Tag: IE

  • IE boss gets award

    IE boss gets award

    Chief Executive Officer, Ikeja Electric Plc, Mrs. Folake Soetan, has been awarded the Outstanding Woman in Energy (Power Sector) award by the Women in Maritime and Energy Awards (WIME), in celebration of her leadership, and advocacy for diversity, equity and inclusion of all resources, particularly the female gender in the sector.

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    Mrs. Soetan said: “I am here today because of the creativity and doggedness of my team. Over the years, we have evolved and emerged the trail blazer in the dynamic energy value chain.’’

    Speaking for the WIME Advisory & Steering Board, Mrs. Chizoba Anyika, said the awards aim to demonstrate how a mutually supportive environment could help enable great business outcomes across all parts of the maritime and energy business.

  • IE wins SERAS innovation prize

    Electricity Distribution Company (DisCo), Ikeja Electric Plc (IE), has won this year’s edition of SERAS Innovation Prize at the SERAS Awards in Lagos.

    The DisCo got the award, which was keenly contested by Union Bank Plc, ISON BPO, Access Bank and Data Jaja, in a category that focused on innovative and sustainable ideas with positive environmental impact on society.

    IE which was making its debut at the  awards, was nominated in three categories; Best Corporate Communications Team, Best Stakeholder Engagement and Sera’s Prize for Innovation.

    According to the organisers, the power firm emerged winner of the Innovation Award because of its innovative approach to promote electrical safety standard among staff, contractors, customers and the general public through the introduction of its proprietary game POWERPLAY.

    Receiving the award, the Head of Corporate Communications, Felix Ofulue, nosaid the firm has evolved to become the pacesetter and the game-changer in the nation’s power sector. He commended the organisers for a transparent exercise.

    “We are proud to have won in this category, especially as the award brings recognition to our sincere efforts at ensuring that people understand the dangers of electrical hazards. Our board game, PowerPlay, which was the basis for this victory is well endorsed and well received by stakeholders,” he said.

     

  • ‘BDCs should access dollars from I&E Forex Window’

    ‘BDCs should access dollars from I&E Forex Window’

    The establishment of Investors’ & Exporters’ Forex Window by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in April has stabilised the naira and the economy. The Bureaux de Change (BDCs), which have been supporting the CBN’s development agenda, believe they should be able to access dollars from the window as seen in the International Money Transfer Operators (IMTOs) inflows. Association of Bureau De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON) President Aminu Gwadabe says such practice will boost dollar liquidity. He speaks with COLLINS NWEZE on the naira’s outlook in the New Year and the role of BDCs in national development.

    Until the impact of Bureaux de Change (BDCs) operations in national development began to crystalise in the heat of the currency crisis, many thought the operators had nothing to offer. But those with such thoughts have since realised how wrong they were.

    The BDCs have continuously supported the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in its development and currency stability roles, Association of Bureaux De Change of Nigeria (ABCON) President Aminu Gwadabe said.

    He also spoke on the role of BDCs in achieving foreign exchange stability. A  BDC is defined by the CBN manual as a retail forex dealer carrying on the business of Personal Travel Allowance (PTA), Business Travel Allowance (BTA), medical and school fees, and also to carrying on inward and outward transfer.

    Said Gwadabe: “So, a BDC is a licensed outfit, normally by the CBN. All over the world, BDC operators play different roles. For instance, the primary role of BDCs globally is to ensure forex availability to the critical retail sector of the forex market in terms of supply so as to bridge the gap between the official and the parallel market exchange rate. They have even gone, for instance, beyond convergence, beyond providing liquidity, to the achievement of the major policy of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), which is exchange rate stability. Before BDCs were allowed in the official foreign exchange market, the CBN had over the years tried many methods to ensure there is convergence of the exchange rates, but that was not achieved.”

    “ We have witnessed different auction system, Retail Dutch Auction, Wholesale Dutch Auction, all these did not deliver the desired result. But in 2006, when all the prescriptions of how to checkmate this problem of spikes (volability) in the forex market failed, the thought to allow BDCs come into the official market was considered, and they (CBN) allowed us. By then we had a gap of about N50 ranging to N60, but as soon as BDCs came into the official market, within one month, the rates converged to a difference of only 50 kobo between the parallel market and the official market,” he stated.

     

    Role of BDCs

    Gwadabe said that overtime, there have been arguments about the role of BDCs. He disclosed that some people even went to the extent of saying the BDCs are no longer relevant.

    “If you remember the single exchange market that came in 2014, it did not even recognise the role of BDCs. However, that regime did not last because they did not consider the role of the BDCs. But after consistent agitation by the association, that there is need to acknowledge the role of the BDCs and include them, so that we can continue with what we have been helping the CBN  and the economy to achieve, which is exchange rate stability, the CBN reviewed its stance by allowing us to come into the market, and also offered us what they call the International Money Transfer Operations (IMTO) proceeds, and since then there have been significant achievements. One, we have also disappointed the pundits that predicted that the dollar exchange rate will hit N1000 before December 2017,” he said.

    The BDCs, he added, have also helped in eliminating the spike, volatility and uncertainty of the exchange rate.

    “Before people could not plan, manufacturers were crying, but now the manufacturers are opting for the exchange rate above the inflation rate due to the stability being witnessed in the market. No more spike, people can plan, I think for the past six months, we have seen the dollar stable between N360 and N365 even at the parallel market. So this is a great achievement for the manufacturers, for economic planners. At least people can plan, people can order their inventory without much stress.

    “That has been one of the important roles BDCs play, in eliminating the spike, and also the gap between the exchange rates, which created opportunities for rent seeking. There is no more rent seeking. Speculation which also used to be the order of the day in the forex market has also been eliminated. Also currency exportation, which is also an opportunity just because of the opportunities for rent seeking, is also not the order of the day.

    “All these are great achievements that the BDCs have helped in ensuring that the economy is stable, to the point that we have even come out of recession. For an economy to grow, there must be some sectors doing the hard  job. I can assure you that for this convergence that we have seen, the commendation should go to the BDCs, because it is their hard work that made it happen”.

    Now, most of the BDCs  because of the convergence, are not even in operations because the parallel market rate is even lower than that of our rate, so we have brought down the rate. Even below the parallel market rate, with difference of about N1 to N1.50, so there are a lot of achievements.

    Also, in the process BDCs created employment, we are about 3,500 licensed BDCs now and each BDC have at least nothing less than six workers. So if you multiply six by 3,500, we are talking about 21,000 Nigerians that are dependent on the BDC subsector.

     

    Dollar sales to BDCs

    On the need for the CBN to continue selling dollars to BDCs to sustain stability in the market and convergence of exchange rates, he said the sovereignty of any currency is the sovereignty of that nation.

    “No nation will just fold its arm and allow others dictate the exchange rate of its currency. Every nation protects its currency. Now having said that, one of the determining factors of this currency stability is the buffer or  the external reserve.  And I want to congratulate the CBN, the buffers have been good, there is projection of $45 billion reserve by end of next year, so that will continue to generate positive outlook of the exchange rate. And I am happy that the CBN Governor, just last week said that the CBN has the ammunition to fight anybody that will joke with the exchange rate regime. So the sustainability of CBN intervention in ensuring continues growth, continuous stabilisation of the exchange rate is just too important.

    “Now, for  the BDCs, for the past one year, we have not been relying on the CBN sources. Our sources have been diversified from the CBN sources to IMTO sources. So all that the CBN needs to do is to see, in conjunction with the association how we can deepen the market. It is all about deepening the forex market.  We can come in with other products; we can come in with other sources. Even the Investors and Exporters (I&E) window, as far as I am concerned should be another window for the BDCs to be buying money. The CBN, like what they are doing right now, coordinating the IMTO proceeds,  should also begin to coordinate the proceeds of the (I&E) window so that we have enough of liquidity for the BDCs to ensure the stability is maintained”.

    Gwadabe explained that: “Even the Diaspora remittances, you see the association is working on a lot of automation projects to enhance standards, to enhance competition, global competitiveness, in terms of our visibility even for the world to see that there is honesty and transparency in our system. So we are building confidence and we are working with the Nigeria Interbank Settlement System (NIBSS) to ensure that most of our operations, most of our systems are being transparent and very soon our members will start doing online real time rendition of their returns. We have perfected that with the CBN, we are only waiting for the tokens  to be provided.

    “So our members will not need to go to CBN branches to submit their returns, they will now be doing it from the comfort of their office. So it is germane for CBN to continue to deepen the forex market, and statistics, experience has shown that the only reliable and efficient tool to achieving this convergence is the BDC subsector”.

     

    Access to I&E Forex window

    Gwadabe said the CBN should allow BDCs have access to funds from the I&E Forex Window. He said: “It is very workable. If you look at the International Money Transfer Operators (IMTOs) window now, the proceeds come to the banks, which is being coordinated by the CBN, and it is disbursed to BDCs operators. So  the same concept or procedure can be adapted in the I&E window”.

    “It was even our advocacy that made the CBN consider establishing the window as we disclosed the dwindling investors’ confidence in the market. Because we always meet with the investors and they always tell us their concerns and fears, and part of our recommendation to the CBN was to create a special window for investors and exporters.

    “And you can see the impact, it is working very well. In fact, what we are even looking at is that there should be a Diaspora window like the I&E window, the modalities, the technicalities are the same. It is the same institutions that will be involved. The institutions over there that will generate these funds, the banks as correspondent banks, the CBN as regulators and BDCs as the operators. So it is the same players, it’s just coordinating them and making sure the same thing is applied and everybody is happy”.

     

    Agitation for dollar sale margin increase

    Gwadabe explained that right now, the BDCs are operating under the challenges of multiple exchange rates. “That has been a very key issue in terms of  continued transparency and stability of the forex market. However, I am also not unaware of the fact that the sovereignty of the currency is the sovereignty of that nation, so the CBN is having two or three different exchange rates to ensure liquidity,  but you see that has been posing a challenge because you see even the bank rate, the CBN is selling to them at N358 per dollar  and we are buying N360 per dollar from the CBN”.

     

    Tackling multiple exchange rates/ Naira’s outlook

    He said it is possible to tackle multiple exchange rates “It is very possible. When you look at the determination of the exchange rate now, we  have  what we call  managed float. And if you look at even where the exchange rate should go, if not the inflation rate that is higher than the MPC rate, I am sure by now, the prediction of dollar should be N250 per dollar, it would have been feasible.

    “My outlook for the naira, ceteris paribus, I see the naira going to say, N300 to the dollar. The basis for  my outlook is that, one, we are going to have a robust external reserve buffer, two, we are cutting our food import, and we are diversifying our export, and then corporate governance. You see that in all we are doing now, everybody is imbibing the rules of corporate governance, Know Your Customers (KYC), Anti money laundering manual and what have you, to ensure that no more breaches”.

  • IE gets ISO certification

    IE gets ISO certification

    Ikeja Electric (IE) will not compromise the safety of customers under its jurisdictions, as part of efforts to promote growth, Its Chief Executive officer, Anthony Youdeowei, has said.

    Speaking during the presentation of the ISO 9001 & OHSASA 18001 to the company in Ikeja, yesterday, he said the certification was a product of the commitment of the firm to safety, quality management of materials and resources.

    Youdeowei said: ‘’As a responsible organisation, we (IE) would not relent in our efforts to provide safety needed by our customers during and after installations of equipment needed to improve power supply to them. The safety standard and training is not limited to the IE customers, but to customers and other stakeholders, especially the Licensed Electric Contractors Association of Nigeria, who are certified to carry out installations of electrical items in various communities, especially the wiring of buildings and other activities.’’

    According to him, IE is the first and the only company in the power sector to receive the certification, stressing that the development would encourage other operators to try to get the certification.

  • Capitals inflows push I&E FX window to $11.2b

    Capitals inflows push I&E FX window to $11.2b

    •  $33b reserves to cover 8.1 months imports 

    The Investors’ and Exporters’ (I&E) Forex Window has attracted $11.2 billion as at September 15, a report by FBN Capital, the investment and research arm of FBN Holdings, has said.

    The foreign exchange reserves which currently stand at $33 billion is expected to cover 8.1 months imports, when imports of services are added, it said.

    The research firm said: “The pick-up in oil production has been an obvious positive for accumulation. Officials are encouraging the view that it is back at, or close to the 2.0 million barrels per day level. Further, the FGN may well return to the Eurobond market this year. The heavily-oversubscribed Iraqi sovereign issue last month without US guarantees was a reminder of the strength of the market.”

    Continuing, it said: “On the basis of the balance of payments for 2016, reserves at end-August provided 10.8 months’ merchandise import cover. When we add imports of services, the cover is still 8.1 months,” it said.

    The report explained that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will also be boosted by the signals from the I&E window, where turnover has continued to soar since it was launched in April 21.

    The positive performance at the window has also been attributed to CBN’s policies, especially its instruction to banks and other authorised dealers  to implement electronic Certificate of Capital Importation (eCCI) for foreign investors.

    The Certificate of Capital Importation is given to foreign investors to confirm the level of investment they have brought into the country. The certificate has always been on hard copy until this policy shift.

    The eCCI implementation, which takes effect tomorrow, is expected to boost transparency and enhance confidence of foreign investors in the local market. The foreign investors constitute about 70 per cent of the total transaction turnover in the capital market.

    The eCCI would enable foreign investors to easily find out the status of their investments in the country, increase transaction efficiency and ensure that investors get adequate returns on their investments.

    In a circular to all authorised dealers, CBN Director, Trade and Exchange Department, W. D.  Gotring, said: “To enhance transparency and efficient processing of foreign investment flows to the country, the CBN informed all authorised dealers and the public of the deployment of electronic Certificate of Capital Importation (eCCI) platform.”

    Continuing, he said the eCCI shall replace the hard copy of CCI normally issued in respect of all capital inflows either in form of cash or machinery/ equipment.

    “The policy, takes effect from tomorrow, meaning that from this date, processing of all Certificate of Capital Importation in Nigeria shall only be done electronically on the eCCI platform,” he added.

    Speaking also on the development, Head of Treasuries at Ecobank Nigeria, Olakunle Ezun, said the volume of capital inflows was likely to rise with the coming of eCCI, which is expected to cut off all processing bureaucracies that discourage investors.

    He explained that before now, the CBN had appointed the Financial Market Dealers Association (FMDA) as the sole issuer of certificate of capital importation.

    He said the banks buy booklets of Certificate of Capital Importation from FMDA and issue them to foreign investors. The Certificate of Capital Importation, Ezun added, allows the foreign investors to buy dollar at the official rate when they are repatriating their profits or exiting the economy.

    “If any bank has a customer that brought dollar into the economy, such bank gets the CCI from FMDA and issues it to the customer. It helps the customer to access dollar from official rate official rate when he is exiting the economy,” Ezun said.

    He said that the eCCI would take the market to the next level because the transactions were available for everybody to see.

  • IE pleads for consumers’ understanding  on damaged installations

    IE pleads for consumers’ understanding on damaged installations

    The Ikeja Electric (IE) has appealed to consumers in its network area to show understanding over the disruption of electricity supply caused by rainstorm.

    Its Head of Corporate Communications, Mr Felix Ofulue, made the appeal on yesterday in Lagos.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that violent storm, which accompanied last Friday rain, had destroyed the IE’s installations in some parts of Lagos.

    Ofulue said areas mostly affected by the storm included Ilupeju, Ikeja GRA, Adeniyi Jones and Ajao Road, both in Ikeja and Ojodu.

    According to him, others areas are Idimu, Egbe, Abule-Egba and Ikorodu.

    He said that power outage being experienced in those areas was caused by rainstorm which knocked down some electrical poles and other installations.

    Ofulue said that the damage done on the network was huge.

    He, however, assured the consumers of the company’s swiftness in restoring electricity to the affected areas.

    Ofulue said that the company’s team of engineers had been deployed and were working round the clock.

     

  • IE: Billing darkness as winning strategy

    Have you seen the Okota district head office of Ikeja Electric (IE) on Okota Road, lately?  It reminds you of that old song: “She’s beautiful, she’s lovely, she takes your breath away …!”

    Meeehnnn, IE is totally rebranded out there!  It glows, just as its electricity market is swamped in total darkness!  Simply intimidating!

    Indeed, that intimidation reminds you of good — well, more of bad — old Poke Tolo, the fictional anti-hero of James Hadley Chase’s novel, Want to Stay Alive?  Remember that fella?  That’s right — he who declared he had found the formula, fear, to prise the wallet of the rich!

    Well, as IE Okota is rebranding and preening and is bright and beautiful, its customers are progressively dull and grumpy, wallowing in pit darkness.

    But like the fictive Poke Toholo and his rich-and-the-spoilt victims, the very real life IE has probably patented a fear-driven primer, on how a DISCO (electricity distribution company) can mint a fortune drowning its customers in darkness, while at the same time threatening them with disconnection.

    In the Okota neighbourhood, IE has developed a grim routine. There would be a total blackout for days. Then, as if jerking awake, light would come streaming, for hours on end.

    At luckier seasons, it would be on for a whole day. Or even for a whole night, near uninterrupted, long enough for the refrigerators to buzz and the air conditioners to hum; and for the denizens to remember that alas, they were still residents of some 21st century city, where electricity should be routine; and not some antediluvian jungle, where it was alien.

    By chance or design, however, this “harvest” time always comes, when the all-mighty IE is readying to distribute new bills, bills not based on any metering but on the whims and caprices of its billing merchants.

    But just when the customers were conditioning themselves to their newfound fortune, the disconnecting gang came storming!

    Based on light for a few days, they insist you paid for the darkness all month long — or else!  It is the IE equivalent of the Poke Toholo fear theory!  Meanwhile, after all the excitement, status quo ante-bellum resumed, till another harvest time of rogue electricity and forced payment for darkness!

    The joker for the near-brazen fraud would appear IE’s apparent hesitation to supply most of its customers in the neighbourhood pre-paid electric meters.  More than one year ago, the IE managing director came visiting The Nation.  His pledge was clear: in the next two years, most of its customers would have pre-paid meters, free of charge, except those who didn’t want to await their turn.  Even then, those category of clients would eventually be reimbursed, one way or another.

    For a majority in this neighbourhood, that has not happened.  But wait, why should it?  In Achebe-speak: do you spew out nuts ground for you by benevolent spirits?

    Could IE then be hedging on pre-paid meters, because the pivot of its winning billing-for-darkness strategy depends on its criminally padded billing-by-estimates?

    That sounds too nihilistic to be believed.  Still, Power Minister, Babatunde Fashola, had better warn these smart-alecky DISCOs to play by the rules, before the malevolent spirits of inflamed customers confront their disconnection gangs in the streets!

  • IE: Billing darkness as winning strategy

    Have you seen the Okota district head office of Ikeja Electric (IE) on Okota Road, lately?  It reminds you of that old song: “She’s beautiful, she’s lovely, she takes your breath away …!”

    Meeehnnn, IE is totally rebranded out there!  It glows, just as its electricity market is swamped in total darkness!  Simply intimidating!

    Indeed, that intimidation reminds you of good — well, more of bad — old Poke Tolo, the fictional anti-hero of James Hadley Chase’s novel, Want to Stay Alive?  Remember that fella?  That’s right — he who declared he had found the formula, fear, to prise the wallet of the rich!

    Well, as IE Okota is rebranding and preening and is bright and beautiful, its customers are progressively dull and grumpy, wallowing in pit darkness.

    But like the fictive Poke Toholo and his rich-and-the-spoilt victims, the very real life IE has probably patented a fear-driven primer, on how a DISCO (electricity distribution company) can mint a fortune drowning its customers in darkness, while at the same time threatening them with disconnection.

    In the Okota neighbourhood, IE has developed a grim routine. There would be a total blackout for days. Then, as if jerking awake, light would come streaming, for hours on end.

    At luckier seasons, it would be on for a whole day. Or even for a whole night, near uninterrupted, long enough for the refrigerators to buzz and the air conditioners to hum; and for the denizens to remember that alas, they were still residents of some 21st century city, where electricity should be routine; and not some antediluvian jungle, where it was alien.

    By chance or design, however, this “harvest” time always comes, when the all-mighty IE is readying to distribute new bills, bills not based on any metering but on the whims and caprices of its billing merchants.

    But just when the customers were conditioning themselves to their newfound fortune, the disconnecting gang came storming!

    Based on light for a few days, they insist you paid for the darkness all month long — or else!  It is the IE equivalent of the Poke Toholo fear theory!  Meanwhile, after all the excitement, status quo ante-bellum resumed, till another harvest time of rogue electricity and forced payment for darkness!

    The joker for the near-brazen fraud would appear IE’s apparent hesitation to supply most of its customers in the neighbourhood pre-paid electric meters.  More than one year ago, the IE managing director came visiting The Nation.  His pledge was clear: in the next two years, most of its customers would have pre-paid meters, free of charge, except those who didn’t want to await their turn.  Even then, those category of clients would eventually be reimbursed, one way or another.

    For a majority in this neighbourhood, that has not happened.  But wait, why should it?  In Achebe-speak: do you spew out nuts ground for you by benevolent spirits?

    Could IE then be hedging on pre-paid meters, because the pivot of its winning billing-for-darkness strategy depends on its criminally padded billing-by-estimates?

    That sounds too nihilistic to be believed.  Still, Power Minister, Babatunde Fashola, had better warn these smart-alecky DISCOs to play by the rules, before the malevolent spirits of inflamed customers confront their disconnection gangs in the streets!