Home South African Six Eskom towers collapse due to theft, vandalism

Six Eskom towers collapse due to theft, vandalism

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The cost of repairing the towers is expected to be over R20 million.

A technician works on an electricity pylon.

THEFT and vandalism of pylons, stay wires and conductors have been blamed on the collapse of six Eskom towers outside Welkom in the Free State.

The cost of repairing those towers was expected to be over R20 million.

This was revealed by Miranda Moahlodi, senior manager for occupational health and safety at Eskom, during a public safety campaign that focuses on educating people across the country about the impact of theft and vandalism on the power utility’s towers.

She said “criminal behaviour” also put additional pressure on Eskom’s already strained resources, which could have been used elsewhere, especially given the many storms experienced across the country recently.

Moahlodi said if any of the steel components of an electricity tower or pylon were removed, the tower would be compromised in terms of strength and support.

“So in the case of bad weather conditions such as strong winds or storms, these weakened towers could collapse – and often the one tower could then pull down a few more towers with it as they are connected by the high-voltage lines.

’’Once the towers have collapsed, the live high-voltage lines (carrying thousands of volts) could kill any person or animal coming into contact with them.

“These lines usually serve towns, and if one tower collapses, the nearby towns, businesses and mines will all be without power,” she said.

Moahlodi added that the cost of replacing fallen electricity towers was huge.

Rebuilding a fallen tower, she said, ranged between R3 million to R4m, while the cost of replacing the stolen steel from towers could range between R40 000 and R200 000 per tower.

“This is money that Eskom does not budget for, which means that it could have rather been used for strengthening of the electricity networks in areas where that is needed.”

Eskom has also identified illegal sand mining as an activity that impacts on high- and medium-voltage towers.

According to Moahlodi, during a ground inspection in September, the Eskom patrol team discovered the stay wire anchor on a tower on the Arnot-Maputo 400kV line was exposed due to illegal commercial sand-mining activities around the base of the stay wire that keeps the tower upright.

“Sand had been excavated deeply around the base of the stay wire of the tower, hence an emergency was declared because the tower could imminently collapse if the foundation was subjected to moderate storms or windy conditions.

“These deplorable acts of theft and vandalism are strongly condemned and should be reported to the local Eskom offices or police immediately,” Moahlodi concluded.

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