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Publish Date: Thu, 29 Jan 2026, 17:51 PM

JOHANNESBURG, Jan 29 (Reuters) - South African state-owned power utility Eskom has raised its salary increase offer to trade unions to 5.5% from the 3.5% it proposed last year, a document seen by Reuters showed, though it remains well below what unions are demanding.
Eskom has been a long-term drag on Africa's biggest economy through its electricity cuts and financial woes. But a sharp improvement in the performance of its coal-fired power stations has allowed it to stop implementing nationwide blackouts. It reported its first full-year profit in eight years last financial year.
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The revised wage offer was presented to the three major unions it negotiates with over salaries this week in a second round of pay talks.
Eskom proposed that the 5.5% pay increase come into effect on July 1, the day after its current three-year wage deal expires, the document showed.
The offer includes adjustments to other benefits, such as housing.
An Eskom spokesperson confirmed the utility's latest salary offer was 5.5%.
Unions are seeking pay hikes of up to 15%, far above South Africa's annual inflation rate (ZACPIY=ECI) , opens new tab which stood at 3.6% in December and which the central bank thinks may have peaked.
A third round of wage negotiations is scheduled to take place in February, said Khangela Baloyi, energy sector coordinator for the National Union of Mineworkers.
Eskom's three-year agreement reached in 2023 saw non-managerial employees' salaries increase by 7% each year.
The former state monopoly still generates the bulk of South Africa's electricity and would like to agree another multi-year wage deal.
Unions have gone on strike during previous wage disputes, triggering power blackouts.
This time around the potential impact of a strike on Eskom's operations is harder to gauge as the recent improvement in its generation fleet means it has excess capacity.
https://www.reuters.com/business/world-at-work/south-africas-eskom-ups-wage-hike-offer-ongoing-union-talks-2026-01-29/