased 2024/2025 rates. By way of example:
1. eThekwini
Municipality would have a revenue shortfall of R 1.9 billion
2. City of
uMhlathuze would suffer a deficit of R 251 million
3. Kouga
Municipality would have a shortfall of between R 30 and R 40 million
4.
Overstrand
Municipality would have a shortfall of R 45 million.”
[62]
[95]
There are no supporting documents or explanations, and what has been
quoted here is the totality of
the information provided. To borrow
from the language of the Constitutional Court, it is a paucity of
information.
[96]
More strangely, three of these municipalities have submitted cost of
supply studies. These are compliant
municipalities mentioned in the
list of municipalities that can charge the increased rate and are,
therefore, entirely unaffected
by the application. For context, this
dispute regarding the appropriate relief only impacts non-compliant
municipalities. Therefore,
it is odd that SALGA has presented proof
of financial hardship for three compliant municipalities, as their
applications are unaffected
by the dispute. These compliant
municipalities, being 66 in total, are specifically excluded in
paragraph (b) of the order.
[97]
Specifically, eThekwini Municipality is number 2 on the list of
compliant municipalities. As it is
compliant, it is not affected by
the application, so the alleged deficit of R 1.9 billion does not
arise. The City of uMhlathuze
is number 12 on the list. It is
similarly in no danger, as it is a compliant municipality. Overstrand
is number four on the list
of compliant municipalities.
[98]
The facts presented as examples of the impact of not allowing the
non-compliant municipalities to remain
non-compliant are contradicted
by SALGA's identification of which municipalities are compliant.
SALGA’s case on bankruptcy,
is at best, overstated on its own
facts.
[99]
In SALGA's version, it is, therefore, only Kouga Municipality which
stands to run a deficit. Kouga
Municipality filed an affidavit before
this Court. However, in NERSA's discussion document, the Court has
been told that there
is a longstanding practice of municipalities
overcharging consumers. It is not clear whether the alleged deficit
is the result
of an efficient supply of electricity from Kouga or the
increase in Eskom’s tariffs.
[100] The very document
which would have contained an answer to this is the cost of supply
study.
[101] The Court is not
persuaded, at either principle or fact, that a case has been properly
made out that non-compliant municipalities
ought to be permitted to
continue using an unlawful method.
[102]
In
addition, it also weighed with the Court that it is a fundamental
principle of our law that public power may only be exercised
by
substantive and procedural requirements prescribed by the empowering
provisions,
[63]
and "action
which is not by the behests of the empowering legislation is unlawful
and therefore unconstitutional". As
the Constitutional Court
explained in
Minister
of Finance v Agribusiness NPC
:
[64]
“
The ultra vires
doctrine ... is central to the determination of the lawfulness of the
exercise of any public power. This demands,
of every exercise of
public power, a consistent compliance with the bounds set for the
exercise of that power as provided for by
the applicable law and the
Constitution. ... The exercise of public power must, therefore,
happen within the bounds set by the
legal framework.”
[65]
[103] The invitation from
SALGA would be at odds with this principle.
[104] In addition, the
Court considered that the obligation being breached is clear,
longstanding, and not disputed. This Court
recently reaffirmed it. In
addition, NERSA and the municipalities were already granted a
12-month grace period, which effectively
became 20 months, to bring
themselves within the law.
[105] It also weighed
with the Court that in these twenty months, municipalities were
provided to comply with the
Nelson Mandela Bay
judgment, not
one approached the Court for a variation to extend the 12-month
timeframe and explain non-compliance.
Invitation
to rely on section 172 of the Constitution
[106] The Court was faced
with no good options. If it permitted NERSA and the municipalities to
continue using an unlawful method,
it would undermine the rule of
law. If it prevented NERSA and the municipalities from applying the
new unlawful method, tariffs
would not be increased for non-compliant
municipalities. The options for the Court, in stark terms, were to
enforce the law or
to yield to a pragmatic solution that would permit
illegality (which has been ongoing for years) to continue to the
detriment of
the end-users.
[107] SALGA, however,
presented the Court with an additional aspect to consider. SALGA
referred the Court to the breadth of its
powers under section 172 of
the Constitution to craft a just and equitable remedy. Counsel for
SALGA submitted that the country
of section 172 is large. It is, of
course, correctly submitted by SALGA.
[108] However, it is not
apparent to the Court that the room created by section 172 permits
the Court to grant relief which conflicts
with a substantial
obligation to conduct a cost of supply study and to decide tariff
increases premised on such a study. Whilst
our courts have repeatedly
indicated the breadth of the power under section 172, in this case,
the Court is being asked to use
section 172 of the Constitution to
contradict a substantive obligation. The Court was not persuaded its
powers to grant just and
effective relief included relief which
contradicted the Executive, Parliament and a Court order,
particularly in the circumstances
of this case.
[109] The Court requested
assistance from the parties as to whether there was another remedy
which would ameliorate any prejudice
to the non-compliant
municipalities within the Courts powers. Afriforum contended it had
considered relief under sections 24 and
28 of the Municipal Systems
Act. However, Afriforum conceded that these were not true avenues
available to the Court.
[110] As the Court was
not persuaded section 172 permitted it to grant relief in conflict
with explicit obligations and with no
other avenue to ameliorate any
alleged (but not substantiated) potential impact on non-complaint
municipalities, the Court sought
to provide municipalities with a way
to bring themselves within the law and seek a tariff increase. The
Court was not persuaded
that the municipalities, represented by
SALGA, had made out a case and that they would be rendered bankrupt
if they had to comply.
However, in light of the seriousness of such
an allegation and the shortened timeframes under which SALGA had to
respond, the Court
permitted the municipalities another sixty days to
approach NERSA.
[111] The Court founded
its powers to do so in section 172 of the Constitution. As there is
no provision which prohibits such an
order, the Court consider this
approach to be just and equitable.
[112]
The time
period of 60 days does not represent the maximum time within which
municipalities must bring themselves within the confines
of the law.
It of course, remains open to Municipalities to seek an extension of
this sixty day period. Our Courts have permitted
such variations
under section 172 of the Constitution.
[66]
However, that sets the requirement that municipalities must comply
with the law, and if they cannot, the obligation is on them
to
approach the Court and explain and justify their non-compliance.
What
tariff can be used by the non-compliant municipalities
[113] Another aspect
which was contentious, and arose during submissions, was what tariff
the non-compliant municipalities could
charge? Afriforum submitted
that the Court must interdict the non-compliant municipalities from
charging an increased tariff which
would mean effectively, they would
charge their current tariffs. The need for this relief, also, is set
out in paragraph 10.2 of
Afriforum’s letter of 26 June 2024.
[114] Mr Tshetlo for
NERSA presented as evidence an SMS he had receiving during the
hearing that NERSA was considering and approving
tariff applications
in two-hour slots. Afriforum did not object to this evidence being
led, but rather relied on it in support
of its relief and highlight
the need to ensure that unlawful tariffs would not be permitted.
[115] SALGA and NERSA
submitted that the impact of Afriforum’s argument would be,
perversely, to permit the very tariffs which
Her Ladyship Justice
Kubushi had declared as unlawful to persist. The submission was
that it would be untenable if the impact
of a finding that the
current methodology is unlawful, would be to revert to the tariffs
approved in term of the benchmarking methodology
– which has
been declared unlawful. The submission had another bow –
to permit the existing tariffs to continue
would undermine the order
of Kubushi J – as it would then extend the unlawful tariff’s
further.
[116] Afriforum responded
to this criticism in reply. It submitted that it is not seeking to
revert to the position prior to the
Nelson Mandela Bay
judgment. The order of Kubushi J (paragraph 3) dealt with how tariff
increase applications were to be lawfully considered and approved.
The order did not prohibit an existing tariff from remaining in
place. The obvious consequence is that if no new tariff is approved
–
for its failure to be sought or considered lawfully - it stands to
reason that the current tariff stands.
[117] After the hearing,
NERSA filed submissions dealing with this issue. The Court received
the submissions on the day the parties
required an order. The Court
is grateful for these submissions. They turn on the factual position
that municipalities will be bankrupt
if they cannot charge increased
tariffs in light of the fact that the bulk electricity they buy from
Eskom has increased.
The submissions further referred the Court
to the breadth of the Court’s power under section 172 to do
justice between the
parties. On this basis, SALGA invited the
Court to disallow the relief sought by Afriforum.
[118] For reasons set out
above, the Court is not inclined to accept the conclusion of
bankruptcy presented to the Court.
In addition, whilst the
Court’s powers are broad to do what justice demands, for
reasons set out above the Court is not persuaded
that would include
relief which contradicts the Executive, Parliament and the Courts,
particularly in these circumstances.
[119] The Court therefore
granted an order prohibiting the increase in tariffs outside the
lawful method of a cost of supply approach,
which requires a cost of
supply study. The Court finds that such relief is not a
contravention of the order of Her Ladyship
Justice Kubushi. The Court
also notes that without such an order, the relief granted by this
Court would be ineffective.
Urgency
[120] The matter is
urgent. The parties had engaged to a point but required a
determination from the Court before 1 July 2024, when
the municipal
budgets had to be approved.
[121] There is no
opportunity for the applicant to obtain substantial redress after 1
July 2024. The tariffs increase annually,
and if the matter is not
heard urgently, it is unclear how a resolution to the dispute would
be found before the next year's tariffs
are introduced. The applicant
also explained the steps it took in launching these proceedings; it
is clear that it did not delay
in the matter.
[122] The extraordinary
time pressures the Court and parties were placed under could have
been avoided. Before this application
was filed and in a letter dated
19 April 2024, the applicant raised the confusion arising from the
notices above with NERSA as
follows:
"We take note of
NERSA's letter of 17 November 2023 to licensees, requesting them to
submit their completed COS studies by
1 March. Confusingly enough,
NERSA sent out a letter on 29 January 2024 indicating that NERSA
developed a revenue requirement template
with various "assumptions"
that municipalities must consider when applying for an increase.
What is the purpose of
this template if the municipalities are supposed to submit a COS
study when applying for an increase?”
[123] NERSA did not
respond to the applicant's letter to clarify its position. The
applicant also wrote a second letter, which was
also unanswered.
[124] Had NERSA responded
to these letters, the position could have been clarified sooner, and
the need to litigate the week before
the municipal budgets were
approved could have been avoided. NERSA accepts it ought to have
responded to the letters. However,
it is not clear that it accepts
accountability for the consequences of this conduct. It remains
unexplained why NERSA did not respond
to these letters.
[125] SALGA points to
another aspect of NERSA's conduct, which caused unnecessary
circumstances in which the matter was heard. Section
24 of the Local
Government: Municipal Finance Management Act 56 of 2003 (MFMA)
provides that a municipal council is required to
consider approval of
the annual budget at least thirty days before the start of the budget
year – effectively, by no later
than the end of May each year,
in time for the start of the new budget year on 1 July 2024
[126] The correct
position is that municipal electricity tariffs must be based on the
cost of supply studies conducted by municipalities
and submitted to
NERSA when municipalities apply for the approval of new tariffs for
the next financial year. Surprisingly, NERSA
told municipalities, on
25 June 2024, what it requires from them in "
order for NERSA
to determine the rates applicable for the 2024/25 FY
" when
the 2024/25 financial year started on 1 July 2024, five days from the
hearing. It is unclear how NERSA intended for
municipalities to
comply with their budgetary obligations in time.
Costs
[127] The applicant and
SALGA are entitled to their costs. SALGA’s position in court
was clear: it supported the application
save for certain relief which
it believed would place municipalities in an impossible position.
Their assistance to Court was premised
on ameliorating the negative
consequences of this Court’s order. SALGA represents the
municipalities. SALGA itself
had no hand in the dispute before the
Court. No one contended it did. However, SALGA pointed out that
the municipalities
– which it represents -were placed in a
difficult position as a result of NERSA’s conduct. As NERSA had
placed SALGA
in this position – particularly as NERSA could
have avoided the application in a multitude of ways – SALGA is
entitled
to its costs.
[128] Afriforum is
successful, and the cost should follow the result. However, there is
a second reason the applicant is entitled
to its costs. It came to
the Court expressly in the public interest, litigating aspects of the
rule of law and seeking to protect
the rights of those who use
electricity. The applicant is entitled to its costs based on the
Biowatch
principle as well.
[129] There was no
dispute as to the scale of costs sought. The matter was
complex, involved multiple pieces of legislation
and policy.
Particularly the matter of the appropriate relief justify granting of
costs on Scale C for the seniors and B for the
juniors involved.
Conclusion
[130] The Court ordered
that:
a) The
normal rules concerning form and service are dispensed with, and the
application is heard and decided upon
as a matter of urgency.
b) The
first respondent’s mechanism for approval of municipal
electricity tariffs as set out in the
Notice to Municipal Licenced
Electricity Distributers
, 29 January 2024 (Annexure “FA8”
to the Founding Affidavit) is declared to be unlawful, invalid and of
no force and
effect.
c)
For the 2024/2025 municipal financial year, the first respondent
shall consider and, if they are legally
compliant, approve such
electricity tariff applications by municipalities as are based on the
municipalities' cost of supply studies
timeously submitted by the
Notice to Municipal Licenced Electricity Distributers
, 17
November 2023 (Annexure “FA7” to the Founding Affidavit).
A list of such municipalities, totalling 66, is attached
hereto as
Annexure A.
d) The
first respondent is prohibited from considering and approving
municipal electricity tariffs for the 2024/2025
municipal financial
year and subsequent municipal financial years where the
municipalities’ applications for the approval
of municipal
electricity tariffs are not based on cost of supply studies, by the
Notice to Municipal Licenced Electricity Distributers
, 17
November 2023.
e) No
municipality shall be entitled to levy increased electricity tariffs
upon end-consumers until the first
respondent has approved an
application supported by a cost of supply study, by the
Notice to
Municipal Licenced Electricity Distributers
, 17 November 2023.
f)
Any municipality for whom the first respondent has not approved an
application supported by a cost
of supply study shall be entitled to
continue levying electricity rate tariffs on the same tariff as that
applicable during the
2023/24 municipal financial year, subject to
paragraph 7.
g)
Municipalities shall be permitted to supplement electricity tariff
applications with cost of supply studies,
and the first respondent
shall consider and, if they are legally compliant and by the
Notice
to Municipal Licenced Electricity Distributers
17 November 2023,
approve such electricity tariff applications by municipalities as are
based on the municipalities’ cost
of supply studies submitted
after the date of this order, within one month of receipt of the
requisite cost of supply studies.
Municipalities are afforded 60 days
from the date of this order to make such a compliant application to
the first respondent.
h) The
first respondent shall pay the applicant and the second respondent’s
costs of the application, including
the costs consequent upon the
employment of two advocates, that of senior counsel and that of
junior counsel on Scale C, in terms
of rule 67A(2) and (7).
I de Vos
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel for the
applicant:
Margaretha
Engelbrecht, SC
Etienne Botha
Instructed by:
Marjorie Van
Schalkwyk, Hurter & Spies
Counsel for the
first respondent:
Terry Motau, SC
Realeboga Tshetlo
Instructed by
Prince Mudau &
Associates
Counsel for the
third respondent:
Kennedy Tsatsawane
SC
Kgomotso Kabinde
Instructed by:
H M Chaane
Attorneys
Date of the
hearing:
26 June 2024
Date of the order:
28 June 2024
Date of judgment:
8 July 2024
[1]
Afriforum's
Heads of Argument (HOA), para 3, referring to NERSA’s
Answering Affidavit (AA) paras 55 - 56
[2]
Nelson
Mandela Bay Business Chambers NPC and Another v National Energy
Regulator and Others
(63393/2021)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 778 per
Kubushi
J para 167 (quoting from the Consultation Paper)
[3]
(63393/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 778
[4]
GG
31741 (19 December 2008)
[5]
4
of 2006, see section 27(h)
[6]
32
of 2000
[7]
Section
74(2)(d)
[8]
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight
Properties 39 (Pty) Ltd and Another (CC)
[2011] ZACC 33
;
2012 (2)
BCLR 150
(CC);
2012 (2) SA 104
(CC) (1 December 2011)
[9]
Khosa and Others v Minister of Social Development and Others,
Mahlaule and Another v Minister of Social Development (CCT 13/03,
CCT 12/03)
[2004] ZACC 11
;
2004 (6) SA 505
(CC);
2004 (6) BCLR 569
(CC) (4 March 2004
[10]
Lawyers for Human Rights v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
(CCT38/16)
[2017] ZACC 22
;
2017 (10) BCLR 1242
(CC);
2017 (5) SA 480
(CC) (29 June 2017)
[11]
Mlungwana and Others v S and Another (CCT32/18)
[2018] ZACC 45
;
2019
(1) BCLR 88
(CC);
2019 (1) SACR 429
(CC) (19 November 2018)
[12]
NERA
s 2. See also FA para 18; NERSA AA para 10
[13]
ERA
s 2(b)
[14]
ERA
s 4(1)(a)(ii)
[15]
ERA
s 14(1)(a)
[16]
NERSA
AA para 46
[17]
Section 152 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act
108 of 1996 (Constitution)
[18]
Section 156 (read with Part B of Schedule 4) of the Constitution.
This is also provided for in section 83(1) of the Local Government:
Municipal Structures Act 117 of 1998 (Structures Act).
[19]
Government Notice No 1398, 19 December 2008
[20]
32
of 2000
[21]
Section
74(2)(d)
[22]
Policy,
see definitions section
[23]
SALGA
AA, para 2.8.15
[24]
SALGA
HOA, para 2.2
[25]
SALGA
HOA, para 3.5
[26]
NERSA
AA, para 38
[27]
NERSA
AA, para 67
[28]
NERSA
AA, para 68
[29]
COS
Framework, 1. Background
[30]
Id
[31]
COS
Framework, 2, Scope
[32]
Id
[33]
Id
[34]
Judgment
para 171
[35]
COS Framework and Pricing Methodology, annexure "FA6"
provides that "At its meeting held on 29 October 2015 the
Energy Regulator approved the COS Framework to assist licensees in
undertaking COS studies. Subsequent to the approval the framework
was enhanced to include the useful lives of electricity assets to be
used for depreciation purposes. This was approved on 29
March 2016."
[36]
Annexure FA 6 to the Founding Affidavit.
[37]
Framework
and Pricing Methodology,
FA
6 para 5.4
[38]
Id
para 15.5
[39]
Id
para 16.3
[40]
Id
para 17.16
[41]
NERSA
AA, para 76
[42]
Attached to the founding affidavit is FA7
[43]
Attached to the founding affidavit is FA8
[44]
NERSA’s
AA para 71
[45]
From Eskom SOC Limited (“Eskom”), independent power
producers (“IPPs”) and self-generation costs where
such
licensee has self-generation facilities, shown in MWh purchased and
rand value and for on-selling and own use (i.e. licensees’
electricity department and does not include other departments’
usage as these must be billed);
[46]
Consistent with the process set out in annexure AA4 (which is the
letter of 17 May 2024)
[47]
NERSA’s
HOA, para 7.4
[48]
NERSA
AA para 74
[49]
NERSA
AA para 90
[50]
NERSA’s
HOA para 24
[51]
Id
para 74
[52]
(CCT38/16)
[2017] ZACC 22
;
2017 (10) BCLR 1242
(CC);
2017 (5) SA 480
(CC) (29
June 2017)
[53]
Id
para 57
[54]
Id
para 59
[55]
Id
para 61
[56]
Id
para 63
[57]
(CCT
13/03, CCT 12/03)
[2004] ZACC 11
;
2004 (6) SA 505
(CC);
2004 (6)
BCLR 569
(CC) (4 March 2004)
[58]
Id
para 60
[59]
(CCT
110/11, CCT 126/11)
[2012] ZACC 16
;
2012 (5) SA 467
(CC);
2012 (10)
BCLR 1017
(CC) (27 July 2012)
[60]
Id
para 67
[61]
(CCT32/18)
[2018] ZACC 45
;
2019 (1) BCLR 88
(CC);
2019 (1) SACR 429
(CC) (19 November 2018)
[62]
The concluding allegations made in the answering affidavit are that
“electricity service delivery will be brought to a
standstill”
as no municipality will be able to procure electricity from Eskom at
Eskom 2024/2025 tariffs but then sell
it at 2023/2024 tariffs.”
It is also pleaded that most of the municipalities are "already
in dire financial
positions and are unable to service their current
and historic Eskom account". If the relief sought by the
applicant is
granted – to the Municipalities who did not
submit the cost of supply studies – it will have "an
unintended
consequence of weakening the financial positions of most
of the municipalities across the Republic simply because they are
then
forced to sell electricity at tariffs which were not designed
to enable them to recover the full cost of the supply".
[63]
National Education Health and Allied Workers Union v Minister of
Public Service and Administration and Others; South African
Democratic Teachers Union and Others v Department of Public Service
and Administration and Others; Public Servants Association
and
Others v Minister of Public Service and Administration and Others;
National Union of Public Service and Allied Workers Union
v Minister
of Public Service and Administration and Others
[2022] ZACC 6
at
para 73, citing Hoexter Administrative Law in South Africa 2ed Juta
Cape Town 2012 at pp 254 - 256.
[64]
[2022] ZACC 4
[65]
Id
at
paras 39 – 40
[66]
See
Minister of Justice v Ntuli
[1997] ZACC 7
;
1997 (3) SA 772
(CC); Zondi v MEC
Traditional and Local Government Affairs
2006 (3) SA 1
(CC)
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