Book contents
- Reviews
- Duality by Design
- Duality by Design
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Duality by Design: The Global Race to Build Africa’s Infrastructure
- Part I Mitigating Institutional Voids by Design
- 2 Why the Lights Went Out: A Capability Perspective on the Unintended Consequences of Sector Reform Processes
- 3 When the Quest for Electricity Reform and the Need for Investment Collide: South Africa, 1998–2004
- 4 Institutional Enablers of Energy System Transition: Lessons from Solar Photovoltaic Electricity in Eight African Countries
- 5 Harnessing Africa’s Energy Resources through Regional Infrastructure Projects
- 6 Centralized vs. Decentralized Generation in Zambia: Meeting Electricity Demand in the Context of Climate Change
- 7 Delivering Healthcare Infrastructure and Services through Public–Private Partnerships: The Lesotho Case
- 8 Achieving Long-Term Financial Sustainability in African Infrastructure Projects
- 9 A Proactive Social Infrastructure Model for Future Mixed-Use Housing in Egypt
- 10 Collective Action under the Shadow of Contractual Governance: The Case of a Participatory Approach to Upgrade Cairo’s ‘Garbage Cities’
- Part II Exploiting Institutional Voids by Design
- Afterword
- Index
- References
2 - Why the Lights Went Out: A Capability Perspective on the Unintended Consequences of Sector Reform Processes
from Part I - Mitigating Institutional Voids by Design
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 November 2019
- Reviews
- Duality by Design
- Duality by Design
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Duality by Design: The Global Race to Build Africa’s Infrastructure
- Part I Mitigating Institutional Voids by Design
- 2 Why the Lights Went Out: A Capability Perspective on the Unintended Consequences of Sector Reform Processes
- 3 When the Quest for Electricity Reform and the Need for Investment Collide: South Africa, 1998–2004
- 4 Institutional Enablers of Energy System Transition: Lessons from Solar Photovoltaic Electricity in Eight African Countries
- 5 Harnessing Africa’s Energy Resources through Regional Infrastructure Projects
- 6 Centralized vs. Decentralized Generation in Zambia: Meeting Electricity Demand in the Context of Climate Change
- 7 Delivering Healthcare Infrastructure and Services through Public–Private Partnerships: The Lesotho Case
- 8 Achieving Long-Term Financial Sustainability in African Infrastructure Projects
- 9 A Proactive Social Infrastructure Model for Future Mixed-Use Housing in Egypt
- 10 Collective Action under the Shadow of Contractual Governance: The Case of a Participatory Approach to Upgrade Cairo’s ‘Garbage Cities’
- Part II Exploiting Institutional Voids by Design
- Afterword
- Index
- References
Summary
In this chapter we advance the argument that regulatory policies can have a far-reaching impact on the organizational capabilities and, ultimately, on the performance of public utilities. Once capabilities are lost, it may be hard to regain them in the short term. Our insights are based on a qualitative-comparative analysis of capability-losing processes at Eskom, South Africa’s national electric utility. South Africa experienced severe power outages between 2005 and 2008, which are commonly explained as having been caused by inadequate generation capacity, badly maintained power plants and insufficient coal supply. In this chapter, we go a step further and examine the underlying reasons at the organizational level. We show that a variety of new regulations led to a substantial loss of critical competences and skills at Eskom. This caused a deterioration of planning, operation and maintenance procedures, and made swift reactions to the crisis difficult. The ‘capability perspective’ presented in this chapter complements traditional theoretical explanations of utility and sector performance.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Duality by DesignThe Global Race to Build Africa's Infrastructure, pp. 33 - 68Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019