Chris Yelland: Back story to Mabuza resignation - and how to fix Eskom mess

Loading player...
When it comes to reporting in specialist areas, the best journalists are often those who have technical expertise in that sector. For instance, the late investigative journalist Barry Sergeant was a qualified advocate, skills which helped him negotiate the legal minefield that accompanies all serious challenges to the financially crooked. Similarly, mining journalism's doyens Lawrie Williams and late Adam Payne and David Gleason all spent years in hard hats and breathing in  the dust from underground. So when it comes to understanding the mess that is Eskom, our go-to guy is electrical engineer-turned-journalist Chris Yelland. In this fascinating interview on Rational Radio, Yelland applies his mind to the apparently shock resignation of the utility's chairman Jabu Mabuza - and issues which need addressing if the cynics who say SA is on the slide are to be proven wrong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
14 Jan 2020 11AM English South Africa Investing · Business News

Other recent episodes

DA’s Double-Duty Man

South Africa doesn't hear enough from politicians who do the unglamorous work of fixing the state. Jan de Villiers is one of them. The DA MP and chair of Parliament's Portfolio Committee on Public Service and Administration just drove through a landmark law that tightens the firewall between party politics…
17 Apr 8AM 38 min

Elon Musk vs BEE: The explosive debate that could change South Africa forever

From Elon Musk’s Pretoria beginnings to global dominance, this conversation dives into power, policy, and South Africa’s economic crossroads. Solidarity’s Dirk Hermann unpacks the growing backlash against BEE, arguing it stifles jobs, fuels elite enrichment, and deters investment. With pressure mounting from markets, citizens, and international players, is reform inevitable?…
17 Apr 7AM 41 min

South Africa’s wildlife heartland under siege from illegal mining syndicates

Heavily armed illegal mining syndicates are no longer just a problem for abandoned shafts and remote communities. In this interview, De Wet du Toit of the Blyde River Task Force tells BizNews how zama-zama operations linked to foreign criminal networks are threatening South Africa’s water systems, tourism economy and wildlife…
16 Apr 7AM 22 min