Two South Africa unions accept Eskom 7% wage offer, third union rejects it

Two of South Africa's major labour unions have accepted state power utility Eskom's 7% wage increase offer, while a third has rejected it and declared a deadlock, demanding a higher raise, union representatives said on Thursday.

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For several years, South Africa's state-owned power firm, Eskom, had operated in the red financially. / User Upload

Two of South Africa's major labour unions have accepted state power utility Eskom's 7% wage increase offer, while a third has rejected it and declared a deadlock, demanding a higher raise, union representatives said on Thursday.

Eskom began pay talks last year with the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (NUMSA) and Solidarity, with several rounds of negotiations continuing until this month.

The utility's final offer was a 7% pay increase in each of the three years under negotiation, effective from July 2026.

NUM energy sector coordinator Khangela Baloyi and Solidarity general secretary Gideon du Plessis said their members had accepted the offer.

Some members demand higher pay

"Our members gave us a mandate to accept Eskom's final offer. We will sign the agreement tomorrow," said du Plessis.

NUMSA members are demanding a bigger increase.

"Our members demand 8% in the first year," said NUMSA general secretary Irvin Jim. "We have declared a deadlock, we can end up in arbitration and accompanied by demonstrations."

An Eskom spokesperson said the company remained committed to the process, adding that "salary negotiations with our trade unions are at a critical stage."