Close Menu
CovMediaCovMedia
    What's Hot

    Adobe’s Figma Acquisition Failure: How European Regulators Killed the Biggest Software Deal of the Decade

    July 17, 2026

    Michael Jordan’s Charlotte Hornets Sale: Breaking Down the $3 Billion Profit of the Greatest Athlete Investor

    July 17, 2026

    The Space Debris Cleanup Industry: The Multibillion-Dollar Market for Protecting Satellites in Low Earth Orbit

    July 17, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter)
    CovMediaCovMedia
    • Home
    • Trending
    • Banking
    • Economy
    • FinTech
    • Game
    • Investments
    • Markets
    • Tech
    CovMediaCovMedia
    Home » South Africa’s Grid Failure: The Billions Lost to Persistent Power Outages and the Impact on Global Platinum Prices
    Economy

    South Africa’s Grid Failure: The Billions Lost to Persistent Power Outages and the Impact on Global Platinum Prices

    Sam AllcockBy Sam AllcockJuly 17, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email
    South Africa’s Grid Failure, The Billions Lost to Persistent Power Outages and the Impact on Global Platinum Prices
    South Africa’s Grid Failure, The Billions Lost to Persistent Power Outages and the Impact on Global Platinum Prices
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit WhatsApp Email

    Approximately 72% of the world’s platinum is produced in South Africa. When planning an investment or purchasing a car, most people don’t consider that. However, that figure is crucial inside the nation’s mining belt, where electricity powers hoisting, ventilation, and pumping machinery in deep shafts hundreds of meters below the surface. Additionally, the electricity has been unreliable for years.

    The grid failure in South Africa is not a tale of abrupt collapse. The slow unraveling began long before most commodity analysts or investors became aware of it. Eskom’s own analysts predicted in 1998 that if nothing was done, the nation’s power supplies would run out by 2007. There was no action taken. And the blackouts started in 2007.

    Decades of poor management were then added to deteriorating infrastructure. In the 2020s, power plants that were put into service in the 1970s and 1980s—many of which were built with a 30-year lifespan—were still operating and experiencing more malfunctions than they were producing. Eskom, the utility bearing this burden, received government bailouts totaling more than 270 billion rand, accrued debt exceeding 400 billion rand, and was still unable to keep the lights on. It is difficult to comprehend the scope of that financial failure. This isn’t a rounding error. It’s an operational issue masquerading as a structural collapse.

    Loadshedding has been a difficult experience for regular South Africans. The outages lasted up to 11 hours every day at their worst, Stage 6, which was reached in 2023. Generators were used by businesses. Backup systems in hospitals were strained. Retailers observed the spoiling of refrigerated goods. Ten years of load shedding caused an estimated 338 billion rand in economic damage, according to estimates from the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research. The economic cost was estimated to be between 60 and 120 billion rand in 2019 alone. These figures are not abstract. They stand for small businesses that failed, factories that operated at half capacity, and an investment environment that subtly became antagonistic.

    This story extends beyond the boundaries of South Africa through the platinum angle. By its very nature, mining uses a lot of electricity for processing, water pumping, ore hoisting, and ventilation shafts. It becomes challenging to defend underground mining solely on the basis of safety at Stage 6 load shedding. Without dependable power to sustain the environment, miners cannot go underground. This is not a problem for operations. That’s a stop to production. Additionally, the global supply curve changes when a nation that produces almost three-quarters of the world’s platinum begins to regularly halt production.

    The precise amount of platinum production lost over the last ten years due to blackout-related disruptions is still unknown. Mining firms have been hesitant to release detailed data, in part due to competitive concerns and in part because it is genuinely difficult to distinguish between losses caused by load shedding and other operational difficulties. However, it’s easy to read the overall trajectory. South Africa’s PGM output has been under constant pressure, but global demand has been shifting in the opposite direction due to growing hydrogen fuel cell technology and stricter internal combustion engine emissions regulations.

    South Africa’s Grid Failure, The Billions Lost to Persistent Power Outages and the Impact on Global Platinum Prices
    South Africa’s Grid Failure, The Billions Lost to Persistent Power Outages and the Impact on Global Platinum Prices

    A tentative improvement is worth praising. South Africa has not experienced load shedding since May 2025. With private homes and businesses investing an estimated 75 to 80 billion rand in solar systems producing more than 5 gigawatts of capacity, rooftop solar adoption has increased dramatically in recent years. It’s a significant addition. In a sense, it’s also a silent indictment of a nation’s citizens creating a parallel power structure because they couldn’t trust the official one.

    The structural vulnerabilities remain unresolved, which is the deeper issue. The fleet of coal is getting older. The procurement of new renewable energy has been sluggish. Additionally, the political will to make difficult choices regarding the energy transition has frequently faltered, leaving investors who might otherwise support new generation capacity uncertain due to ministerial disputes and policy reversals.

    It’s difficult to shake the impression that the platinum market’s relative calm on this front won’t last forever as you watch this situation develop over time. The supply implications for platinum, palladium, and rhodium would quickly spread if load shedding resumes at scale, and history indicates that ignoring that risk is foolish. Risk is typically priced in commodity markets only after the disruption becomes apparent. The adjustment is rarely gentle by that point.

    Global Platinum Prices
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleThe Corporate Concert Sponsorship Boom: Why American Express and Citibank Are Buying Up Live Entertainment
    Next Article The Spotify Royalty Model Shakeup: Why Independent Artists Are Losing Millions to the Algorithm
    Sam Allcock
    • Website
    • X (Twitter)
    • LinkedIn

    Related Posts

    The Space Debris Cleanup Industry: The Multibillion-Dollar Market for Protecting Satellites in Low Earth Orbit

    July 17, 2026

    The Mexican Peso Surge: How “Nearshoring” Turned the Latin American Currency Into a Global Powerhouse

    July 17, 2026

    The Washington D.C. Defense Boom: How the Return of Great Power Competition is Minting New Aerospace Billionaires

    July 17, 2026

    Comments are closed.

    Top Posts

    How to Get Cricfy TV Download for Smart TV Apps Without the Play Store

    April 20, 202517,710 Views

    Jay Kay Net Worth, Inside the $70 Million Life of the Funk Icon with 22 Cars and a Buckinghamshire Mansion

    July 11, 2025501 Views

    Rory McPhee Net Worth Revealed – Mel B’s Husband Is Secretly a Millionaire!

    July 31, 2025488 Views

    Character AI No Filter: The Secret Trick That’s Changing AI Conversations Forever

    April 16, 2025404 Views
    Don't Miss
    FinTech

    Adobe’s Figma Acquisition Failure: How European Regulators Killed the Biggest Software Deal of the Decade

    By Sam AllcockJuly 17, 2026

    Adobe’s stock dropped 17% on the day it revealed it was purchasing Figma for about…

    Michael Jordan’s Charlotte Hornets Sale: Breaking Down the $3 Billion Profit of the Greatest Athlete Investor

    July 17, 2026

    The Space Debris Cleanup Industry: The Multibillion-Dollar Market for Protecting Satellites in Low Earth Orbit

    July 17, 2026

    The Mexican Peso Surge: How “Nearshoring” Turned the Latin American Currency Into a Global Powerhouse

    July 17, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    Our Picks
    About Us
    About Us

    Stay informed with CovMedia's latest business and finance updates. For queries, contact editor@covmedia.co.uk. Empowering you with accurate insights and news.

    Our Picks

    Adobe’s Figma Acquisition Failure: How European Regulators Killed the Biggest Software Deal of the Decade

    July 17, 2026

    Michael Jordan’s Charlotte Hornets Sale: Breaking Down the $3 Billion Profit of the Greatest Athlete Investor

    July 17, 2026

    The Space Debris Cleanup Industry: The Multibillion-Dollar Market for Protecting Satellites in Low Earth Orbit

    July 17, 2026
    Most Popular

    Steve Clarke Salary Scotland: Was He Worth Every Penny the SFA Paid?

    July 14, 20264 Views

    The Swiss Banking Consolidation: What the UBS and Credit Suisse Merger Means for the Future of Hidden Wealth

    July 14, 20264 Views

    Keir Starmer’s Financial Disclosures: What the UK Prime Minister’s Net Worth Reveals About Modern British Politics

    July 16, 20264 Views
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.