Integrated results for the year ended 31 March 2016 Cover slide (same as IR cover) 5 July 2016 This presentation is available at www.eskom.co.za/IR2016 Contents Overview of Financial Operating Conclusion the year review performance Throughout this presentation, year end refers to 31 March 2016, while period or year refers to the year ended 31 March 2016 and comparative period or prior year to the year ended 31 March 2015 1 Overview of the year Key highlights for the year Financial performance • EBITDA of R32 billion, representing an increase of 37.4% • Cost savings of R17.5 billion achieved against a target of R13.4 billion, including reduced OCGT usage • Received R23 billion equity from shareholder • Cash generated from operating activities increased by 36.4% to R37.2 billion • Liquid assets of R38.7 billion at 31 March 2016, an increase of 123% • 57% of funding for 2016/17 has been secured 3 Key highlights for the year (continued) Operational performance • No load shedding for almost 11 months to July 2016 • Generation plant performance improved in the second half of the year, with the EAF of 78% for quarter 1 of 2016/17 • Medupi Unit 6 in commercial operation on 23 August 2015, adding 720 MW generation capacity • Ingula Unit 4 in commercial operation on 10 June 2016, adding 333MW peaking capacity • Ingula Units 3, 4, 2 and 1 synchronised to the grid on 3 March, 25 March, 21 May and 16 June 2016 respectively • Excellent Transmission network performance • 345.8km of lines installed and 2 435MVA transformers commissioned for Transmission 4 Key highlights for the year (continued) Socio-economic performance • 158 016 additional households were electrified • Procurement from B-BBEE compliant suppliers was 82%, exceeding the target of 80% • Procurement from black women-owned suppliers was 19%, exceeding the target of 12% 5 Financial review Improved financial performance Financial performance Key financial ratios Interest cover ratio Debt service cover Revenue R163bn EBITDA R32bn 0.55 ratio 1.07 (10.6%) (37.4%) (2014/15: 0.27) (2014/15: 0.92) BPP savings Debt / equity Gross debt / Net profit R4.6bn R17.5bn 1.67 EBITDA ratio 11.4 (2014/15: R0.2bn) (target R13.4bn) (2014/15: 2.53) (2014/15: 16.1) • Increased EBITDA due to: o Increased revenue o Cost containment • Improved liquidity position, as a result of: o Equity injection of R23 billion o Cash generated from operating activities of R37.2 billion (2014/15: R27.3 billion) 7 Income statement for year ended 31 March 2016 YoY % R million 2016 2015 change Revenue 163 395 147 691 11 Other income 2 390 4 444 (46) Primary energy (84 728) (83 425) (2) Net employee benefit expense (29 257) (25 912) (13) Net impairment loss (1 170) (3 766) 69 Other expenses (18 663) (15 771) (18) Profit before depreciation and amortisation and net fair value loss (EBITDA) 31 967 23 261 37 Depreciation and amortisation expense (16 531) (14 115) (17) Net fair value loss on financial instruments and embedded derivatives (455) (2 807) 84 Net finance cost (7 919) (6 109) (30) Share of profit of equity-accounted investees, net of tax 43 49 (12) Profit before tax 7 105 279 >100 Income tax (2 488) (37) (>100) Net profit for the year 4 617 242 >100 Loss for the period from discontinued operations – (42) ~ Profit for the year 4 617 200 >100 1. Figures refer to the group’s results, which have been audited by the independent auditors, SizweNtsalubaGobodo Inc. 2. Figures for 2014/15 were restated. 8 Overall electricity sales volumes • International sales volume growth Electricity volumes % growth/(decline) & contribution of 12.2% due Eskom having surplus -10% -5% 0% 5% 10% 15% Contribution Redistributors capacity (1.6%) 41.8% Residential 2.9% 5.6% • Increase in commercial (5.2%), Commercial 5.2% 4.7% Industrial (6.2%) agriculture (6.1%), mining (2.1%) 23.4% Mining 2.1% 14.3% and residential (2.9%) sales volumes Agriculture 6.1% 2.7% Rail (7.9%) • Decline in municipalities (1.6%), rail 1.2% International 12.2% 6.3% (7.9%) and industrial (6.2%) sales Total (0.8%) volumes Coal production vs demand • Overall electricity sales volumes GWh declined by 0.8% 18 500 Total demand Shortfall Available production 18 000 17 500 17 000 16 500 16 000 15 500 15 000 Dec-15 Jun-15 Jan-16 Apr-15 May-15 Apr-16 May-16 Jun-16 Nov-15 Feb-16 Mar-16 Jul-15 Aug-15 Sep-15 Oct-15 9 Primary energy costs analysed – 2% YoY increase only 2015/16 Primary energy cost analysis Year-on-year analysis R billion % of cost % of production 18% 4% R83.4 4% 4% 4% R6.0 4% (R9.5) 4% 78% (R0.9) 92% 92% 78% – 2014/15 Primary energy cost analysis % of cost % of production R5.7 12% 3% 4% 4% R0.3 4% 4% (R0.2) 4% R84.7 84% 92% 78% 93% Eskom generation International purchases Independent power producers 10 Financial position strengthened 31 March 31 March YoY % R million 2016 2015 1 change PPE and intangible assets 521 174 458 881 14 Working capital 43 615 35 488 23 Liquid assets 38 680 17 359 123 Other assets 57 216 46 217 12 Total assets 660 685 557 945 17 Equity 180 563 117 164 48 Debt securities and borrowings 322 658 297 434 8 Working capital 52 360 44 063 19 Other liabilities 105 104 99 284 6 Total equity and liabilities 660 685 557 945 17 • Equity improved with R23 billion equity by shareholder and conversion of R60 billion subordinated loan • Liquid assets increased by 123% to R38.7 billion 1. Figures for 2014/15 were restated. 11 Arrear debt and debtors ageing • Payment agreements have been signed with 60 municipalities, including 19 of the top 20 • Arrear debt by municipalities, including interest, increased from R5 billion to R6 billion • Average Soweto collection level improved from 16% to 18% • 17 527 post-paid meters were converted to pre-paid meters in Soweto • 5 992 smart meters were installed in Midrand and Sandton, and will be converted to prepaid meters Within < 60 days > 60 days Electricity debtors age analysis, R million Total due date overdue overdue Large power users, excluding municipalities 6 913 6 250 246 417 Large power users, municipalities (including interest) 11 325 5 320 932 5 073 Small power users 2 576 1 465 178 933 Soweto (excluding interest) 4 746 189 179 4 378 Other customers 1 534 846 680 8 Total at 31 March 2016 27 094 14 070 2 215 10 809 % of total 100% 52% 8% 40% 2016 2015 Average debtors days (all categories) 30.35 32.29 12 57% of funding for 2016/17 secured R billion 2015/16 2016/17 Domestic bond private placement 10.0 10.0 Signed DFIs 10.9 19.8 Signed ECAs 4.7 7.1 Swap restructuring 6.2 1.8 Government equity 23.0 – MIGA loan 7.6 – Sub-total funding secured 62.4 38.7 Structured products – 3.2 New DFIs – 13.6 Domestic bonds 8.2 7.0 Commercial paper 6.3 6.0 Total funding 76.9 68.5 ccc+ b3 B- 13 Operating performance Improved Generation operating performance • EAF improved in the last quarter of 2015/16 Monthly plant availability (EAF) • Significant improvement in EAF of 78.6% for 85% 80% the first quarter of 2016/17 75% • Unplanned breakdowns reduced from 70% 15.2% in 2014/15 to 14.9% in 2015/16, with 65% planned maintenance increasing from 9.9% 60% Dec-15 May-15 Jan-16 May-16 Jun-16 Jun-15 Apr-15 Apr-16 Sep-15 Nov-15 Jul-15 Feb-16 Mar-16 Aug-15 Oct-15 in 2014/15 to 13.0% in 2015/16 • Reduced reliance on OCGTs, with the Month Year-to-date load factor in the last quarter well below 6% Planned maintenance, % • A total of 13.6Mt coal transported by rail, which is 1Mt more than 2014/15 14% 12% • Since inception, a total of 3 392MW of IPPs 10% connected to the grid, with 2 145MW of 8% renewables 6% • As a result of the above, no load shedding 4% 2% for almost 11 months to July 2016 0% 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 15 Continued improvement in network performance System minutes lost for events < 1 minute • Transmission achieved a best ever Minutes reported performance for system minutes 5.0 lost <1 of 2.41 (2014/15: 2.85) 4.0 • Only 1 major incident occurred 3.0 2.0 • Distribution network performance (SAIFI and SAIDI) within acceptable limits 1.0 0.0 • Demand savings of 215MW achieved 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 • One environmental contravention SAIFI / SAIDI performance occurred 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 SAIFI SAIDI 16 We remain focused on bringing new capacity online Megawatts MW of capacity 100 794 261 120 535 - 7 031 5 221 Transmission km lines 346 319 811 787 631 6 162 3 268 Substations MVAs 2 435 2 090 3 790 3 580 32 090 2 525 17 670 Inception to Mar- Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Mar-15 Mar-16 Total to date 11 17 Progress on the new build programme • Medupi Unit 6 in commercial operation on 23 August 2015, adding 720 MW to South Africa’s electricity grid. The unit achieved EAF of 97.8% for June 2016 • Medupi Unit 5 is on track for commercial operation in the first half of 2018 • Ingula Unit 4 in commercial operation on 10 June 2016, adding 333 MW to peaking capacity. In respect of the other units, one unit expected to be operational during the 2016/17 financial year and two units during the 2017/18 financial year, based on the approved schedule • All the Ingula units synchronised to the national grid ahead of schedule, on 3 March (Unit 3), 25 March (Unit 4), 21 May (Unit 2) and 16 June 2016 (Unit 1) • Kusile Power Station continues to achieve set milestones on the path for Unit 1 commercial operation in the second half of 2018 • Conversion of the Gourikwa and Ankerlig OCGTs to dual fuel expected to be completed in 2017 • Transmission lines (346km) installed and substation capacity (2 435MVA) commissioned to support network strengthening, new Generation capacity and IPPs 18 Other key operational performance Environment and safety • LTIR improved from 0.36 in 2014/15 to 0.29 in 2015/16 • Employee and contractor fatalities increased: 4 employees (2014/15: 3) and 13 contractors (2014/15: 7) • Relative particulate emissions improved slightly to 0.36kg/MWh sent out (2014/15: 0.37) • Specific water consumption increased to 1.44l/kWh (2014/15: 1.38) Equipment theft • Crime decreased by 28% in value compared to the prior year • High-value crime was targeted and success was achieved with 229 arrests 19 Other key operational performance (continued) Socio-economic • Committed corporate social investment spent of R103.6 million (2014/15: R115.5 million) for the year, exceeding budget with 5.1%, benefitting 302 736 beneficiaries (2014/15: 323 882) • Procurement from B-BBEE compliant suppliers as a percentage of procurement was 81.7%, exceeding the target of 80% • Procurement from black women-owned (BWO) suppliers as a percentage of procurement was19.3%, exceeding the target of 12% • Total of 158 016 households (2014/15: 159 853) were electrified during the year, with almost 90% of all households electrified 20 Other key operational performance (continued) Human resource performance • Staff complement increased to 47 978 (2014/15: 46 490) mainly due to employment of 1 370 learner artisans to strengthen pipeline • 2.73% of employees are people with disabilities • Racial equity in senior management of 61.1% and in professional and middle management of 71.7% • Gender equity in senior management of 28.1% and in professional and middle management of 35.1% • The Eskom Women Advancement Programme will accelerate the development of female employees in the professional and middle management levels, to create a pipeline for senior management vacancies 21 Conclusion Conclusion • Eskom is on a firm financial and operational footing: o Improved financial performance with healthy liquidity position o Generation performance has been stabilised, with continued improvement expected o No load shedding is anticipated o New build programme on target to meet delivery dates Eskom is well placed to deliver on our journey towards excess capacity 23 Download our “Eskom results” app for tablets from the Apple and Android app stores Insert image here Insert image here Thank you This presentation is available at www.eskom.co.za/IR2016