City Power, Johannesburg Metropolitan Police Department (JMPD) and the South African Police Service (SAPS) at the Princess Crossing informal settlement in Roodepoort resulted in the removal of several loads of volatile electric wires used by residents to connect power illegally. Illegal electricity connections don’t only cost the City of Johannesburg millions of rands every year, but they also result in many people – mostly children – being electrocuted after coming into contact with live electricity wires. In the past financial year, 18 deaths linked to illegal power connections were reported. In the same period, City Power and national power utility Eskom lost a combined total of R3-billion in revenue to illegal connections. These illegal power connections also overload the system and cause power disruptions.
A six-hour joint operation byWhat else to read
Additional Reading?
Request Free CopyRelated Articles
Jun 5, 2024
World Environment Day 2024: Waste management the key to land restoration
June 5 is World Environment Day and this year’s theme is Land Restoration, Desertification & Drought Resilience. “These concerns are of the utmost importance to South Africa because the country is greatly susceptible to all three,” says Leon...
Dec 5, 2023
Geotech study by SRK for East London port rehabilitation
As part of the proposed rehabilitation of the century-old Quay Wall 3 at the Port of East London, SRK Consulting has completed a geotechnical investigation to assess ground conditions at the site. Brent Cock, principal engineering geologist at SRK...
Feb 5, 2024
Drought – never waste a good disaster
Over the past few weeks, many celebratory videos and photos have been shared of overflowing supply dams for the Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality (NMBM). Kirsten Kelly talks to Matthew Hills, an engineer at NMBM about avoiding dry taps, the...