
In Conversation With Cllr Chris Santana- DA Johannesburg Shadow MMC for Finance
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The Democratic Alliance (DA) in Johannesburg says it has agreed to support a proposed R3.8 billion loan for City Power after successfully pushing for tighter financial safeguards, stronger oversight mechanisms, and accountability measures tied to how the money will be spent.
The loan agreement, linked to German development bank KfW, is aimed at funding electricity infrastructure upgrades and stabilising parts of Johannesburg’s struggling power network amid growing pressure over outages, ageing infrastructure, vandalism, and service delivery failures.
According to the DA, the party initially raised concerns in Council that the original loan report lacked sufficient detail, accountability protections, and clear guarantees around how borrowed funds would be managed.
The DA says its pressure resulted in several amendments being introduced before it agreed to support the loan. These include restricting the funding to specific approved infrastructure projects, introducing additional monitoring and auditing systems, involving the German government and project coordinators in oversight processes, and freezing executive salary increases and bonuses at City Power for at least two years.
The development highlights the increasingly complicated dynamics within Johannesburg’s coalition politics, where opposition parties often use key votes to negotiate governance conditions and oversight measures.
The debate also comes at a time when residents continue expressing frustration over electricity outages, infrastructure decay, billing disputes, cable theft, illegal connections, and concerns over financial mismanagement within municipal entities.
Supporters of the loan argue Johannesburg urgently needs major infrastructure investment to prevent further collapse of the electricity network and improve long-term energy stability.
Critics, however, warn that taking on more debt carries risks — especially for a city already facing financial strain, governance instability, and service delivery challenges. Questions also remain around whether municipalities have the institutional capacity to effectively manage large-scale infrastructure funding without waste, corruption, or delays.
The issue raises broader discussions about accountability in local government, coalition politics, municipal debt, and whether South African cities can realistically rebuild infrastructure while balancing financial sustainability.
The loan agreement, linked to German development bank KfW, is aimed at funding electricity infrastructure upgrades and stabilising parts of Johannesburg’s struggling power network amid growing pressure over outages, ageing infrastructure, vandalism, and service delivery failures.
According to the DA, the party initially raised concerns in Council that the original loan report lacked sufficient detail, accountability protections, and clear guarantees around how borrowed funds would be managed.
The DA says its pressure resulted in several amendments being introduced before it agreed to support the loan. These include restricting the funding to specific approved infrastructure projects, introducing additional monitoring and auditing systems, involving the German government and project coordinators in oversight processes, and freezing executive salary increases and bonuses at City Power for at least two years.
The development highlights the increasingly complicated dynamics within Johannesburg’s coalition politics, where opposition parties often use key votes to negotiate governance conditions and oversight measures.
The debate also comes at a time when residents continue expressing frustration over electricity outages, infrastructure decay, billing disputes, cable theft, illegal connections, and concerns over financial mismanagement within municipal entities.
Supporters of the loan argue Johannesburg urgently needs major infrastructure investment to prevent further collapse of the electricity network and improve long-term energy stability.
Critics, however, warn that taking on more debt carries risks — especially for a city already facing financial strain, governance instability, and service delivery challenges. Questions also remain around whether municipalities have the institutional capacity to effectively manage large-scale infrastructure funding without waste, corruption, or delays.
The issue raises broader discussions about accountability in local government, coalition politics, municipal debt, and whether South African cities can realistically rebuild infrastructure while balancing financial sustainability.

