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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2022] ZAGPPHC 927
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## Casting, Forging and Machining Cluster of South Africa (NPC) and Others v National Energy Regulator of SA and Others (92792/2019)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 927 (25 November 2022)
Casting, Forging and Machining Cluster of South Africa (NPC) and Others v National Energy Regulator of SA and Others (92792/2019)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 927 (25 November 2022)
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sino date 25 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number
: 92792/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
DATE:
25 NOVEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
CASTING,
FORGING AND MACHINING
CLUSTER
OF SOUTH AFRICA (NPC) FIRST
APPLICANT
SCAW
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
SECOND
APPLICANT
DUNROSE
TRADING 57 (PTY) LTD
THIRD
APPLICANT
INTERNATIONAL
WIRE CONVERTORS (PTY) LTD FOURTH APPLICANT
ABRACON
PROPERTY 1 (PTY) LTD
FIFTH
APPLICANT
and
NATIONAL
ENERGY REGULATOR OF SA
FIRST
RESPONDENT
CITY
POWER SOC LTD
SECOND
RESPONDENT
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
THIRD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This application relates to the municipal electricity tariffs (‘the
tariffs”)
that were approved by the First Respondent, the
NATIONAL ENERGY REGULATOR OF SOUTH AFRICA, ("NERSA") in
respect of the
Second Respondent, CITY POWER SOC LTD, ("City
Power") for the 2019/2020 financial year. Almost three municipal
financial
years had elapsed before this matter could be heard by this
Court.
[2]
The application, itself, pertains to the review of the decision by
NERSA taken on
or about 10 July 2019 to approve tariffs for, City
Power, for the 2019/2020 financial year (the "impugned
decision")
on the grounds that it was unlawful, irrational and
unjustified. The review was brought under the Promotion of
Administrative Justice
Act ("PAJA"),
[1]
read with section 33 of the Constitution, alternatively the rule of
law.
THE
PARTIES
[3]
A short background of the parties involved in these proceedings, is
set out herein,
in order to provide an understanding as to how they
relate to each other and why it is that the Applicants brought this
application
against the Respondents.
The Applicants
[4]
The First Applicant is CASTING, FORGING AND MACHINING CLUSTER OF
SOUTH AFRICA (NPC)
("CFMC"), whose primary business is to
promote the growth and development of the metals manufacturing
industry in South
Africa. CMFC represents the collective interests of
the Applicants by pursuing growth and development of the metals
manufacturing
industry in South Africa.
[5]
The other Applicants are all members of CMFC and pursue a common
objective. The Applicants
(other than CMFC), are all businesses
operating within the municipal boundaries of the Third Respondent,
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan
Municipality (“City of
Johannesburg") or ("the Municipality"). They are all
consumers and users of electricity
supplied by City Power, and all
fall within the class of "industrial electricity users".
The Respondents
[6]
NERSA is a regulatory authority established in terms of section 3 of
the National
Energy Regulator Act ("NERSA Act").
[2]
NERSA's mandate is to regulate the electricity industry in South
Africa in terms of the Electricity Regulation Act (“the
ERA”).
[3]
NERSA took the
decision that is impugned in this application.
[7]
City Power is a municipal entity, wholly owned by the City of
Johannesburg established
as a municipal owned entity. City Power
conducts business by providing an energy distribution service to the
City of Johannesburg.
City Power is licensed by NERSA as the sole
authorised distributor of electricity in the Johannesburg
Metropolitan Area as designated
for City Power in the applicable
distribution licence. City Power discharges the electricity
distribution function on behalf of
and as agent of the City of
Johannesburg, and, it thus, steps into the shoes of the Municipality,
and assumes all of its constitutional
obligations and rights.
[8]
The City of Johannesburg is a Category A Municipality established in
terms of section
12 of the Local Government: Municipal Structures
Act.
[4]
No specific relief is
sought against the City of Johannesburg in these proceedings, and is
cited only on the basis of its interest
in the outcome of the
application. The City of Johannesburg, has opted to oppose the
application and together with City Power,
are represented by the same
counsel.
[9]
All of the Respondents, are Organs of State.
LOCUS
STANDI
[10]
It was contended on behalf of the Applicants that the impugned
decision affects not only the
Applicants, and those who are dependent
on the Applicants for their livelihoods, but also the entire
Johannesburg Metropolitan
Area, and the Republic, more broadly. This
was said to be so because the effect of the impugned decision, if it
was allowed to
proceed, will be that many of the Applicants’
businesses were to become unsustainable, with consequential
disastrous effects
for the local and broader economy. Moreover, the
public had an interest in seeing the rule of law upheld, which was
what the Applicants
seek to achieve in this application.
[11]
The Applicants, as a result, brought this application: in terms of
section 38(a) of the Constitution
in their own interest; in terms of
section 38(e) of the Constitution on behalf of their employees,
shareholders and downstream
consumers of the products they
manufacture, who will all be adversely affected by the tariff
increase, should the review not be
upheld; and in terms of section
38(d) of the Constitution in the public interest
BACKGROUND
[12]
The mandate of NERSA as the regulatory authority of the energy sector
in South Africa, includes
the regulation of electricity supply
industry. In terms of section 4(ii) of the ERA, NERSA regulates the
electricity prices and
tariffs. As part of the regulation of
electricity prices and tariffs, NERSA determines electricity tariffs
and/or approves electricity
tariff increases. The powers and function
to determine tariffs or approve tariff increases, are sourced from
the Constitution,
the ERA and the Electricity Pricing Policy of the
South African Electricity Supply Industry (“the EPP”).
[5]
[13]
NERSA acts as the regulator of,
inter
alia
,
electricity tariffs for ESKOM and municipalities. In both instances,
NERSA derives its authority from section 15(1) of the ERA.
ESKOM
generates, transmits, and distributes electricity to industrial,
mining, commercial, agricultural, residential customers
and
municipalities. Certain municipalities in the country, like City of
Johannesburg, are licenced by NERSA to distribute electricity
within
their licensed area. The electricity they distribute to their
customers, is purchased in bulk from ESKOM. City Power buys
bulk
electricity from ESKOM and distributes it to its customers within the
Johannesburg Metropolitan Area. In terms of section
15(2) of the
ERA,
[6]
a licensee like City
Power, may not charge a customer any tariff, for the distribution of
electricity, other than that determined
or approved by NERSA. Hence,
before City Power can charge tariffs to its customers, it must first
apply to NERSA for approval of
such tariffs.
[14]
The method NERSA uses when setting or approving electricity tariffs
is called the Guideline and
Benchmarking Method, which involves an
annual approval of a percentage guideline increase and a review of
the municipal benchmarks.
The guideline increase is said to assist
municipalities in the preparation of their budgets, while the revised
benchmarks are used
in the evaluation of the municipal tariffs
applications. The benchmarks are, also, developed to ensure that
tariffs across municipalities
are not vastly different.
[15]
The municipal tariff guideline increase is developed based on ESKOM’s
approved bulk price
increase of electricity to municipalities, and
the increase in the municipalities’ cost structures. For this
reason, the
approval of the municipal guideline increase is
determined subsequent to the ESKOM Retail Structural Adjustments
(ERTSA) and the
Multi-Year Determination ("MYPD") of the
ESKOM’s tariffs.
[16]
The process for the determination and approval of municipal
electricity tariffs by NERSA, commences
a year preceding the year in
which the determination or approval of the tariff is made, by the
submission of Distribution Forms
(“D-Forms”) to NERSA by
municipalities. The closing date for the submission of D-Forms is the
end of October of the
preceding year.
[17]
These forms contain information regarding the financial position and
efficiency levels of the
municipality, as well as data regarding the
customer’s consumption patterns and the number of customers
per
tariff category. The information is said to assist NERSA in the
analysis of the tariffs and in determining the revenues that the
municipality collects from the various tariff categories. The D-Forms
that are primarily used for the tariff approval process are
financial
forms (D1 Forms), Market Information (D2 Forms), and Human Resources
Information (D3 Forms). It is said that NERSA
will not consider
any municipal tariff application without the submission of
appropriate and accurate D-Forms information.
[18]
The submission of D-Forms is followed by the MYPD process by NERSA,
followed, thereafter, by
NERSA issuing the municipal tariff guideline
and the application by municipal licensees for approval of increases
in terms of the
issued NERSA guideline.
[19]
Periodically, NERSA engages in a MYPD in respect of ESKOM, in terms
of which NERSA approves the
various tariffs which ESKOM is allowed to
charge in respect of its electricity business over the period covered
by the determination.
These tariffs include, amongst others, the
Supply Tariff, that is, the tariff at which ESKOM supplies
electricity in bulk to other
licensees (such as City Power). The
tariff, also, includes the costs of generation and transmission of
electricity plus a "reasonable
rate of return", but does
not include any charges in relation to the distribution of
electricity.
[20]
Following the completion of the MYPD process, NERSA uses the outcome
of the MYPD together with
the information derived from the D-Forms,
to annually, issue a Municipal Tariff Guideline Increase (the "Tariff
Guideline").
The Tariff Guideline is extrapolated from a sample
of the information contained in the D-Forms and comprise of:
20.1
a guideline increase for licensees (most of the licensees are
Municipalities; some, like City Power are municipal entities)
over
the previous guideline tariff, of a fixed percentage; and
20.2
a benchmark price in respect of each Municipal (licensee) customer
category.
[21]
The Tariff Guideline sets the tariffs that NERSA deems justifiable to
be raised by municipal
licensees when supplying electricity to their
various categories of customers, and is updated annually.
[22]
NERSA, also, reviews the tariff benchmarks and recommends the new
benchmarks that would be used
in the evaluation of the municipal
tariff applications and are developed in order to ensure that tariffs
across municipalities
are not vastly different.
[23]
The Tariff Guideline, done in terms of the benchmark formulation, is
communicated to municipal
distributors as a guideline in determining
their annual electricity tariffs. This occurs in the following
manner:
23.1
NERSA issues a Consultation Paper
[7]
setting out proposed increases to the Municipal Tariff Guideline for
the forthcoming financial year. This normally happens during
September to October of the year preceding the financial year in
respect of which the guideline tariff will become applicable;
23.2
Consultation between NERSA and licensees (municipalities) and
stakeholders, takes place;
23.3
After the consultation process NERSA determines the Municipal Tariff
Guideline for the relevant year during March to
April of the year
during which the increases are to take effect; and
23.4
The determined Municipal Tariff Guideline and its reasons therefor
are then published by NERSA on the NERSA Website,
in compliance with
the provisions of section 10(2) of the ERA.
[24]
Following the issuing of the Tariff Guideline, all municipal
licensees are required to submit
fully motivated proposals to NERSA
in respect of their tariffs for the forthcoming year. The submissions
of the applications, are
intended to take place during April to June,
for implementation on 1 July of that year.
[25]
The approval process proceeds as follows:
25.1
If the licensee's proposal falls within the parameters of the
Municipal Tariff Guideline, the proposal is generally accepted
and
approved by NERSA without further consideration; but
25.2
If the proposal exceeds the approved Municipal Tariff Guideline, the
proposal is referred to as an "above the guideline"
increase, and will have to be justified before consideration and
approval or rejection by NERSA.
[26]
The electricity tariffs approved by NERSA are incorporated into each
municipality's annual Budget
and submitted to Council for approval.
Following the completion of the municipal budget process, the
Municipal Tariff takes effect
with the implementation of the
Municipal Budget on 1 July of every year. The impugned decision is
the outcome of this process in
regard to the submission of tariffs
application by City Power and the resultant approval of tariffs of
the City of Johannesburg
for the 2019/2020 financial year.
CITY
POWERS’ APPLICATION
[27]
The process set out above, is the same process that NERSA followed
when setting tariffs for the
2019/2020 financial year. The only
difference is that in the 2019/2020 financial year, NERSA is said to
have used D-Forms for the
2017/2018 financial year instead of the
2018/2019 financial year. In addition, the Municipal Guideline
determination were issued
on 23 May 2019 instead of April to June
2019.
[28]
City Power submitted its tariffs increase application for the
2019/2020 financial year, on 14
March 2019. The application was to
increase the tariffs by 12,20%. As earlier stated, NERSA issued its
Municipal Guideline determination
on 23 May 2019. On receipt of the
municipal tariff guideline letter from NERSA, City Power submitted
another application which
amended the tariff increase of 12.20% to
13,07% in line with NERSA’s guideline tariffs. NERSA approved
the 13,07% tariff
increase as applied for by City Power. This is the
decision that is being challenged by the Applicants in these
proceedings.
PROCEDURAL
ISSUES
Disputes of fact
[29]
The issue of disputes of fact, more particularly between the expert
reports on which the parties
relied, arose sharply in NERSA’s
papers, this issue was however, abandoned by NERSA at the
commencement of the proceedings.
The issue will not be considered in
this judgment.
The Rule 53 Record
[30]
At the commencement of the hearing, the Applicants’ counsel
raised the issue of the delay
occasioned by the supplementation of
the Rule 53 Record (“the Record”), by NERSA and the late
filing of City Power’s
answering affidavit. The Applicants
requested that such delay be attributed to NERSA and City Power when
the issue of remedy is
considered, and that the supplementary Records
filed be struck out from the record of proceedings.
[31]
In opposing the Applicants’ application for the striking out of
the supplementary Records
from the record of proceedings, NERSA
submitted that such application should not be granted on the ground
that the delay is not
attributable to it, but to the Applicants.
NERSA, further, argued that since there was no formal application
before Court for the
striking out of the supplementary Records from
the record of proceedings, NERSA was ambushed, as it was not informed
that such
application was to be argued in Court.
[32]
City Power argued that the delay ought not to be placed at its door
as it played no role in the
supplementation of the Record.
[33]
The common cause chronology of events, in regard to the Record, are
that the original Record
was filed on 25 June 2020. On 19 August
2021, after the Applicants had supplemented their founding affidavit,
as required in terms
of Uniform Rule 53, and had, also, filed its
first heads of argument, NERSA supplemented the Record by filing the
first supplementary
Record. The first supplementary Record contained
documents that NERSA argued were before it when the impugned decision
was taken
and were erroneously omitted when the Record was compiled.
The Applicants in turn filed a Rule 30A notice, requesting NERSA to
provide certain documents, which would authenticate the fact that
documents filed with the first supplementary Record were before
NERSA
at the time of taking the impugned decision. NERSA responded to the
said notice by indicating that such documents were not
available. On
22 November 2021, together with its answering affidavit, NERSA filed
the second supplementary Record, which sought
to replace City Power’s
Annual Financial Statement for the 2018/2019 financial year with that
of the 2017/2018 financial
year, filed with the first supplementary
Record. City Power, in turn, filed its answering affidavit on 10
December 2021.
[34]
In the circumstances, the Record was filed five (5) months late.
NERSA supplemented the Record
for the first time twenty (20) months
after the application was launched, and twenty-two (22) months after
the launch of the application,
NERSA filed the second supplementary
Record. The full Record, which should have been filed in January
2020, was filed almost two
years later on 22 November 2021. The
Record was filed in full, after the Applicants had filed a
supplementary affidavit in terms
of Rule 53, the first heads of
argument, and the second supplementary affidavit in terms of Rule 53.
City Power, on the other hand,
filed its answering affidavit almost 2
years after the launch of the application. By the time the matter was
heard before this
Court, the delay had taken the matter out of the
2019/2020 tariff year into almost three years down the line.
[35]
The Applicants’ proposition in regard to the issue of delay,
was that it would primarily,
be relevant to the question of remedy,
in relation to providing them with substantive relief in the form of
the right not to be
charged the unlawful tariffs that City Power
charged them for 2019/2020 financial year.
[36]
As will appear more fully later in the judgment, the issue of the
delay occasioned by the supplementation
of the Record was finally
resolved by the filing of a draft remedy proposal by City Power,
which provided the Applicants with a
substantive retrospective
relief. The Applicants will, as a result, not have a problem with
being deprived of substantive relief,
if they are successful, because
of the delay.
[37]
In regard to the application for the striking out of the
supplementary Records from the record
of proceedings, it is this
Court’s view that the supplementary Records should not be
struck out. In this Court’s opinion,
the Record as filed by
NERSA will provide this Court with a much better perspective since
all the documents will be before it,
when the matter is dealt with.
The
Applicants have challenged the wrong decision
[38]
City Power submitted in oral argument before this Court that the
Applicants’ challenge
in these proceedings is misdirected, and,
as such, fatal to their case. The gravamen of City Power’s
complaint was that while
the Applicants’ concern is primarily
with the tariff decision, they have taken no steps to challenge it.
They, instead, sought
to challenge the tariff decision by raising
arguments, which are directed at the Guideline and Benchmarking
Method, which is misdirected,
so City Power argued.
[39]
The argument was that the Guideline and Benchmarking Methodology is
an administrative decision,
and the Applicants should not have
expected NERSA to depart from the trite principle that NERSA was
bound to follow the guideline
and not depart from it unless it was
set aside by a Court.
[40]
Furthermore, it was City Power’s contention that it formulated
its application on the understanding
that it would be assessed
according to the tariff guidelines and benchmarks which were
published a week before it submitted its
tariff application increase
to NERSA. According to City Power, it would have been procedurally
unfair for NERSA to have applied
a different set of rules to those,
which were in place at the time it submitted its tariff application
increase. City Power had,
thus, a legitimate expectation that its
application would be assessed using the Guideline and Benchmarking
approach.
[41]
Relying on the decision in the
Oudekraal
principle,
[8]
City Power argued
that the fatal shortcoming in the Applicants approach, is that since
they have not sought to review the Guideline
and Benchmarking Method,
that methodology was to be treated as valid and binding, unless and
until it was reviewed and set aside
by a competent Court of law.
Therefore, City Power submitted, the Applicants could not challenge
the tariff decision by raising
arguments, which were directed at the
Guideline and Benchmarking Method. Consequently, City Power contended
for the dismissal of
the Applicants’ case on the basis that the
Guideline and Benchmarking Methodology was obligatory and should be
followed because
of the
Oudekraal
principle. In, further, developing the argument, City Power submitted
that the
Oudekraal
principle, is recognised as authority by other Constitutional Court
judgments,
[9]
for the trite
proposition that until an administrative act is set aside by Court,
it exists in fact, and is to be treated as valid,
and as a result,
NERSA had no discretion to exercise under the circumstances. The
further submission was that, even if it can be
found that NERSA had a
discretion, or that
PG
Group
was on point, NERSA acted lawfully and rationally in choosing to
follow the policy and, that must be so, because the policy was
not
set aside.
[42]
Conversely, the Applicants’ argument was that City Power’s
argument as set out above
is misguided in that it depends on the
proposition that NERSA’s Guideline and Benchmarking Method is
not a guideline but
rather some form of binding law. The contention
was that, such an argument would collapse if NERSA’s Guideline
and Benchmarking
Method were to be held as a guideline.
[43]
In the main, the Applicants’ argument was that there is nothing
in law precluding it from
challenging the tariff decision without
attacking the underlying methodology, and this is what they were
doing in these proceedings.
[44]
It is not in dispute that the Applicants are in these proceedings
challenging the impugned tariff
decision and not the Guideline and
Benchmarking Methodology used by NERSA when it determined City Power
tariffs. It is, also, not
in dispute that the impugned tariff
decision is a separate and independent administrative decision from
the Guideline and Benchmarking
approach, and that nothing precludes
the Applicants from challenging only the tariff decision without
challenging the underlying
methodology that produced it.
[45]
The controversy, as seen by this Court, is whether NERSA’s
Guideline and Benchmarking Method
is binding on NERSA, as contended
for by City Power or whether, as a guideline, it is not binding and
affords NERSA an exercise
of discretion when applying it, as argued
by the Applicants.
[46]
City Power’s suggestion that the Guideline and Benchmarking
Method is an administrative
decision that is binding until set aside
by a Court of law, is reinforced by City Power’s reliance on
the
Oudekraal
principle, as alluded to earlier in this judgment. Whereas, the
Applicants’ assertion that the methodology is a guideline
which
is not binding and affords NERSA an exercise of discretion when
applying it, is fortified by the Applicants’ reliance
on the
principle in
PG
Group
,
[10]
that states that a methodology is not law but a guideline that allows
the exercise of a discretion when applying it.
[47]
The Constitutional Court in its decision in
PG
Group,
[11]
when
dealing with the Gas Act, held that the maximum pricing methodology
is not law, but rather a guideline made in accordance with
the
empowering legislation. In addition, NERSA, in that judgment, had a
discretion not to rigidly apply the maximum price methodology,
if its
application would lead to irrational or otherwise unlawful results.
[48]
Similarly, in this matter, if it could be found that NERSA’s
Guideline and Benchmarking
Method was a guideline and not a binding
decision, as argued by City Power, then in that event, as a
guideline, it will allow NERSA
to exercise its discretion not to
rigidly apply the methodology if its application would lead to
irrational or otherwise unlawful
results.
[49]
This Court is of the view that the Applicants’ argument that
NERSA’s Guideline and
Benchmarking Method is a guideline, is
valid, simply because the method says it’s a guideline –
the Guideline and Benchmarking
Method, and NERSA itself, throughout
its papers, regards the method as a guideline.
[50]
Having found that the method is a guideline, it stands to reason that
in applying it, NERSA is
allowed to exercise its discretion not to
rigidly apply it. A good example that, NERSA exercises a discretion
when applying the
methodology, is in regard to NERSA’s tariff
determination process, which runs on D-Forms and require cost
information from
the municipalities. If there was no discretion to
exercise, and NERSA was to rigidly apply the methodology, the
information derived
from the D-Forms would be unnecessary. Moreover,
if NERSA were to rigidly apply the methodology with the result that
its application
would lead to irrational or otherwise unlawful
outcomes, then it would be acting contrary to the provisions of the
Constitution,
the ERA and the EPP, which are binding on NERSA and
City Power.
[51]
The majority judgment, in
PG
Group
,
[12]
held, also, that determining rationality, whether under PAJA or not,
must include some evaluation of the process by which a decision
was
made – in other words, the process leading to a decision (or
the means) must be rationally related to the purpose or
ends. This
puts to bed City Power’s proposition that the Applicants are
not allowed to challenge the tariff decision by raising
arguments,
which are directed at the Guideline and Benchmarking Method. This is
so, even though it is clear from the Applicants’
papers that
the pleaded case of rationality was directed at the impugned decision
itself, and not the process leading to the decision.
[52]
City Power’s proposition that the methodology is an
administrative decision – a guideline
decision and benchmark
decision, is in this Court’s view, misguided.
The
Constitutional Court in
PG
Group
left the question of whether a methodology is an administrative
action in terms of PAJA open.
[13]
However, that Court, in its majority judgment, as earlier stated,
took a view that a methodology is not law, but rather a
guideline.
[14]
Similarly, the Methodology in this matter is a guideline made in
accordance with empowering legislation.
[15]
In this Court’s opinion, an administrative decision is taken at
the time of adoption of a guideline and benchmark as a methodology
to
be used when tariffs are determined, and once, the decision is made,
and the methodology adopted, the Guideline and Benchmarking
Method,
is now a guideline or policy. Additionally, a guideline or policy may
be attacked on the grounds of unlawfulness and invalidity
in terms of
section 172(1)(a) of the Constitution, on the basis that such policy
or guideline is inconsistent with the principle
of legality and,
thus, invalid.
[16]
[53]
Consequently, this Court holds that it is bound by the Constitutional
Court in
PG Group
, which clearly state that a methodology is a
guideline that allows the exercise of discretion in its application
and that there
is nothing that proscribes the Applicants from
challenging the tariff decision without having to challenge the
underlying methodology
or the process leading to such a decision.
[54]
Having made such a finding, it follows that the Applicants have
challenged the correct decision.
THE
APPLICANTS’ GROUNDS OF REVIEW
[55]
The Applicants raised a number of grounds of review in their papers,
but, in oral argument before
this Court, only three of those grounds,
which according to the Applicants, are most important and reflect the
obvious flaws in
NERSA’s decision to approve the City Power
tariffs, were argued. The Applicants maintained that they stand by
all the grounds
of review set out in their papers, and were not
abandoning any. The three grounds of review are:
55.1
The first ground of review is that in adopting the approach NERSA is
using, it acted in an objectively irrational manner
and had regard to
irrelevant considerations, by using the wrong benchmarks to measure
the City Power tariffs.
55.2
The second ground of review is that, NERSA did not consider the cost
of supply of particular customer categories, and
this rendered the
determination of the tariffs illegal and inconsistent with the ERA
and the EPP.
55.3
The last ground of review is that, NERSA acted unconstitutionally and
unlawfully by approving the City Power tariffs
without having regard
to any cost of supply study, and without being able to assess whether
the set tariffs are reflective of City
Power’s overall cost of
supply.
[56]
For all these reasons, including those stated in the Applicants’
papers, it was submitted,
on behalf of the Applicants, that the
tariffs are irrational; contrary to law; not authorised by the
empowering provisions; taken
in circumstances where relevant
considerations were not taken into account and irrelevant
considerations were included; and are
unreasonable.
ARGUMENTS
The Applicants
[57]
The Applicants’ core complaint is that NERSA’s tariff
decision did not comply with
the applicable legislation, was not
cost-reflective and was not based on verified or reliable
information.
[58]
The submission by the Applicants was that NERSA's determination of
the tariffs which are at issue
in this application fails to comply
with the regulatory framework in at least three respects, each of
which render the tariff unlawful
and contrary to the ERA read with
the EPP, as follows:
58.1
First, NERSA’s Guidelines for municipal tariff setting did not
require tariff applicants (including municipalities
such as City
Power) to demonstrate the cost-basis for their tariffs. There was
accordingly no cost-basis for the tariffs imposed.
The tariffs were
not based on costs as required by section15(1)(a) of the ERA (not
cost-reflective); but, were based on the previous
years' tariffs set
by NERSA in terms of its benchmarking approach as set out in the
Municipal Guideline. A further argument was
that NERSA had never
determined a cost reflective tariff for City Power. The generic
indexing approach was wholly unrelated to
the reasonable costs
incurred by City Power in providing its licensed distribution service
and was inconsistent with the ERA and
the EPP.
58.2
Second, the tariffs were entirely generic. The process was focused on
the determination of a generic approved tariff
increase percentage
and if a municipality's tariffs prior to the increase were already
above cost-reflective levels, then the application
of an "approved"
increase merely perpetuated this state of affairs. There was, thus,
no question or consideration of
"reasonableness" or cost
reflectivity in relation to any of the tariffs imposed as required by
section 15(1)(a) of the
ERA.
58.3
Third, the tariffs set by NERSA did not consider the different costs
of supplying different customer categories as required
by section
15(1)(d) of the ERA read with Policy Position 2 of the EPP, nor was
there any evidence of any approval by NERSA for
cross-subsidies or
other pricing to customers that departed from cost-reflective levels
per
customer category. It was, thus, factually impossible for
NERSA to have determined whether the tariffs
per
customer
category were cost-reflective, as those costs were unknown.
NERSA
[59]
NERSA, in rejecting the Applicants’ argument, submitted, that
the most important feature
of section 15(1) of the ERA was that it
does not prescribe how NERSA should determine whether the licensee
covers costs plus a
reasonable margin or return. The contention was
that it was incumbent upon NERSA to develop municipality guidelines
that gave effect
to the jurisdictional facts set out in section 15(1)
of the ERA. In the absence of the cost of supply study, it was argued
that,
NERSA was empowered to exercise the powers conferred upon it by
the ERA and the EPP,
to wit
, to request the municipalities to
furnish relevant information regarding their costs. In so doing,
NERSA would have had all the
relevant information regarding costs.
This information would have assisted in terms of determining whether
the municipality concerned,
covered its costs and the reasonable
margin or return, as envisaged by both the ERA and EPP.
[60]
NERSA, argued further that, the fact that the cost of supply study
was not conducted, did not
mean that other avenues including the
powers of NERSA to source financial information from a municipality,
was ineffectual. NERSA
contended that it sourced the information from
the Municipality specifically to determine cost reflective tariffs as
the cost of
supply study of the Municipality was found to be
insufficient.
[61]
In response to the Applicants’ argument that the methodology
that NERSA used when setting
the City Power tariffs did not enable
the Municipality to: be efficient; prescribe incentives for continued
development; provide
end users with information regarding cost of
consumption; and avoid undue discrimination amongst customer
category, NERSA’s
submission was that the Applicants
incorrectly interpreted the provisions of section 15(1) of the ERA.
According to NERSA, the
method it used in this case, albeit, the
benchmark methodology, took cognisance of the individual cost of
supply of the Municipality.
Therefore, the fact that the methodology
was referred to as a benchmark did not mean that it was not capable
of sourcing relevant
information for the purpose of determining
whether it covered costs and a reasonable margin or return. In fact,
the ERA conferred
powers on NERSA to seek any information from the
Municipality to determine the tariffs in question.
[62]
Secondly, as NERSA argued, the Applicants incorrectly stated that the
Municipality provided no
independently verified or reliable cost
information to NERSA in respect of the impugned decision and that
NERSA took no steps to
establish the actual costs of supplying
electricity within the City of Johannesburg.
City Power
[63]
Before this Court, City Power argued three points in opposition to
the arguments raised by the
Applicants in this Court.
[64]
The first point was that of the Applicants’ contention that the
impugned decision produced
City Power tariffs that were 43% higher
than the other municipalities. The second point was in respect of the
contention that the
Applicants attacked the wrong decision, which has
already been dealt with earlier. The last point was that argued by
the Applicants
that NERSA misapplied the methodology.
[65]
As regards the grounds of review raised by the Applicants, City Power
submitted that the first
ground of review, that of unlawfulness, and
the second ground of review, that of the failure to consider relevant
considerations
and considering irrelevant considerations, were hit by
the wrong challenge point and required no further elaboration. The
only
ground of review that remained was partly addressed by NERSA’s
counsel, and City Power wanted to make some additions to it,
that is,
the point that, NERSA misapplied the methodology.
[66]
City Power’s argument in this regard was that the wrong
benchmark approach, as contended
for by the Applicants, was not
applied to all City Power tariffs. The method, as specifically argued
by the Applicants, was wrongly
applied to the business conventional
tariffs and the industrial medium voltage TOU tariffs. In support of
its argument, City Power,
referred to a judgment in
Retail
Motor Industry Organisation,
[17]
where the Supreme Court of Appeal,
per
Justice Plasket, dealt with the question of what happens when a
single decision has parts that are good and parts that are bad.
That
Court, advocated for the fashioning of a remedy which only set aside
the bad part and retaining the good part. On the basis
of that
judgment, City Power argued for the severance of the two tariffs that
were adversely affected, in this matter.
[67]
City Power’s proposition would have been appropriate only if
the Applicants had raised
it as the only ground of review. The order
would, correctly so, be confined to the commercial and industrial
tariffs. The challenge
for City Power, however, is that there are
other grounds of review the ruling of which, as will appear clearly
hereunder, are in
favour of the Applicants. Moreover, in view of the
order that City Power has proposed, as will appear hereunder,
severance will
not be necessary because the order makes it clear that
it is only the Applicants who will have any claim to the benefit of
the
adjusted tariffs, and residential tariffs will not be affected.
[68]
Consequently, this point is not sustainable, and, if the Applicants
are successful, Prayer 2
of the notice of motion ought to be granted
as it is.
THE
ISSUE FOR DETERMINATION
[69]
The issue for this Court to determine is whether the decision taken
by NERSA when it approved
the electricity tariffs for City Power was
unlawful.
[70]
According to NERSA, the relevant question for the purpose of this
inquiry should be whether NERSA
was in possession of sufficient
information to determine cost reflective tariffs, and whether the
method used was in line with
the ERA and other relevant legal
frameworks.
ELECTRICITY
REGULATION FRAMEWORK
[71]
The parties are agreed that NERSA is required to determine an
electricity tariff with reference
to the applicable legal prescripts.
These legal prescripts include the Constitution, the ERA, and the
EPP, which bind both NERSA
and the municipalities (including City
Power).
[18]
[72]
The principles that NERSA ought to have taken into consideration when
setting municipal electricity
tariffs, including those of City Power,
are reflected in section 15(1) of the ERA read with certain relevant
Policy Positions of
the EPP.
[73]
The principles are stated in section 15(1) of the ERA as follows: a
licence condition determined
under section 14 relating to the 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 licensed activities, including a reasonable margin or
return; (b) must provide
for or prescribe incentives for continued
improvement of the technical and economic efficiency with which
services are to be provided;
(c) must give end users proper
information regarding the costs that their consumption imposes on the
licensee’s business;
(d) must avoid undue discrimination
between customer categories; and (e) may permit the cross-subsidy of
tariffs to certain classes
of customers.
[74]
In essence, the key requirements, in terms of section 15(1) of the
ERA, include allowing for
cost recovery of an efficient municipality,
incentive for improvement of efficiency, proper information regarding
costs of consumption,
avoiding undue discrimination between customer
categories, and explicit allowance for cross-subsidisation between
classes of customers.
[75]
The Applicants have based their grounds of review, argued orally in
Court, mainly on the principles
in subsections 15(1) (a), (d) and (e)
of the ERA. The principles that are relied upon are that the setting
or approval of prices,
charges and tariffs (a) must enable an
efficient licensee to recover the full cost of its licensed
activities, including a reasonable
margin or return; (d) must avoid
undue discrimination between customer categories; and (e) may permit
the cross-subsidy of tariffs
to certain classes of customers. Section
27(h) of the ERA makes it clear that the EPP is binding on the City
of Johannesburg and
all other municipalities. Thus, the relevant
sections of the EPP, namely, section 2 read with Policy Positions
1,
[19]
2
[20]
and 4
[21]
dealing with the
general tariff principles; and, section 8 read with Policy Positions
23,
[22]
26,
[23]
27
[24]
and 29
[25]
dealing with cost of supply studies, must be adhered to.
APPLICATION
OF THE LAW TO FACTS
[76]
The three grounds of review raised orally by the Applicant in Court,
are dealt with hereunder.
Whether
NERSA’s failure to consider a cost of supply study, for City
Power resulted in the set tariffs, being tariff reflective
instead of
cost reflective.
[77]
The principle set out in subsection 15(1)(a) of the ERA prescribes
that municipal electricity
tariffs must be cost reflective instead of
tariff reflective. The EPP, as well, makes it clear that tariffs must
be cost reflective.
Section 8 of the EPP, which deals with
distribution pricing, emphasises this by stating that -
“…
This
first section will address the key principle for distribution
pricing, namely that tariffs would be cost reflective and in
support
of cost reflectivity
.”
[78]
The EPP requires the Municipalities to conduct a cost of study within
a period of five years
from the date on which the policy was
published. Policy Position 23 of the EPP, emphatically states that
electricity distributors
should undertake cost of supply studies at
least every five years, but at least when significant license
structure changes occur,
such as in customer base, relationships
between cost components and sales volumes.
[79]
In terms of the EPP, for NERSA to determine electricity tariffs that
are cost reflective, a cost
of supply study must be carried out by
each municipality before such tariffs are set. This process will
enable NERSA to assess
the overall cost of supply of a municipality
applying for a determination or an increase of its tariffs for that
financial year.
The cost of supply study should have been carried out
within five (5) years from the promulgation of the EPP.
[80]
NERSA in its papers, concedes, correctly so, that a cost of supply
study determines the actual
cost
per
customer group, and,
allows for cost-reflective pricing
per
customer category in
line with the relevant provisions of the ERA and the EPP.
[81]
From the evidence proffered by NERSA in these papers, it is quite
clear that NERSA acknowledges
that a cost of supply study is a
requirement, which must be complied with, for the achievement of a
cost reflective municipal tariff.
[82]
Firstly, in its response to the Applicants’ argument that the
methodology used in determining
the guideline was based on averages
which do not accurately reflect the operating circumstances of each
municipality and the cost
drivers impacting on the different input
costs
per
municipality, NERSA, acknowledged that an averaging
approach was not ideal, given the uniqueness of each entity, and
conceded that
an ideal situation will only result when each
municipality is assessed individually based on its unique cost
structure and load
profile. In addition, it also, stated that, this
can only be achieved by means of a cost of supply study.
[83]
Secondly, NERSA, acknowledged that the cost of supply studies and
outcomes thereto, should be
available as a normal course of business
as they are required as part of the regulatory framework, that is, in
terms of Policy
Position 23 of the EPP.
[84]
Furthermore, NERSA conceded that it used the benchmarking methodology
only because there was
no other method available, and that it had
taken steps to ensure that municipalities carry out their respective
cost of supply
studies. It is not in dispute that NERSA had, by then,
already directed municipalities to submit cost of supply studies that
should
allow a shift towards cost reflective tariffs for electricity
tariffs to reflect efficient costs and reasonable return for every
licensee, in line with the requirements of the ERA and the EPP.
[85]
From what is stated above, there appears to be no doubt that NERSA
supported the fact that municipalities
should undergo a cost of
supply study as that would have definitely enabled NERSA to determine
tariffs that are based on each municipality’s
cost of supply.
[86]
That NERSA supported the view that the cost of supply studies, were
important, was, clearly,
reflected in its response to some of the
concerns raised by stakeholders during the consultation process.
NERSA agreed, during
those consultations, that municipalities must
develop cost of supply studies that will reflect the true cost of
supplying electricity
to their customers. And, in order to show the
seriousness in which NERSA took the requirement for cost of supply
studies, it approved
a cost of supply study framework and implored
all municipalities to undertake and submit cost of supply studies, so
that the revenue
earned by the municipalities
per
tariff
category, was aligned with the cost of supply of electricity.
Municipalities were informed to use the framework as a guideline
when
developing their cost of supply studies. In addition, NERSA undertook
to continue to support and engage licensees when they
develop their
cost of supply studies, so as to ensure a smooth transition towards
the cost of supply study implementation.
[87]
It is not in dispute that City Power did not supply NERSA with a cost
of supply study before
its application was considered by NERSA. Both
NERSA and City Power conceded in their evidence before this Court
that at the time
of approval of City Power tariffs, City Power’s
cost of supply studies did not serve before NERSA for consideration.
NERSA
stated that the cost of supply study furnished to it by City
Power was insufficient and could not be considered.
[88]
On the basis of what this Court has stated above, which is mainly
based on the evidence of NERSA,
it is evident that without the cost
of supply study serving before it, at the time of considering City
Power tariffs, NERSA could
not have been able to assess City Power’s
true cost of supply.
[89]
NERSA’s contention that the methodology it used enabled it to
take into account the overall
cost of supply of City Power, is, in
this Court’s view, without merit. The evidence on record, based
on City Power’s
version, indicates that City Power’s
application for tariffs increment, itself, was not based on costs, it
was merely based
on an estimate of what NERSA’s guideline
tariff would be.
[90]
In its own evidence City Power stated that it initially applied for a
tariff increment of 12,20%
based on an estimate of what it thought
NERSA’s guideline percentage increase would be. City Power
stated, further that when
NERSA later on publicised its guideline,
which was more than that City Power applied for, it had to reapply
and request an amendment
of the percentage increase to 13,07% in line
with NERSA’s publicised percentage increase, which application
was approved
without much ado.
[91]
City Power’s application would have been approved without much
ado because it fell squarely
within the percentage increase set by
NERSA. In the Consultation Paper that was circulated to NERSA’s
stakeholders, including
the municipalities, at the time, NERSA
mentioned that municipalities must submit their specific cost drivers
should they be different
from the ones presented by NERSA in the
Consultation Paper. The Consultation Paper, furthermore, mentioned
that municipalities
applying for an increase that was above the
guideline have to justify their increases to NERSA. Moreover, in
NERSA’s ‘Reason
for Decision’ of the ‘Determination
of the Municipal Tariff Guideline for the Financial Year 2019/2020
and the Revision
of the Municipal Tariff Benchmarks Decision’,
it was stated that municipalities applying for an increase that was
above the
guideline would have to justify their increases to NERSA.
[92]
It follows that since City Power’s tariff increment was within
NERSA’s guideline,
its application would be approved without it
having to justify anything. In fact, City Power did not have to
motivate its application
because it had applied in line with the
percentage tariff guideline issued by NERSA. City Power’s
application was approved
even without having to explain why it
changed the tariff increment it had originally applied for which was
lower than that issued
by NERSA, to the one that was in line with
NERSA’s guideline. Of concern is that some of the tariffs
proposed by City
Power in its application, because they fell within
the guideline were approved even though NERSA did not have benchmark
tariffs
for them.
[93]
Importantly, the method used by NERSA, does not allow for the actual
distribution costs to be
identified or investigated, but, is instead,
reflective of tariffs charged by other municipalities. This is
occasioned by the fact
that this is the method that was used to
derive the original benchmark values that were set some ten (10)
years ago by NERSA. The
actual tariffs have never been determined
because of this method. The benchmarks have simply been, annually,
escalated since then
without regard to the actual underlying costs of
any municipality, City of Johannesburg, included. Without
the actual
underlying costs being determined, City Power’s true
cost of supply will never be known and any tariff set by NERSA will
remain in contravention of the legislative and regulatory framework
and, therefore, unlawful.
[94]
Additionally, the Record of Decision does not indicate that there was
sufficient cost based information
to enable NERSA to determine the
true cost of supply for City Power. The Record of Decision states
that when developing the percentage
guideline for the 2019/2020
financial year, NERSA considered the 2016/2017 D-Forms information
which was used to determine whether
there would be any changes to the
municipality’s cost structures. The D-Forms were, also,
considered to determine whether
the weights of the cost drivers that
have been developed need to be revised and maintained.
[95]
As is evident from what is said above, the D-Forms information for
the financial year 2016/2017,
was used to determine the percentage
guideline for the 2019/2020 financial year. Ordinarily the
information that ought to
have been used, should have been the
information of the preceding year, that is, the information from the
D-Forms of the 2018/2019
financial year. Undoubtedly, therefore, the
information that was used to determine the City Power tariffs, was
outdated, and NERSA’s
argument that it had credible financial
information that assisted it to approve a tariff that allows for the
recovery of efficiently
incurred costs including a reasonable margin
or return, is not sustainable. NERSA stated, as well, that the
information submitted
in the D-Forms was expected to be accurate as
it was mainly based on previously audited ring-fenced financial
statements. It argued
that it did not have to doubt that information
as it was from audited financial statements. NERSA, also,
acknowledged that it had
seen an improvement in the quality of data
submitted by the municipalities.
[96]
This statement, in this Court’s view, is an indication that
there have been some discrepancies
noted by NERSA previously in
regard to the information provided in the D-Forms, which appears not
to have been dealt with satisfactory
and completely. Save for saying,
it had seen some improvements, NERSA, does not state what the
discrepancies were and in what manner
those discrepancies have
improved. Therefore, without that explanation by NERSA, it cannot be
categorically stated, that the discrepancies
that NERSA had noted
previously, have been completely and satisfactory dealt with, nor can
NERSA say, with certainty, that the
information that was before it
when it took the impugned decision was accurate and reliable.
[97]
Moreover, even if, as NERSA wanted to argue, the information was
contained in audited and ring-fenced,
financial statements, the fact
remains that the information in those financial statements, was
definitely dated.
[98]
NERSA’s challenges are further compounded by the fact that the
benchmark was developed
based on information contained in a
stratified sample of all municipalities, and City Power tariffs were
increased by that benchmark.
City Power tariffs can, therefore, not
be said to be cost reflective, under the circumstances.
[99]
Of fundamental importance is that NERSA conceded that it could only
develop and implement costs
reflective tariffs upon submission of the
cost of supply studies by municipalities. City Power did not submit a
cost of supply
study. Therefore, it is goes without saying that NERSA
could not determine cost reflective tariffs for City Power.
Whether
NERSA did not consider the cost of supply of particular customer
categories
[100]
Going further, NERSA did not have before it, information that would
have assisted it to assess City Power’s
cost of supply to
different categories of customers, because the costs, thereof, were
not known. This was so because NERSA had
not in the first place
determined City Power’s overall cost of supply.
[101]
In terms of subsection 15(1)(d) of the ERA, discrimination between
customer categories is allowed, but undue discrimination
should be
avoided. The subsection provides that the setting or approval of
prices, charges and tariffs must avoid undue discrimination
between
customer categories.
[102]
The non-discrimination principle is further articulated in section
2.5 read with Policy Position 4 of the EPP,
where the
non-discrimination principle is set out as follows:
“
There
are currently a number of obstacles, principally relating to cross
subsidies that prevent the full implementation of non-discriminatory
pricing approach. These discriminatory practices have created a
situation where similar customers are subject to significantly
different tariffs without any real differences in the cost of supply.
This undermines the efficient allocation of resources and
prevents
healthy competition within similar industries. This means that the
full potential and benefits of electricity could only
be extended to
all customers once these discriminatory pricing practices are
removed. The obstacles should therefore, be addressed
and removed
”.
[103]
Furthermore, categories of customers, for a municipality, are
allowed, in terms of section 15(1)(e) of the ERA,
to subsidise each
other, that is, cross-subsidisation is allowed between the customer
categories, but such cross-subsidy must be
deliberate and
transparent. Furthermore, the EPP provides that the number of
customer categories for tariff purposes should be
justifiable to
NERSA based on cost drivers and customer base.
[26]
[104]
It is clear, from the above stated, that over and above cost of
supply of a customer, NERSA had, also, to consider
the cost of supply
by customer category and the discrimination and cross-subsidisation
between the customer categories.
[105]
NERSA, in its evidence, conceded, correctly so, that it is, by means
of a cost of supply study, that the actual
cost
per
customer
group can be determined. This, according to NERSA, allows for
cost-reflective pricing
per
customer category in line with the
EPP, and provides a means of ascertaining cross-subsidisation,
particularly, between the residential
customers and commercial
customers as envisaged.
[106]
What, however, is apparent on record, is that NERSA did not consider
the different costs of supplying different
customer categories, nor
was there any approval by NERSA of cross-subsidies or other pricing
to customers that departed from cost
reflective levels
per
customer category. In fact, NERSA, itself, conceded that it did not
have regard to costs
per
customer category. A detailed
assessment of costs
per
customer category was not possible and
it could not have been possible because City Power did not make a
cost of supply study available
to NERSA.
[107]
The extent to which there had been undue discrimination or
cross-subsidisation between the different customer
categories, same
could, not be determined as the data on which to base such an
assessment was not before NERSA at the time of decision
making. NERSA
could only determine whether any undue discrimination or cross
subsidisation between customer categories occurred,
by considering
the costs of supply by customer category, which could have been
enabled by a cost of supply study.
[108]
Section 15(1)(d) of the ERA read with the principles set out in
Policy Positions 2, 4 and 29 of the EPP, makes
it clear that NERSA
must consider cost of supply through the whole service, that is, the
service of the customer, as well as, within
customer categories of
that customer.
[109]
Of importance is that the methodology adopted by NERSA was unable to
assess the cost of supply of City Power.
In its evidence, NERSA
acknowledged that although the benchmarking approach created
discrepancies between the tariffs of various
municipalities, it was,
however, developed to ensure that tariffs across municipalities are
not vastly different when evaluating
the municipal tariff
application. NERSA, also, admitted that certain customer categories
like industry and business, largely overpay
for the rendered
distribution services if compared with other customers, particularly
residential, which results is substantial
cross–subsidisation
requiring a cross-subsidy framework, that would clearly define how
subsidies should be shared amongst
customers.
[110]
From the record, it is common cause that no cross-subsidy framework
was developed. Certainly, at the time of the
approval of City Power
tariffs no such framework existed. It can, thus, be safe for this
Court to infer that there might have been
undue discrimination and
cross-subsidies between City Power’s customer categories, which
remained undetected. The methodology
that was in place at the time,
as NERSA conceded, was developed to ensure that tariffs across
municipalities are not vastly different.
It was not developed to
assess cost of supply of licensee’s services or cost of supply
per
customer category.
[111]
It is evident from the evidence on record, which NERSA appears not to
be disputing, that NERSA made no attempt
whatsoever to consider the
cost of supply to different customer categories. This is so because
the methodology that was used by
NERSA to develop the benchmarks was
materially flawed, as it did not assist NERSA to investigate the cost
of supply through the
whole service, that is, the service of City
Power, as well as, within customer categories of City Power.
[112]
According to NERSA’s Consultation Paper, the municipal
electricity tariff benchmarks for the 2019/2020 financial
year, were
based on five assumed tariff/customer categories, whilst City Power’s
application was based on more than five
customer categories. NERSA
having assumed the customer categories, it cannot be said that it
considered City Power’s customer
categories. Even if it can be
said that NERSA did consider those assumed customer categories for
City Power, nevertheless, it is
evident that not all City Power’s
customer categories were included in that assumption, when the
percentage tariffs were
set.
[113]
Furthermore, NERSA acknowledged in the stakeholder engagement process
that there should be different financial
benchmarks for
municipalities, applying different depreciation regimes. It, further,
acknowledged that it was not correct to use
the same benchmark to
utilities using different accounting regimes. However, the evidence
proffered in this matter indicates the
opposite. It is obvious that
the benchmarks that were used by NERSA, having been developed from
stratified samples, were used in
the same way for all municipalities
even those which used different accounting regimes. There is no
evidence on record that indicates
whether NERSA treated City Power
differently from other municipalities that applied depreciation
regimes or accounting regimes,
that are different from those of City
Power.
[114]
Earlier in this judgment, it was found that the methodology used by
NERSA is not able to determine a licensee’s
cost of supply.
This being so, it obvious that the benchmark would not have ensured
cost reflective tariffs for City Power’s
customer categories.
[115]
In terms of the ERA and the EPP, if a council of a municipality
wanted to cross subsidise, it must do so deliberately
and in a way
that is transparent. It must show the cost of supply of customers who
are going to be subsidised. Cross-subsidisation
must, also, exclude
any undue discrimination. In the view of this Court, this could only
be properly done where a cost of supply
study has been done.
[116]
Policy Position 23 of the EPP, dealing with cost of supply studies,
at section 8.1 thereof, emphasises that ‘
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’
.
[117]
Without the cost of supply study, and, therefore, the cost of supply
of City Power, which would result in the
cost of supply of City
Power’s customer categories, NERSA would not have been able to
investigate the extent, if any, of
undue discrimination or
cross-subsidisation between City Power’s customer categories.
When setting or approving municipal
tariffs, NERSA was enjoined by
the provisions of the ERA and the EPP, to consider these principles,
and assess whether or not there
was undue discrimination or
cross-subsidisation that was deliberate and transparent.
[118]
Even if it were to be accepted that the method adopted by NERSA did
consider the cost of supply of each municipality,
what it cannot
contest is that the methodology did not look at costs within customer
categories and the cross subsidisation between
the customer
categories. This is a requirement, in terms of the ERA and the EPP,
that NERSA must comply with and which is binding
on the
municipalities, including City Power that NERSA failed to adhere to.
Because no cost of supply study was provided, NERSA,
actually, had no
way of assessing the extent of any discrimination and whether such
discrimination was not undue, as well as, cross
subsidies between
customer categories, and to determine whether such cross subsidies
were deliberate and transparent.
[119]
The Applicants’ ground of review that the tariff decision taken
by NERSA when it determined the City Power
tariffs was unlawful
because it was in breach of section 15(1)(d) and (e) of the ERA, and
principles 2, 4 and 29 of the EPP, is
in this Court’s view
correct, and ought, therefore, to succeed.
Whether
NERSA considered irrelevant considerations and did not consider
relevant considerations
[120]
Although NERSA was of the view that there was sufficient information
before NERSA to approve the City Power tariffs,
(D-Forms and
financial statements); and that the information that was allowed, was
credible and reliable, the problem is that the
benchmark was
developed based on information contained in a stratified sample of
all municipalities and City Power tariffs were
increased by that
benchmark. The information as such was not municipality
specific, hence the tariff increase was not cost
reflective.
[121]
In setting the percentage increase for City Power, NERSA did not
consider City Power’s D-Forms and other
information, alone. The
other municipalities’ information was put in the mix to develop
a percentage increase which applied
to all the municipalities
equally. In essence, NERSA engaged in a process of comparing the base
values across municipalities in
an effort to assess efficiency on a
broad level. The value NERSA arrived at was based on averages across
all municipalities, and
not on City Power’s base value, only.
[122]
Furthermore, as already stated, the information from the D-Forms was
stale as it was for the 2016/2017 financial
year when it ought to
have been for the 2018/2019 financial year. Consequently, NERSA’s
contention that the process of approving
tariffs was not mechanical
and that the tariffs were considered on a case-by-case basis, cannot
be correct when the aforementioned
reasons are considered.
[123]
Fundamentally, without a cost of supply study, it cannot be said that
the information in the D-Forms and the audited
financial statements,
even if it could have been accepted as not being outdated, was
properly applied. It follows that when the
percentage increase was
determined irrelevant consideration were taken into account and
relevant considerations, which could have
been provided by a cost of
supply study, were not considered.
CONCLUSION
[124]
In essence, the Applicants’ case hinged on the fact that there
was no cost of supply study developed for
the City of Johannesburg,
at the time NERSA took the decision to set the 2019/2020 financial
year, City Power tariffs.
[125]
Without a cost of supply study, which the EPP emphasises it should be
carried out every five years,
[27]
by each municipality, NERSA could not assess the overall cost of
supply of the municipality applying for an increase of its
tariffs,
[28]
or the cost of
supply of the customer categories of that municipality, and, as a
result, NERSA could not lawfully set tariffs for
such a municipality.
This is what happened in the case of City Power.
[126]
NERSA, has continually in its argument stated that a cost of supply
study is the responsibility of individual
municipalities and that
without being furnished with one, like in this matter, it will
continue to apply the Guideline and Benchmarking
Method when setting
municipality tariffs. However, NERSA has been enjoined by the EPP to
see that within five (5) years that cost
reflective tariffs shall
reflect all costs components.
[29]
The calculation of the five (5) year period should have started from
2008, when the EPP was promulgated.
[127]
City Power having conceded that it did not carry out a cost of supply
study for its application for the 2019/2020
financial year tariffs
approval, it cannot be said that the decision NERSA took to set City
Power tariffs was lawful. This is so
because without the cost of
supply study, NERSA could not assess the correct overall cost of
supply for City Power, and without
the correct overall cost of
supply, NERSA could not assess the cost of supply of City Power’s
customer categories. NERSA
could, also not assess whether there was
discrimination that occurred between the customer categories and if
discrimination did
occur, whether such discrimination was undue or
not. NERSA could, also, not assess whether there was any
cross-subsidisation that
occurred between the customer categories,
and, that if such cross-subsidisation did occur, whether or not it
was deliberate and
transparent. As such the impugned decision is
unlawful, unconstitutional and invalid.
[128]
As the Constitutional Court confirmed in
PG
Group
,
[30]
information relating to costs is a necessary input into a tariff
determination. Without that information, there is "
a
missing or faulty link between the means and the ends
”,
it is a procedural irrationality that signifies the material
irrationality. On the facts of this matter, this reasoning
applies
equally to the City of Johannesburg tariff determination by NERSA.
Irrationality has, thus, been established. Accordingly,
NERSA’s
decision, taken when setting City Power tariffs for the 2019/2020
financial year, is hereby declared unlawful, unconstitutional
and
invalid, it ought to be reviewed and set aside as prayed for by the
Applicants.
EXPERT
EVIDENCE
[129]
Each of the parties commissioned economic experts to analyse the
Record of Decision and to determine whether it
could be said that the
tariffs were cost reflective.
[130]
Based on the final decision this Court eventually reached, in this
application, on the common cause facts, it
was not necessary for the
Court to make use of the reports of the experts which are, in any
event, based on divergent opinions.
REMEDY
[131]
In addition to the declaratory relief of invalidity of the impugned
decision, the remedy sought by the Applicants
in the amended notice
of motion is for this Court to
(a)
Suspend the declaration of invalidity in prayer 1A until finalisation
of the process contemplated in
prayers 3 and 4 below.
(b)
Remit the decision back to NERSA, along with directions as to how the
decision should be taken, and,
pending the re-taking by NERSA of the
impugned decision.
(c)
Order the retrospective reconciliation of the tariffs originally
charged against the tariffs lawfully
to be determined on remittal and
repayment to the Applicants of any amounts due in terms of that
reconciliation.
(d)
Declare that all future tariff determinations must be made on a cost
recovery basis and by means of
a process, which ensures that the City
of Johannesburg furnishes NERSA with all the prescribed information,
which is necessary
for NERSA to determine a cost-based tariff.
[132]
City Power seemed not to be too adverse, to the remedy sought by the
Applicants, in the event that the declaratory
remedy of invalidity
sought by the Applicants is granted in their favour. City Power,
however, argued against the insertion of
the retrospective
application of the remedy in so far as the Applicants sought refund
of the tariffs for the financial period of
2020/2021 and thereafter.
[133]
City Power submitted further that it would not be just and equitable
for this Court to make an order prescribing
how NERSA should conduct
itself in future when determining electricity tariffs as this would
be tantamount to violating the principle
of separation of powers.
[134]
It, in that regard, proposed what it considered to be a just and
equitable remedy to be granted, as follows:
1.
The decision of the First Respondent,
published on the First Respondent's website on or about 16 August
2019 (with retrospective
effect to 1 July 2019), to approve an
electricity tariff for the Second Respondent for the 2019/2020 tariff
year ("the tariff
decision"), is reviewed and set aside.
2.
Save to the extent set out in paragraph
3 below, the order in paragraph 1 shall not have any retrospective
effect and shall not
affect any amounts that became due to the
Second/Third Respondents pursuant to the tariff decision.
3.
In respect of the Applicants (which
shall include the members of the applicants as at the date of
instituting the present application),
the following regime shall
apply subject to paragraph 4 below:
3.1.
The Applicants and the Second/Third
Respondents will seek to resolve by mutual agreement their dispute
regarding the applicable
electricity tariffs payable for the
2019/2020 tariff year;
3.2.
If agreement is not reached in terms of
paragraph 3.1 within thirty (30) days of the date of this order, the
tariff decision is
remitted to the First Respondent, for it to take a
decision only on the applicable electricity tariffs payable by the
Applicants
for the 2019/2020 tariff year; and
3.3.
Following the agreement in paragraph 3.1
or a valid decision as contemplated in paragraph 3.2:
3.3.1.
If the Applicants
owe amounts to the Second/Third Respondents arising from
the
agreement in paragraph 3.1 or the decision in paragraph 3.2, they
shall pay these amounts forthwith; and
3.3.2.
If the Second/Third
Respondents owe amounts to the Applicants arising from
the agreement
in paragraph 3.1 or the decision in paragraph 3.2, they shall credit
the Applicants with these amounts forthwith.
[135]
In support of City Power’s argument and suggested draft remedy,
NERSA emphasised City Power’s submission
that the Court should
not grant a remedy whereby a regulator, like NERSA, would be told
what it must do when taking a decision.
NERSA, as such, made a
suggestion that an order be granted remitting the matter to NERSA for
reconsideration of the tariffs, without
having to prescribe to NERSA
what it must do because NERSA does not regulate the industry only as
between City Power, the City
of Johannesburg and the Applicants, but,
that there are other role players which will be impacted upon by
anything that NERSA was
going to do.
[136]
NERSA was also, adverse, to the retrospective effect of the remedy,
contending that the order is made in 2021/22
for the tariff decision
taken in 2019/20. As such, NERSA cautioned about the ramification of
such a remedy, which if not guarded
may open flood gates for other
parties who were impacted by the tariff decision.
[137]
The Applicants, did not have a problem with the draft remedy as
suggested by City Power and supported by NERSA,
in that, the proposed
remedy provided them with substantive relief, in respect of the
challenged tariffs. They were, however, not
satisfied by the omission
in the draft remedy of the prayer that they said addressed the
future. Their contention was that such
a prayer was particularly
important, as this dispute will be replayed again as soon as NERSA
makes its next tariff determination;
and that NERSA seemed not to
accept that it was bound by the provisions of section 27(h) of the
ERA to execute the reticulation
function in accordance with the EPP.
Thus, an order fashioned to incorporate the future, would ensure that
NERSA complies with
the provisions of the ERA and EPP, so the
argument went.
[138]
In terms of section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution and section 8 of
PAJA,
[31]
this Court has a
wide discretion to consider an appropriate relief following the
finding of unlawfulness in the impugned decision.
The remedy to be
granted must be just and equitable.
[139]
The Constitutional Court in
Hoërskool
Ermelo
,
[32]
when granting a remedy based on section 172(1)(b) of the
Constitution, expressed itself as follows:
“
The
power to make such an order derives from section 172(1)(b) of the
Constitution. First, section 172(1)(a) requires a court, when
deciding a constitutional matter within its power, to declare any law
or conduct that is inconsistent with the Constitution invalid
to the
extent of its inconsistency. Section 172(1)(b) of the
Constitution provides that when this Court decides a constitutional
matter within its power it ‘may make any order that is just and
equitable’. The litmus test will be whether considerations
of
justice and equity in a particular case dictate that the order be
made. In other words, the order must be fair and just within
the
context of a particular dispute.
It
is clear that section 172(1)(b) confers wide remedial powers on a
competent court adjudicating a constitutional matter. The remedial
power envisaged in section 172(1)(b) is not only available when a
court makes an order of constitutional invalidity of a law or
conduct
under section 172(1)(a). A just and equitable order may be made even
in instances where the outcome of a constitutional
dispute does not
hinge on constitutional invalidity of legislation or conduct. This
ample and flexible remedial jurisdiction
in constitutional disputes
permits a court to forge an order that would place substance above
mere form by identifying the actual
underlying dispute between the
parties and by requiring the parties to take steps directed at
resolving the dispute in a manner
consistent with constitutional
requirements. In several cases, this Court has found it fair to
fashion orders to facilitate a substantive
resolution of the
underlying dispute between the parties. Sometimes orders of this
class have taken the form of structural interdicts
or supervisory
orders. This approach is valuable and advances constitutional
justice particularly by ensuring that the parties
themselves become
part of the solution.”
(Footnote omitted)
[140]
The
PG
Group
litigation, on the other hand, demonstrates that the Courts will, in
appropriate cases, where NERSA's conduct has been shown to
be
unreasonable or contrary to the empowering legislation, have "not
the slightest hesitation" to set aside NERSA's tariff
determinations.
[33]
The Court
will also ensure that the remedy granted is meaningful and will
ensure that proper tariffs are to be imposed, even retrospectively.
[141]
It is trite that when invoking the provisions of section 172(1)(b) of
the Constitution, the granting of a just
and equitable remedy in the
circumstances of this case, must ensure that the tariffs are adjusted
retrospectively to a lawful amount.
[142]
The parties agreed to the substantive remedy which ought to be
granted in favour of the Applicants as
per
the draft remedy
proposed by City Power. The Applicants appear, also, to be content
that the proposed draft remedy does not extend
to other parties
except the Applicants and that the retrospective effect thereof
covers only the period in question, which is the
2019/2020 financial
period. What remained the challenge was the additional declaratory
relief sought by the Applicants in regard
to the future, that is, an
order prescribing how NERSA should conduct itself when setting
tariffs, in the future.
[143]
In this Court’s view, the agreement by the parties as to the
extent of the retrospectivity of the refund
of the tariffs, is
correct. It would never have been just and equitable for the remedy
sought by the Applicants, to reach all the
way back into those
periods (2020/2021 tariff year and the tariffs thereafter) and result
in the extraordinary potential for refunds
that will cause calamity
for the Municipality. Fundamentally, there was no basis to interfere
with the 2020/2021 tariff year and
the tariffs thereafter, since
there would be separate decisions, which have not been challenged.
[144]
This Court is in agreement that it is not for this Court to prescribe
to NERSA what it must do when taking a tariff
decision. This Court
has clearly expressed itself in the judgment and has stated as such
what NERSA did that was wrong and what
it needs to correct. It is
therefore unnecessary for this Court to grant the relief that the
Applicants seek.
[145]
The further argument by City Power that such an order will be remiss
for lack of joinder to these proceedings
of other role players, who
might be impacted by such an order, is valid, as well. It is indeed,
so that NERSA does not regulate
the industry only as between City
Power, the City of Johannesburg and the Applicants. NERSA can, also,
not treat City Power differently
from other municipalities when it
comes to the determination of electricity tariffs. Whatever remedy is
granted to the Applicants
which would prescribe the manner in which
NERSA should conduct itself when determining electricity tariffs,
will have an impact
on other municipal electricity distributors.
[146]
It is this Court’s view that the remedy sought by the
Applicants will definitely have an impact on other
municipal
electricity distributors and it will, consequently, not be just and
equitable to grant such a remedy. Under the
circumstances, a
just and equitable remedy, that this Court should grant, is that
proposed by City Power.
COSTS
[147]
The Applicants as the successful parties have prayed for a punitive
cost order against NERSA on the basis of an
alleged shifting case,
and that such costs to include the costs of two counsel. They, also,
prayed for costs against City Power.
[148]
It is the view of this Court that punitive costs against NERSA are
not warranted in this matter. There is no evidence,
none was argued
before this Court that established that NERSA was a vexatious or
frivolous litigant in these proceedings, warranting
that it be
mulcted with a punitive cost order.
[149]
This Court is in agreement that the issues in this matter were
complex and important to warrant the employment
of two counsel –
one senior and one junior.
[150]
Therefore, an order for costs on a party and party scale, inclusive
of costs consequent upon the employment of
two counsel, ought to be
granted jointly and severally against NERSA and City Power, in favour
of the Applicants.
THE
ORDER
[151]
The following order is made
1.
The application is granted.
2.
The Draft Order annexed to this judgment is made an order of Court.
E.M
KUBUSHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ legal representatives
by e-mail.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 25 November
2022.
APPEARANCES
:
APPLICANTS’
COUNSEL:
ADV.
M
CHASKALSON SC
ADV.
S PUDIFIN-JONES
APPLICANTS’
ATTORNEYS: JOUBERT GALPIN
SEARLE INC
FIRST
RESPONDENT’S COUNSEL: ADV. P
MOKOENA SC
ADV.
P MANAGA
FIRST
RESPONDENT ATTORNEYS: CHEADLE THOMPSON &
HAYSOM INC
SECOND
& THIRD RESPONDENTS’
COUNSEL:
ADV.
S BUDLENDER SC
ADV.
P NGCONCO
SECOND
& THIRD
RESPONDENTS’
ATTORNEYS: EDWARD
NATHAN SONNENBERGS INC
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number
: 92792/2019
In
the matter between:
CASTING,
FORGING AND MACHINING
CLUSTER
OF SOUTH AFRICA (NPC) FIRST
APPLICANT
SCAW
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD SECOND
APPLICANT
DUNROSE
TRADING 57 (PTY) LTD THIRD
APPLICANT
INTERNATIONAL
WIRE CONVERTORS (PTY) LTD FOURTH APPLICANT
ABRACON
PROPERTY 1 (PTY) LTD FIFTH
APPLICANT
and
NATIONAL
ENERGY REGULATOR OF SA FIRST
RESPONDENT
CITY
POWER SOC LTD
SECOND
RESPONDENT
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY THIRD
RESPONDENT
This
Order is made an Order of Court by the Judge whose name is reflected
herein, duly stamped by the Registrar of the Court and
submitted
electronically to the Parties/their legal representatives by email.
This Order is further uploaded on Caselines by the
Judge’s
secretary. The date of this Order is deemed to be 25 November
2022.
COURT
ORDER
1.
The decision of the First
Respondent, published on the First Respondent's website
on or about
16 August 2019 (with retrospective effect to 1 July 2019), to approve
an electricity tariff for the Second Respondent
for the 2019/2020
tariff year ("the tariff decision"), is reviewed and set
aside.
2.
Save to the extent set out
in paragraph 3 below, the order in paragraph 1 shall not
have any
retrospective effect and shall not affect any amounts that became due
to the Second/Third Respondents pursuant to the
tariff decision.
3.
In respect of the
Applicants (which shall include the members of the applicants as
at
the date of instituting the present application), the following
regime shall apply:
3.1.
The Applicants and the Second/Third Respondents will seek to
resolve by mutual agreement their dispute regarding the
applicable
electricity tariffs payable for the 2019/2020 tariff year;
3.2.
If agreement is not reached in terms of paragraph 3.1 within
30 days of the date of this order, the tariff decision
is remitted to
the First Respondent, for it to take a decision only on the
applicable electricity tariffs payable by the Applicants
for the
2019/2020 tariff year; and
3.3.
Following the agreement in paragraph 3.1 or the decision in
paragraph 3.2:
3.3.1.
If the Applicants
owe amounts to the Second/Third Respondents arising from
the
agreement in paragraph 3.1 or a valid decision in paragraph 3.2, they
shall pay these amounts forthwith; and
3.3.2.
If the Second/Third
Respondents owe amounts to the Applicants arising from
the agreement
in paragraph 3.1 or a valid decision in paragraph 3.2, they shall
credit the Applicants with these amounts forthwith.
4.
The respondents are
directed jointly and severally to pay the costs of the applicants,
such costs to include the costs of two counsel – one senior and
one junior.
REGISTRAR
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
:
APPLICANTS’
COUNSEL: ADV.
M CHASKALSON SC
ADV.
S PUDIFIN-JONES
APPLICANTS’
ATTORNEYS: JOUBERT
GALPIN SEARLE INC
FIRST
RESPONDENT’S COUNSEL: ADV. P
MOKOENA SC
ADV.
P MANAGA
FIRST
RESPONDENT ATTORNEYS: CHEADLE THOMPSON &
HAYSOM INC
SECOND
& THIRD RESPONDENTS’
COUNSEL:
ADV.
S BUDLENDER SC
ADV.
P NGCONCO
SECOND
& THIRD RESPONDENTS’
ATTORNEYS:
EDWARD
NATHAN SONNENBERGS INC
[1]
Act
No 3 of 2000.
[2]
Act No
40
of 2004.
[3]
Act No
4
of 2006.
[4]
Act No
117
of 1998.
[5]
Promulgated in Government Gazette No 31741 dated 19 December 2008.
[6]
“
A
licensee may not charge a customer any other tariff and make use of
provisions in agreements
other
than that determined or approved by the Regulator as part of its
licensing conditions.”
[7]
Consultation
Paper on the "Municipal Tariff Guideline Increase, Benchmarks
and Proposed timelines for the Municipal Tariff
Approval Process for
the 2019/2020 Financial Year" ("the Tariff Guideline and
Benchmarks Consultation Paper").
[8]
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
2004
(6) SA 222 (SCA).
[9]
MEC for
Health, Eastern Cape and Another v Kirkland Investments (Pty) Ltd
t/a Eye and Lazer Institute
2014 (3) SA 481
(CC) para 101;
Merafong
City Local Municipality v AngloGold Ashanti Ltd
2017 (2) SA 211
(CC) paras 41 and 43;
Department
of Transport and Other v Tasima
(Pty) Ltd
2017 (2) SA 622
(CC) para 147.
[10]
National
Energy Regulator of South Africa v PG Group (Pty) Limited and Others
2020 (1) SA 450 (CC).
[11]
Para 33.
[12]
Para 48.
[13]
Para 31.
[14]
Para 33.
[15]
Section 35(1) of the ERA.
[16]
See
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight
Properties 39 Pty Ltd and Another
2012 (2) SA 104
(CC) para
104(e)(iii).
[17]
Retail
Motor Industry Organisation and Another v Minister of Water and
Environmental Affairs and Another
2014
(3) SA 251 (SCA).
[18]
See section 27(h) of the ERA.
[19]
“(a) The revenue requirement for a regulated licensee must be
set at a level which covers the full cost of production,
including a
reasonable risk adjusted margin or return on appropriate asset
values. . .”
[20]
“Electricity tariffs must reflect the efficient cost of
rendering electricity services as accurately as practical.
. .”
[21]
“All forms of discriminatory pricing practices must be
identified and removed, other than those permitted under specific
cross-subsidisation/developmental programmes, or be transparently
reflected to unlock the full potential of electricity to all.”
[22]
“Electricity distributors shall undertake COS studies at least
every five years, but at least when significant licensee
structure
changes occur, such as in customer base, relationships between cost
components and sales volumes. . .”
[23]
“(a) The number of consumer categories for tariff purposes
should be justifiable to NERSA based on cost drivers and
customer
base: . . .”
[24]
“NERSA must see within five years that cost reflective tariffs
shall reflect all the following cost components
as far as possible:
. . .”
[25]
“Tariff structure and levels shall be aligned with the results
from the COS studies in which the resultant income
will equal the
revenue requirement.”
[26]
Section 8.4 of the EPP read with Policy Position 26.
[27]
Policy Position 23 of the EPP.
[28]
Section 8.8 read with Policy Position 29 emphasises that the tariff
structure and levels should be aligned with the results
from the
cost of supply studies in which the resultant income will equal
revenue requirements.
[29]
Section 8.5 read with Policy Position 27 of the EPP.
[30]
Para 51.
[31]
Remedies
in proceedings for judicial review
8 (1) The court or tribunal, in proceedings for judicial review in
terms of section 6(1), may grant any order that is just and
equitable.
[32]
Head
of Department Mpumalanga v Hoërskool Ermelo
2010 (2) SA 415
(CC) at 96-97.
[33]
PG Group Ltd and Others v National Energy Regulator of South Africa
and Another
2018 (5) SA 150
(SCA).
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