Category: Energy

  • Egbin to invest in Katsina, others 

    In line with the Federal Government’s decision to boost power supply via generating 33,000 gigawatts (Gwh) of electricity through renewable energy sources, Egbin Power Company is planning to explore opportunities in renewable energy sources in Katsina, Adamawa, Borno  and other states in the Northeastern and Northcentral parts of the country.

    The company’s Chairman, Mr Kola Adesina, who made this known during a stakeholders’ forum in Lagos, said the decision to invest in renewable energy in those states was borne out of the desire to help Nigeria’s improve its electricity generation and distribution capacity.

    He said: ‘’We would be building renewable energy plants in Adamawa, Katsina, Borno and other states, in line with our goals to improve power supply in the country. The renewable energy initiative would help in providing electricity to some sections of the populace that do not have access to grid electricity transmission. Our vision is to electrify Nigeria, and we have been nominated on the Committee that is charged with the responsibility of Lightening Up Lagos.”

    He explained that infrastructure has been a major problem in the sector, arguing that failure of the operators to get the requited equipment for power generation and distribution is affecting growth of the industry.

    Adesina said his firm would establish power industrial park, through which stakeholders in the value chain would be getting materials needed for production.

    According to him, the industrial park would be similar to the parks, which the Federal Government, has approved for the oil and gas sector.

    ‘’Our plan is to build industrial power for the electricity sector, as soon as we overcome our challenges. The park would help in fast-tracking the growth of the sector, by increasing the electricity generation and distribution output” he added.

    He said power is one of the three critical sectors that should be developed to move the economic forward, urging the Federal Government to help grow the industry.

    Adesina explained that the sector, especially the operators are grappling with huge debts, arguing that the issue has not allowed them to produce the desired growth.

    He appealed to the government to help Egbin Power Company, recover debts in the course of running its plant.

    The foreign exchange market, he said, is unfavourable, in view of the fact that the value of the naira has fallen drastically.

    He noted that, naira which was exchanged for N159 to a dollar few years ago, when investors were buying the assets of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN), now sell for N197 per dollar at the official market.

    This, he said, made operators to spend more on importation of raw materials, with its undesirable consequences on the industry.

    It would be recalled that the Federal Government adopted the Renewable Energy Target(RET) scheme few years. The scheme, adopted from Australia, was to assist Nigeria to optimally maximise its renewable energy sources. The government had broken the scheme into two namely the Small-scale Renewable Energy Target and the Large-scale Renewable Energy Target in order to allow businesses and individuals invest in the off-grid transmission in order to increase power supply in the country.

  • Firm unveils power equipment

    A firm, Mantrac Nigeria Limited, said it would provide a ‘Smarter Energy Solution’ to help improve power supply in the country.

    The company, which is the only organisation that has the franchise to distribute caterpillar products in Nigeria, said the solution is driven by gas.

    The Managing Director, Edmund Martin Lawson, who made this known during a seminar in Lagos, said the solution uses gas, adding that institutions and individuals, who can afford the equipment can use it generate electricity.

    He said Stanbic IBTC Plc has promised to finance the acquisition of the equipment through the CAT Financial Service.

    He said: “The engines will help in bringing power closer to the communities. The country is facing problems in the areas of generation, distribution and transmission of electricity. When the solution or technology is well deployed, there would be power in areas where it is used.’’

    He said industries would operate optimally once power is improved, adding that employment opportunities would be created in the process.

    He said: ‘’Given the fact that the economy has grown in the past at an average of six percent per annum without adequate power, coupled with the fact that Nigerian economy has been ranked first in Africa one can imagine what the country would do, if the power is stable.’’

    Martin-Lawson said the country is battling huge volume of untreated gas, stressing that if such gas is well channeled to where it can be used to provide electricity, the economy would be better.

    “If you use the gas well, you will be able to reduce the cost of power, power need is going into the next level and we should be able to assist as many as are willing to kick start the operation and the ones that are already in operation; we want to give them the support to achieve their objectives.

    “As of today, we do diesel but there is no argument that gas is the cheapest source of power. We cannot compare what we spend on gas to what we spend on diesel. Gas is lighter, it is environmentally friendly; it reduces pollution and emission; it is cleaner.’’ That is the closest to green energy.

  • Invest in gas infrastructure, expert tells operators

    The 678-kilometre West African Gas Pipeline (WAGP) can transform the region into an investment hub, if stakeholders invest in gas infrastructure, Head, Energy and Power, Ecobank Plc, Mrs Olufunke Jones has said.

    She said the pipeline, which cuts across Nigeria, Ghana and other countries in the sub-region, can transform the economic landscape.

    Speaking during a stakeholders’ forum on Wednesday, last week in Lagos, Mrs Jones urged operators to assemble and transport gas molecules to where they are required for socio-economic growth.

    She said operators would benefit if there is increased investment in gas infrastructure.

    Mrs Jones said: ‘’The challenge we are facing in the power sector is not that of turbines, but that of aggregating the gas potentials for growth. Stakeholders should try and increase investment in gas infrastructure. Once they are able to do this, access to gas by users across the broad spectrum of oil and gas industry, would not be a problem. Besides, the price of gas is going to be competitive and the better for players in the industry.’’

    She urged operators to look for ways to access funds, and invest in critical components of the oil and gas sector.

    Mrs Jones said debts would reduce once the power distribution companies (DisCos) adopt what she described as ‘’Strategic Debt Collection Method.’’

    ‘’What I mean by strategic collection is that the DisCos should strategise on how to increase revenue collections from 60 to 65 per cent; 67 to 70 per cent; and thereafter move to 80 per cent or 100 per cent. This is possible if stakeholders can do the needful by increasing, investment in the gas industry,’’ she added.

  • Fed Govt to roll out growth plans for power, says BPE

    Fed Govt to roll out growth plans for power, says BPE

    The Federal Government has put in place modalities to drive the power sector for growth, just as it has driven the telecommunication industry for better performance, the Director- General, Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE),Benjamin Dikki has said.

    The modalities, according to him, include making the bodies such as the Ministry of Power and the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) to provide stronger regulatory frameworks that would help in developing the sector and the introduction of a competitive environment for operators, among other initiatives.

    Speaking in Lagos at a stakeholders’ meeting, Dikki said the need to make the power sector more competitive and vibrant is imperative for the growth of the economy.

    The meeting, which has the Minister of Power, works and housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola, the Chief Executive Officers of Eko ElectricityDistribution Company(EKEDC),Oladele Amoda, Ikeja Electric, Mr Abiodun Ajifowobaje, and other stakeholders, was at the instance of the management of Egbin Power Company Plc.

    He said once the regulators nurture power sector for growth, there would be stability in the electricity supply and the economy will get better.

    He said: ‘’ Power sector will work because the telecom industry works.  The telecom sector works because the regulators were allowed to nurture investments in that area.  I believe the regulators would nurture investments in the electricity industry for growth, given a conducive environment.  Investments would not only engender competition, but would make the operators fare better. Once there is competition in the energy sector, prices of products and services would come down and the better for consumers.’’

    Dikki said problems such as revenue shortfalls, inability of power firms to garner enough capital for operation and others,  are hindering the growth of the sector, urging operators to drive investments to generate revenue for growth.

    According to him, privatisation has opened a new phase in the nation’s power sector, because private operators are now saddled with the responsibility of running the industry.

    On industry’s performance, Dikki said some of the new investors in the sector have tried to improve electricity generation and distribution.

    Citing Egbin Power Plant, the BPE’s DG said the plant, which was owned by the Sahara Energy Group, has relatively improved power generation.

    ‘’Egbin Power Company should be commended for being a flagship of what privatisation is.  The reason is because its management has been able to increase electricity megawatts (Mw) 400 to over 1,000 megawatts of electricity.  This growth needs to be sustained for the benefits of consumers,’’ he added.

    Also, the Chief Executive officer, Egbin Power Company, Mr Dallas Peavey, said the firm has overhauled its operation to ensure growth, adding that the turbines are nearing full capacity.

    He said the firm has six turbines, adding that the turbines are returning to their installed capacity of 1,320 megawatts of electricity soon.

    Peavey said efforts are on-going to make the six turbines produce optimally, stressing that the development would help in improving power supply in the country.

  • Crude oil price ‘ll rebound March 2016, don predicts

    Crude oil price ‘ll rebound March 2016, don predicts

    Oil price will rebound in March 2016, after falling for more than two years with resultant effects on Nigeria and other oil producing nations, a professor of Petroleum Resources and Policy Research, Prof Wunmi Iledare has said.

    He said the downturn in the global market would ease in the first quarter of next year, once the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is able to control oil supply from the Middle East, among other initiatives that are being carried out to increase the international prices of crude oil.

    What is happening to Nigeria and other oil producing countries, he said,  is not about oil price alone, but about what he described as market edge.

    He said: ‘’It is one thing to produce oil and it is another thing to sell the oil and earn good revenue. There is no doubt that the country will further experience cash crunch till March 2016, when the turnaround in the market is expected.’’

    He said Nigeria should further expect cash crunch, as the oil price may not rally up until March 2016,  arguing that the country would benefit when the price of crude rebounds.

    He said the Federal Government’s decision  to benchmark its 2016 budget at $38 per barrel, is in tandem with the realties in the global oil market where the price of oil has fallen to $35 per barrel.

    Iledare, who is the President of International Association of International Energy Economics (IAEE), Nigerian chapter, said with the price of oil falling to $50 a barrel in mid 2014,  $47 a barrel in May 2009 and now $35 a barrel, the Federal Government has no option than to further expect cash crunch.

    According to him, the government should be thinking of how to diversify its revenue base if it wants its fiscal programme vis-a-vis budget to be sustainable.

    ‘’ In the milieu, the government should be thinking of another means of funding its budget in the years ahead.  Price volatilities and instability in crude oil production are some of the major features of the market, and these directly or indirectly are affecting Nigeria, being an oil dependent nation. What Nigeria has got to do is to look for ways of turning oil and gas to finish products to up its revenue, among considering other measures that would have positive impacts on the economy,” he added.

    It would be recalled that the slump in the global price of crude oil dated back to 2012, when Brent crude rose to as high as $111.26 a barrel, up from $61 a barrel in 2009. Since then,  the market has been witnessing a general slump in the prices of crude oil, a development that has affected exploration and production activities in Nigeria, whose oil is the main stay of its economy.

  • Getting graduates into oil, gas industry

    Getting graduates into oil, gas industry

    Many graduates with requisite skills are finding it difficult to get jobs in the oil and gas industry. The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and others have a role to play to solve this problem, Gbubemi Peter Agbowu writes.

    Nigeria is a petroleum rich country, and an oil and gas producing member of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) since 1969. The advent of oil production turned Nigeria from a multi-sectoral economy to a mono-economy, with oil and gas providing about 95 per cent of export earnings and 70 per cent of government revenue.

    This is an obvious negative economic trend, known as the ‘Dutch Disease”. Pundits have agreed that for the country to attain its true growth potential, it must rekindle other sectors of the economy; sectors for which it ironically had comparative advantages before petroleum.

    One effect of our mono-economy is its inability to accommodate the ever growing population, majority of which are youths.

    The age structure of the populace is as follows: 0-14 years account for 43.2 per cent, 15-24 years account for 19.3 per cent, while 25-54 years age group accounts for 30.5 per cent of our population.

    This results in a youth dependency ratio of 84 per cent (CIA World Fact Book). These numbers vividly show Nigeria’s massive current and future youth population.

    Of this youth cross-section, 50 per cent are unemployed, with graduates of tertiary institutions making about 20 per cent, and often remain unemployed for upwards of five years after graduation (NISER 2013).

    With the current high  rate of youth unemployment  among university graduates, coupled with the fact that petroleum still remain our mainstay, serious efforts should be made  to get graduate  youths employed in the sector.

    In Europe, since the 2008 financial crisis, there has been an increase in youth unemployment, although varied among its different countries.

    One unifying trend, based on research and experience, is that young people who do not get attached to the labour market at an early stage upon graduation, risk being permanently excluded from the job market.

    Such exclusion could have severe consequences not only on the personal level, but also for the long term social and financial sustainability of the country. Nigeria currently faces this dilemma, with a staggering number of its youths plagued with unemployment.

    Furthermore, its university graduates are faced with the usual trend of never being able to find employment, years after graduation. The burning questions are: how do we get these able bodied, qualified individuals into the workforce?

    How do we get a graduate employed in the oil and gas industry; the mainstay of the economy? How can these graduates be ushered from school leaver status to employment?

    The answer lies in Federal  Government’s ability to initiate and execute policies that would stimulate opportunities and assimilation of qualified graduates into the oil and gas sector.

    Nigerian Petroleum Exchange (NIPEx) oversees both the e-marketplace and the Joint Qualification System (JQS) for electronic procurement, contracting and registration of contractors/service providers respectively.

    This has been a welcomed development by Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) since its inception, and has helped to ensure transparency in the contracting process and reduction in the contract approval cycle in the oil and gas industry.

    A  recommendation is to use the NIPEx process to aid the transition of graduates into the oil and gas workplace. This can be achieved by enabling a process where graduates with outstanding results in oil and gas-related degrees are able to register their details into the Nipex portal.

    The system would require validation and attestation of the credentials of these recent graduates. The portal would maintain a high level of “graduate pool”, and will be organised according to their various disciplines.

    When there are Invitation to Tenders (ITTs) issued by the oil and gas companies for various projects, via the portal; depending on the scope of work, most call to tenders require each prequalified bidder to submit its man-power and staffing plan, complete with CV’s, showing the bidding company’s ability to successfully execute the proposed work.

    It is at this juncture that the National Petroleum Investment Management Services (NAPIMS) in conjunction with Nigeria Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) mandates a policy that man-power from the graduate pool in the portal is assigned to each bidder’s bid package submitted in NIPEx.

    This ensures that regardless of which bidder wins the contract, it would have absorbed highly competent graduate staff who would get their much needed assimilation into the industry.

    This exercise will be an advantage, not just for the graduate that is being placed, but for the contractor, who sometimes finds it difficult to find quality personnel with oil and gas related degrees. Another avenue is for the government to initiate policies that would easily enable the youth to be part of a registered and licensed local content oil and gas company, and provide measures that would pave the way for these companies integration into the Nigerian oil and gas industry.

    A way of achieving this is for the government to begin a programme which mandates the Nigerian Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) to subsidise the costs and simplify the process of company registration for qualified graduates.

    This subsidisation and simplification process will be afforded to groups of youth graduates that have come together to form a company with the intention of operating in the oil and gas industry, with the support of the government.

    To qualify, the group of shareholders in the company must either have the same discipline, forming a specialist company, or have different but complimentary disciplines.

    An important requirement to qualify for this status would be that at least one of the shareholders of the proposed company must have at least 10 years of oil and gas industry experience in the companies proposed area of specialisation.

    This is to bridge the gap of inexperience within the company. This would mean that recent graduates would need to align with an experienced industry professional.

    Such a scheme is not only advantageous to a fresh graduate, but would prove beneficial to an industry worker with valuable work experience, but currently out of a job; or industry professionals that are looking to go into private business and consulting.

    In parallel to the CAC registration programme, the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) should have a special category for these youth companies involved in this programme, to subsidise and fast track their certification process.

    The laxity involved in the certification of these companies is by no means a compromise to standard and safety, but based on the premise that these companies will be assimilated and paired with established companies with all prerequisite qualifications, certifications and accreditation should be given.

    Acceptable DPR licensing categories for this programme will be the general category and the major category, with the services to be licensed within these categories left at the discretion of DPR; depending on the qualifications and credentials of the company’s shareholders.

    Upon successful company registration and licensing by DPR, these companies should be registered with NCDMB, as a special “Youth Integration Company”.

    The aim of this status is for these companies to be assimilated into the industry, and for these companies to benefit from a training programme. While NCDMB fulfills its remit of vetting the industry procurement processes to ensure local content requirements are adhered to during the award of contracts, as directed by the Local Content Act; it should take this opportunity to mandate that these Youth Integration companies are paired with the established bidding companies, as a prerequisite for contract award.

    In turn, these youth companies will act as subcontractors to the awardee, and will be required to execute a part of the contract scope. Furthermore, as it is a requirement for all companies operating in the nation’s oil and gas industry to provide a plan and execute training for its local personnel, adequate training plans for these youth companies must be submitted by the contractor, and approved by NCDMB before the award of the contract, or start of the project.

    The contractor shall be required to provide the necessary insurance coverage and necessary guarantees to enable its paired Youth Integration Company (now subcontractor) execute its work.

     

    Labour market integration training, orientation

    There is a catch 22 situation in the sense that oil and gas companies are looking to employ candidates that possess certain skill sets which are attained through industry work experience.

    This puts our graduates in the dark, as no matter their academic achievement, they cannot attain these skills they are not privy to. In order to ease integration of the graduates into the labour force, the onus is on the government to ensure that they are taught these vital skills after graduation.

    This will bridge the gap between the academic knowledge of the graduate and the much sought after industry work place mannerism, etiquette, understanding of processes and procedures. Skills which would ordinarily only come with work experience within an oil and gas company.

    The fact of the matter is that the Nigerian graduates are intellectually competent. Despite the lacklustre, ill-equipped and badly run universities, highly competent graduates are churned out in high numbers.

    Evidence of this is the success and achievement levels of Nigerian graduates who thrive and exceed their peers in post-graduate studies  overseas.

    Despite high academic achievement, the missing ingredient from our youth graduates, which is key to employment by the oil and gas companies, is the work experience.

    Drilling down into “work experience”, what is of most importance to the hiring companies, is familiarity with the industry ethics. The reason oil and gas companies bring in expatriates to man their projects in Nigeria is not solely due to their technical competence, but also their industry ethics.

    The evidence of having worked in varying projects across the world is proof that the individual is knowledgeable in the industry’s code of conduct, business ethics, procedures, processes, and safety standards.

    While this is on a macro level, on a micro level, such processes and standards are company specifics, as individual companies have their specific modus operandi. This is particularly the case with multinational companies with huge operations across the world.

    The aim of such standards is unification of its global operation, where a worker in for instance, Brazil can easily come to work in a project in Scotland with a very short learning curve.

    This is the reason a firm such as Chevron will prefer to hire a worker that has previous Chevron experience, as he or she would know the “Chevron way”.

    As a result of this trend among the oil and gas companies, a recommendation for our government in aiding the hiring of our graduate youths, is for each NNPC Joint Venture, such as Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC), Chevron Nigeria Limited (CNL), Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited (MPNU), under their Joint Operating Agreement (JOA), to set up training programmes under their JV.

    The aim of these programmes will be to furnish these youth graduates with the skillsets required to work successfully within their joint venture companies.

    The curriculum would focus on team building initiatives, company policies, procedures and job skills specifically catered to the requirements of the companies. This would enable each student’s easy assimilation into these companies, upon completion of the training and orientation.

    The training would be certified, thereby making each graduate more marketable to companies in the industry as a whole. A key advantage of the JV initiated training programme is the JVs knowledge of their upcoming projects, manpower specific requirements and the skills and disciplines needed for these projects.

    This would ensure that the training programs are fit for purpose and prepares its students for the upcoming projects. With all theses, what is  most important is for the Nigerian Petroleum industry to be stimulated.

    This is what will spur the multiplier effect that would lead to more industry activities, spending on projects and the resultant need for industry personnel; to accommodate our graduate youths.

    The Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), looming in the air for years without passage, has created the Achilles heel to any industry’s development; uncertainty.

    The uncertainty of the fiscal regime, and petroleum laws that will be in place, has prevented spending of billions of dollars on new projects in Nigeria, by the International Oil Companies (IOC’s).

    Furthermore, although Nigeria unfortunately missed out on a flurry of industry activities during the era of $100 per barrel oil, it must be more pragmatic now with a lower price for oil, and a glut of the commodity in the world market.

    What is needed is an efficient PIB that secures an appropriate amount of economic rent for the Nigerian government, but yet allows operators to continue a profitable business, particularly in riskier ventures such as deep offshore exploration, new frontier basin exploration and non-associated gas development.

    Such an environment will increase oil companies’ confidence in operating in Nigeria amidst a global downturn in global spending. Government policy is required to stir our industry further down the petroleum value chain, stimulating activity in refining and petrochemicals; to create further value from our oil, in a low priced market.

    Government policies that streamline   the process of licensing and approval of modular refineries, blending plants, and other downstream capital projects and promoting availability of feedstock for these projects is invaluable.

    These projects would create added value, increased revenue, sector growth, and much needed job opportunities for our graduate youths. In conclusion, there is no doubt that Nigeria needs to make active strides to develop its ailing real sectors such as manufacturing and agriculture to increase its growth and create jobs for its fast growing youth population.

    However, in the current state where the petroleum industry is the mainstay of the economy, and unemployment of the youth is at staggering levels, the government must step in with the right policies to guide the industry down the right path, and in parallel, ensure that qualified youths can gain employment in a more efficiently run industry amidst current global challenges

    • Agbowu, a Contracts Advisor in Saudi Aramco and a promoter, Star Delta Energy Services can be reached via email: info@stardeltaes.com; twitter: @GPAStarDelta.
  • Crude oil price ‘ll rebound March 2016, don predicts

    Crude oil price ‘ll rebound March 2016, don predicts

    Oil price will rebound in March 2016, after falling for more than two years with resultant effects on Nigeria and other oil producing nations, a professor of Petroleum Resources and Policy Research, Prof Wunmi Iledare has said.

    He said the downturn in the global market would ease in the first quarter of next year, once the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is able to control oil supply from the Middle East, among other initiatives that are being carried out to increase the international prices of crude oil.

    What is happening to Nigeria and other oil producing countries, he said,  is not about oil price alone, but about what he described as market edge.

    He said: ‘’It is one thing to produce oil and it is another thing to sell the oil and earn good revenue. There is no doubt that the country will further experience cash crunch till March 2016, when the turnaround in the market is expected.’’

    He said Nigeria should further expect cash crunch, as the oil price may not rally up until March 2016,  arguing that the country would benefit when the price of crude rebounds.

    He said the Federal Government’s decision  to benchmark its 2016 budget at $38 per barrel, is in tandem with the realties in the global oil market where the price of oil has fallen to $35 per barrel.

    Iledare, who is the President of International Association of International Energy Economics (IAEE), Nigerian chapter, said with the price of oil falling to $50 a barrel in mid 2014,  $47 a barrel in May 2009 and now $35 a barrel, the Federal Government has no option than to further expect cash crunch.

    According to him, the government should be thinking of how to diversify its revenue base if it wants its fiscal programme vis-a-vis budget to be sustainable.

    ‘’ In the milieu, the government should be thinking of another means of funding its budget in the years ahead.  Price volatilities and instability in crude oil production are some of the major features of the market, and these directly or indirectly are affecting Nigeria, being an oil dependent nation. What Nigeria has got to do is to look for ways of turning oil and gas to finish products to up its revenue, among considering other measures that would have positive impacts on the economy,” he added.

    It would be recalled that the slump in the global price of crude oil dated back to 2012, when Brent crude rose to as high as $111.26 a barrel, up from $61 a barrel in 2009. Since then,  the market has been witnessing a general slump in the prices of crude oil, a development that has affected exploration and production activities in Nigeria, whose oil is the main stay of its economy.

  • How to improve power, by stakeholders

    Stakeholders have advocated urgent measures to transform the power sector. To them, industrialisation would remain a pipe dream if the power sector challenges are not addressed. They spoke at theAnnual Power & Utilities Roundtable organised by PricewaterhouseCoopers in Lagos. The theme of the forum was: “The challenges with transforming the Nigerian power landscape.”

    Oando Gas and Power, Chief Executive Officer,  Mr. Bolaji Osunsanya, said over 540 per cent of Nigeria’s gas is associated gas (AG), and that it could be taken out like bongas and airgas.

    Osunasanya said: “In the infrastructure deposit, Nigeria’s master is currently wet. This can produce 1,200megawatts of electricity (Mw) offshore needs.

    “The gas industry is a low defined value chain, and a wise approach is needed to transform it,” he added.

    He also identified historical preference for oil, absence of communication in terms of gas, lack of clarity and standardisation, fall in international oil price, processing, transportation and distribution as some of the challenges besetting the industry.

    On gas market revenue, he said there were various policies that have contributed to the required infrastructure blueprints.

    Osunsanya noted, however, that the distribution sector is fraught with constraints from the DisCos, GenCos to the gas suppliers, adding that  “Close to 90 per cent of transmitted gas gets to the end users. An increase of available generation will be needed to curb the gas constrainsts”.

    Also, Chief Executive Officer, Genesis Energy Group, Mr. Akinwole Omoboriowo, said electricity regulators should be independent in discharging their obligations without interference from the government, adding, however, that clear key performance indicators needed to be set for them.

    “Towards transforming the Nigerian power landscape, there should be active encouragement of mini and micro grids, as well as grid-based power supply to discos/municipals, operated by laws and incentives,” operated by laws and incentives, “he said.

    Explaining that mini-grid requires DisCo to be carved out and operated independently, the energy expert,  however, canvassed for alternative funding from multinationals and corporate organisations through their Corporate Social responsibility (CSR).

    Managing Director, Niger Delta Power Holding Company, Mr. James Olotu, said Nigeria generates 4,200Mw of power as against 42,090Mw generated by Eskom of South Africa.

    According to him, Ethopia generates over 10,000Mw of hydropower versus 4,700Mw by NIPP Sudan, which built 1,250Mw Merowe hydropower Dam.

    Olotu said issues such as regulatory clarity, certainty of what is generated not being paid for; policy inconsistency, access to long term finance, merry-go-round for the investor and infrastructure deficit-gas were challenges facing the sector.

    He said: ‘’While pricing is being sorted out and infrastructure ongoing by the National Integrated Power Project (NIPP), lack of effective gas, acts of vandalism, state of finances owing to low operating tariff, uncompleted legacy projects and declining budgetary appropriation, still pose major challenges to transforming the power landscape.’’

    The Leader, Power and Utilities West Africa (PWC), Mr. Pedro Omontuemhen, said the firm recently conducted a survey across Africa, where it interviewed senior executives in the energy industry, in 15 countries, including Nigeria.

    Omontuemhen said the survey showed that over 620 million people live without electricity in the rural areas of Africa, adding that by 2025, there would be a better improvement if huge investment is made in the sector.

  • Fed Govt to roll out growth plans for power, says BPE

    Fed Govt to roll out growth plans for power, says BPE

    The Federal Government has put in place modalities to drive the power sector for growth, just as it has driven the telecommunication industry for better performance, the Director- General, Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE),Benjamin Dikki has said.

    The modalities, according to him, include making the bodies such as the Ministry of Power and the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) to provide stronger regulatory frameworks that would help in developing the sector and the introduction of a competitive environment for operators, among other initiatives.

    Speaking in Lagos at a stakeholders’ meeting, Dikki said the need to make the power sector more competitive and vibrant is imperative for the growth of the economy.

    The meeting, which has the Minister of Power, works and housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola, the Chief Executive Officers of Eko ElectricityDistribution Company(EKEDC),Oladele Amoda, Ikeja Electric, Mr Abiodun Ajifowobaje, and other stakeholders, was at the instance of the management of Egbin Power Company Plc.

    He said once the regulators nurture power sector for growth, there would be stability in the electricity supply and the economy will get better.

    He said: ‘’ Power sector will work because the telecom industry works.  The telecom sector works because the regulators were allowed to nurture investments in that area.  I believe the regulators would nurture investments in the electricity industry for growth, given a conducive environment.  Investments would not only engender competition, but would make the operators fare better. Once there is competition in the energy sector, prices of products and services would come down and the better for consumers.’’

    Dikki said problems such as revenue shortfalls, inability of power firms to garner enough capital for operation and others,  are hindering the growth of the sector, urging operators to drive investments to generate revenue for growth.

    According to him, privatisation has opened a new phase in the nation’s power sector, because private operators are now saddled with the responsibility of running the industry.

    On industry’s performance, Dikki said some of the new investors in the sector have tried to improve electricity generation and distribution.

    Citing Egbin Power Plant, the BPE’s DG said the plant, which was owned by the Sahara Energy Group, has relatively improved power generation.

    ‘’Egbin Power Company should be commended for being a flagship of what privatisation is.  The reason is because its management has been able to increase electricity megawatts (Mw) 400 to over 1,000 megawatts of electricity.  This growth needs to be sustained for the benefits of consumers,’’ he added.

    Also, the Chief Executive officer, Egbin Power Company, Mr Dallas Peavey, said the firm has overhauled its operation to ensure growth, adding that the turbines are nearing full capacity.

    He said the firm has six turbines, adding that the turbines are returning to their installed capacity of 1,320 megawatts of electricity soon.

    Peavey said efforts are on-going to make the six turbines produce optimally, stressing that the development would help in improving power supply in the country.

  • Nigeria needs $40b to generate 20,000Mw

    Nigeria needs $40b to generate 20,000Mw

    Nigeria requires $40billion to move her electricity generation from current 4,500 megawatts (Mw) of electricity to 20,000Mw by year 2020, the Managing Director/ Chief Executive officer, Enugu Electricity Distribution Company, Mr Roberts Dickerman, has said.

    Speaking on       how to grow the energy sector at the 2015 edition of the West African Industry Power Convention (WAPIC) Forum in Lagos, he said the country’s power sector  is yet to achieve appreciable growth, because majority of the citizens are still living in darkness.

    According to him, the country generates 156 units of electricity per person, while India generates 774 units of electricity per person, stressing that the country records the lowest electricity generation per person in the world.

    Dickerman said the issue is affecting the capacity of the power distribution companies (DisCos) to distribute power to consumers and further generate revenue.

    According to him, between 40 per cent and 60 per cent of energy is not being paid for by consumers in the country, adding that the issue has made it difficult for power firms to operate  optimally.

    He said: ‘’The Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) has been in a state of almost constant change and financial crisis since privatisation. One cause of this challenge is a timing mismatch between privatisation expectations and realities. “The rules of Transition Electricity Market(TEM) as declared by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) require DisCos to remit 100 per cent of their energy and capacity payment upstream, but the industry has not yet solved the puzzle of how to collect anywhere close to 100 per cent of the energy billed to consumers.’’

    Also, the Chief Executive Officer, Seplat Petroleum Development Company, Mr Austin Avuru, said the country needs $10billion per annum to fix gas and other infrastructural problems besetting the power industry.

    He added that the country would spend $10billion each  in the next 10 years to achieve meaningful results in the area of providing gas to power firms.

    He said the development would help in achieving the goals of encouraging energy efficiency and providing stable electricity, set by the government, in order to achieve the desired economic growth.

    Aturu, who spoke on: ‘’Improved Power Generation Company in Nigeria,  said gas production per cubit feet needs to improve drastically for the growth of the electricity sector.

    He said: “We  need to move gas level from two cubit feet per day to 12 cubic feet  per day to speed up electricity generation process in the next 10 years, and to achieve this, there is the need to invest $10 billion in the energy value chain every year, which translates to $100 billion in 10 years period.”