Tag: POWER

  • Simba Group expands network for power back up products

    Simba Group expands network for power back up products

    Simba Group, distributors of luminous inverters and power backup solutions, on Tuesday rolled out its network of Simba Service Centres across cities in Nigeria. The company, which represents brands such as Luminous, Genus, Epsilon and Exicom, distributes and services power backup products such as Inverters, Batteries, Online UPS and Integrated Power Management Systems.

    Announcing the network roll out in Lagos, Simba Group Managing Director, Chief Vinay Grover, said “We have always believed that a good quality product means very little unless it is supported by a high level of service before, during and after the sales process. It is with this in mind that we recently launched our one-of-a-kind 24*7 nationwide contact centre and exclusive customer-service online portal.”

    Chief Grover explained that as more and more customers turn to the company’s award winning customer care offering, it becomes important that the company brings these services closer to them. “It is with this in mind that we committed to extending our service through the creation of new authorized centres, which I’m happy to announce are fully operational now.”

    Grover invited business owners and aspiring entrepreneurs who want to open such authorized service centres in conjunction with the company to contact them directly. He said Simba plans to roll out a further 20 service centres within the next few months.

    Simba Group, which recently won the Capital Finance International (UK) award for Best Customer Satisfaction in Nigeria, had committed to rolling out service centres beyond their own network which  spans across major cities in Nigeria, including Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano, Ibadan, Maiduguri and Yola.

    The company has now opened further service centres in Ilorin, Akure, Onitsha, Katsina and an additional one in Kano.

  • Senate probes over $3b loss to 10 power projects’ sale

    Senate probes over $3b loss to 10 power projects’ sale

    The Senate yesterday asked its joint committee on Power and Privatisation to investigate the sale of 10 National Integrated Power Projects (NIPP) by the Bureau for Public Enterprises (BPE). The Federal Government lost $3billion in the transaction.

    This followed a motion by Senator Mohammed Hassan (Yobbe South) and five others over alleged “unwholesome practices by Manitoba Hydro International Nigeria Limited under the direction and control of the BPE.”

    In his lead debate, Hassan criticised the activities of Hydro International ((Manitoba), a Canadian company contracted to manage the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN).

    The lawmaker said though the firm was incorporated under the laws of Nigeria, it has insisted to be paid in dollars instead of naira.

    He said: “It is a criminal offence stipulated in Section20(5) of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Act, 2007 for any person or body corporate to refuse the acceptance of naira as legal tender.

    “We are worried that the TCN is imposed with this burden, under the management Services Contract, of paying all taxes for the management contractors while Manitoba does not pay taxes on monies paid under the contract.

    “Section 9(2) of the Companies Income Tax Act(CITA) Cap 21, 2004 provides that tax shall be assessed and payable upon the profit of any company accruing in Nigeria.

    “The Management Service Contract prepared by BPE for the management of TCN is fraught with apparent illegalities and total violation of the laws of Nigeria.”

    Chairman, Senate Committee on Appropriation, Senator Mohammed Danjuma Goje in his contribution lamented that the entire privatisation exercise seemed to be a failure.

    He noted that the idea of the exercise was to empower the private sector to make power more stable in the country.

    He said there seemed to be no difference between the pre-privatisation and post-privatisation era.

    He said: “Unfortunately, those who got the Discos and the Gencos are all crying. The consumers are also crying; so every thing seems to be wrong with the companies.

    “Even if government is not going to revoke contracts, there is need to look at the entire process. Why were the Gencos sold? Were they sold on merit or man-know-man?

     

  • Why power contribution to GDP is low

    Infrastructural bottlenecks, such as obsolete gas pipelines, vandalism, inability of the turbines to access gas for production, dismal state of hydro power equipment, and irregular power supply, have hindered job creation in the electricity and other sectors.This is also affecting the industry’s contribution to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), the Head, Oil and Gas Department, Ecobank Nigeria Plc, Mrs. Olufunke Jones has said.

    She mentioned other issues to include poor funding of the sector occasioned by the reluctance of banks to lend to the power firms, and faulty distribution equipment, adding that the output of the sector has remained low, despite its privitisation a few years ago.

    Speaking during a stakeholders’ forum in Lagos,  Jones said unlike the petroleum industry, which  provides 70 per cent of the Federal Government’s earnings  and further contributes over seven  per cent to nation’s Gross Domestic Product,  the power sector has not.

    She said: “The Federal Government, the Ministry of Power, the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN), the power firms, and other relevant stakeholders need to develop a template that is robust, adaptable and good enough to facilitate improved power supply.  When this happens, the potentials of the sector would be galvanised to create employment. Anything short of this means the sector would not be able to contribute greatly to the GDP.’’

    She said  renewable energy would provide more than 40 per cent of electricity requirement in the West African region by 2040, urging the Federal Government to maximise the opportunities in the renewable energy.

    “By 2040, the region is expected to generate 40 per cent of its electricity from renewable energy.  Nigeria needs to localise power, by using available natural resources. Where there is sunlight, coal, wind and other renewable energy sources, the country should make use of them. The combination of  both the off-grid and on-grid  means of  generating power would help in improving power supply, as well as contribution to the economy.’’ she added.

    According to her, improvement in the operation of the West African Gas Pipeline project, and others initiated to develop power and petrochemical industries is key to the growth of the region.

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission had in December 2014, inaugurated an 11-man advisory board that would manage deployment and use of the regulation in every facet of the power sector.  NERC’s former Chief, Dr Sam Amadi said the development was aimed at creating opportunities for Nigerians to participate actively  in the sector and further improve contribution to the nation’s GDP.

  • Elumelu to discuss clean power at WEF

    Elumelu to discuss clean power at WEF

    Chairman of Heirs Holdings and founder of the Tony Elumelu Foundation, Tony Elumelu, is billed to discuss how to scale clean-energy investment to meet developing-country needs on a panel at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland.

    Elumelu will frame his remarks and calls to action in the context of Africapitalism, the economic philosophy that embodies the private sector’s commitment to the economic transformation of Africa through long-term investments that create both economic prosperity and social wealth.

    In the panel, ‘Catalysing Clean Power,’ Elumelu would focus on private sector, governments and research institutions that hope to expand access to and reduce the cost of energy for developing countries; off-grid technologies, battery power; clean cooking methods and environmentally sustainable power generation.

    The ‘Catalysing Clean Power’ panel, would also include Akinwumi Ayodeji Adesina, President of the African Development Bank (AfDB), Takehiko Nakao, President of the Asian Development Bank (ABD) and Francesco Starace, CEO and General Manager of Enel Group, an Italian manufacturer and distributor of electricity and gas.

  • Oke-Ogun renews bid for power shift

    Oke-Ogun renews bid for power shift

    The people of Oke-Ogun in Oyo State are clamouring for power shift to their zone in 2019. They argue that, since the area has never produced a governor, the move would foster a sense of belonging and ensure even development. Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN examines the issue.

    Oyo State is made up of four administrative zones. They are: Ibadan, Oyo, Oke-Ogun and Ogbomoso. Of all the zones, Oke-Ogun and Oyo are the only ones that have not produced a governor under the democratic dispensation. Apart from Chief Adebayo Alao-Akala who hails from Ogbomosho, all the other governors, including the incumbent abiola Ajimobi, are from Ibadan. The late Alhaji Lam Adesina (1999 to 2003) and Chief Rashidi Ladoja (2003 to 2007) are also from Ibadan. Against the background of this perceived injustice, the people of Oke-Ogun are now unified in the agitation for the creation of their own state.

    To actualise their dream for the proposed state, the people of Oke-Ogun under the auspices of the Oke-Ogun Development Council (ODC) had presented a memorandum to the National Assembly, requesting the Federal Government to create the state out of the present Oyo State. The association, while presenting its memorandum through its National Chairman, Professor Joshua Adeniyi, reeled out the various deprivations the people of the area have suffered and continue to suffer. He accused the state governments of under-developing the Oke-Ogun axis of the state.

    Adeniyi said: “Since Independence, the Oke-Ogun people have been neglected totally as whatever visible development you notice in the area is through community effort. Through self-development efforts, Oke-Ogun people have developed themselves and we therefore want the Federal Government through significant inputs from the National Assembly to consider the creation of Oke-Ogun State.

    “In Oke-Ogun, we don’t have higher institutions of learning, no tertiary health institution, the state and federal roads are completely in state of disrepair and there is no pipe borne water in any part of Oke-Ogun. The boreholes sunk were through individual or communal efforts. Where is government? We in this part of the state have not seen the essence of dividends of democracy. The development is concentrated along the Ibadan, Oyo and Ogbomoso axis to the utter neglect of the Oke-Ogun zone. Where is equity? Where is justice? Where is fairness?”

    The proposed Oke-Ogun State, according to Adeniyi, shall comprise Olorunsogo, Oorelope, Irepo, Saki East, Saki West, Atisbo, Itesiwaju, Iseyin, Kajola, Itesiwaju and Iwajowa local government councils. He said the area has all it takes to be a viable state in terms of its 13,537 sq km of landmass; a population of 1.497 million people, according to the 2006 census, abundant economic and human resources endowments. Former National Chairman of Alliance for Democracy (AD) Chief Michael Koleoso and former Deputy Governor of Oyo State Chief  Iyiola Oladokun are part of the struggle for better prospects for Oke-Ogun.

    The zone is made up of 10 out of 33 local government areas in the state, with a population of about 1.5 million (as per 2006 National Census). Oke-Ogun has the largest landmass (about 60 per cent of the entire state), but lacks any noticeable government presence. This, according to the people of Oke-Ogun, is an indication of successive governments’ insensitivity to the plight of the people.

    The zone used to be the food basket of the state, but that is no longer the case, because the younger generation has not taken to farming; most of the farmers in the area today are old, tired and weak. There is no articulated policy towards encouraging the teeming youths to take to agriculture as a vocation and business. Tools for mechanised agriculture is beyond their reach, thus forcing the young ones, many of them graduates, to take to “Okada” riding business. This has often resulted in the loss of lives through Okada accidents because the young lads are always in a hurry in their approach to the business, to maximize their earnings.

    A prominent indigene of Oke-Ogun, Professor Segun Gbadegesin, bemoaned the total neglect of the region.  He said: “Oke-Ogun used to be the food basket of the Southwest until oil wealth took centre stage in governmental thought and action. Roads developed since 1962 literally disappeared. Okeho-Iseyin road is a federal road that has suffered this fate. It has been contracted out for repair multiple times by the previous administrations. Each time, the ruling party gave the contract to its hirelings with nothing to show. Meanwhile, farmers suffer losses because they are unable to move their produce to the market in timely fashion.

    “Water irrigation has been another important variable in viable agricultural revolution. In the Second Republic, one of the initiatives in this direction was the Ikerre Gorge Dam in Iseyin. It was almost completed, but the Federal Government abandoned it. We were told the dam was capable of supplying potable water as well as irrigation water for the whole of Oke-Ogun. However, it remains only a dream, as reptiles inhabit the Ikerre Gorge Dam now. What kind of government invests in laudable projects such as this only to abandon it?”

    The former Minority Leader in the Oyo State House of Assembly, Alhaji Adekunle Rafiu, also  painted a similar gory picture of Oke-Ogun when  he said: “There exists the fear among the stakeholders in the Oke-Ogun project that the existing political equation appears to have put a ceiling to the office to which a citizen of the region can aspire; as if perpetually restrained to second-in-command to the highest political office in the state, budgetary allocation has consistently been below 10 per cent of the state’s total budget, while lack of infrastructure finds permanent abode in the region.

    “Projects usually allotted the region by successive governments are usually mysteriously manipulated overnight by the powerful and their collaborators and moved to other zones. This is in utter disregard to the laid down formula for distribution of developmental amenities which prescribes that Oke-Ogun with 10 local government areas, takes after Ibadan zone with 11 local government areas as indicated in their record.”

    In the educational sphere, Adekunle said that the zone has always been short-changed, compared to other zones. All that Oke-Ogun can boast of is the satellite campus of the Ibadan Polytechnic located in Saki when other tertiary institutions were cited in Oyo, Ogbomoso and Ibarapa. According to him, no indigene of Oke-Ogun has risen to the position of Chief Judge. He added that the pattern is not different from the subsisting scenario as could be seen in other spheres of life.

    A traditional ruler who spoke in confidence said Oke-Ogun will not accept anything less than governor in 2019. He said: “We are tired of playing second fiddle. We want one of our sons to occupy the exalted office in the next dispensation. The other zones that have produced governors did so with the support of Oke-Ogun. In fact, the votes from Oke_Ogun used to decide the winner. If we had assisted other zones in the past to win governorship elections, they should also support our zone in 2019. Our demand is that the office of governor should go round the four zones.

    “Under the present democratic dispensation, it is the right of the people to aspire for any office. It is also the right of the people to decide their socio-political direction, judging from the prevailing conditions, where the Oke-Ogun area has been underdeveloped by successive administrations.”

    However, Gbadegesin blamed the problem of intra-state power shift on prolonged military rule which, according to him, disrupted the growth of democracy in the country and also prevented generation of citizens from active participation in the leadership of political associations and involvement in governance generally. If there had been no lengthy military rule, many individuals and groups would have benefitted, he added.

    On the rationale of power shift demand by the Oke-Ogun zone, Gbadegesin who was recently conferred with a chieftaincy title, the Asiwaju of Okeho, said it is important to note that the progressive development of the state requires all of its parts to share a sense of belonging. He argued that this is only possible if there is genuine expectation that anyone from any part can successfully aspire to the highest political position in the state. To this extent, Oke-Ogun indigenes have a good case for their humble request, he emphasised.

    In the same vein, the Professor of Philosophy did not hesitate to point out the limitation of power shift. He premised his argument on three planks. “First, power shift and zoning are, to all intents and purposes, controversial concepts. For us to ask for power shift from one zone or area to another is to suggest that the proposed beneficiary zone or area is incapable of engaging in a fair contest without the backing of zoning formula.

    “Second, it is important to note that no one gives up power willingly or voluntarily. It has to be struggled for. Third, even when power shift is accepted, the beneficiaries have to be seen as both competent and dependable and they must prove their mettle to all the stakeholders.

    “By and large, power shift or zoning does not necessarily curtail the fierceness of a successful struggle for power. This, notwithstanding, the genuine aspirations of Oke-Ogun indigenes deserves the support of all parts of the state.”

  • ‘Foreign exchange imbalance affecting power firms’

    The imbalance in the foreign exchange regime, occasioned by the falling rate of naira, is taking its toll on the operations of new power investors, the Chairman, Egbin Power Plc, Mr. Kola Adesina, has said.

    He said the power distribution companies (DisCos) are spending more money than before to buy equipment abroad, because  the naira is falling at abysmal rate.

    While speaking at a stakeholders’ meeting in Lagos, Adesina said the problem facing the naira has made it difficult for power firms  to survive, since they depend on Original Equipment Manufacturers(OEMs) in their   production.

    He said: “When we bought Egbin Power Company when the sector was privatised in 2013, naira was sold for N159 per dollar. At a point, the value of naira reduced further as it was sold for N179 to a dollar, and later N196 to a dollar at the official window. The situation was worse at the black market where dollar is sold for N220 and above. This is not without its attendant consequence on operators in the sector.’’

    According to him, spare parts used in the industry can only be procured in dollars, stressing that the development is having far-reaching effects on the performance of the operators.

    Adesina said despite the fiscal problem, among others, facing the sector, and the economy, Egbin Power has weathered the storm to record some successes.

    He said the achievements included increased megawatts (Mw) of electricity, thereby making the turbines functional, among others.

    Adesina said the recent one was the dedication of 220 megawatts of electricity to Lagos, by Egbin. He said this would not have been possible without the support of the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo.

    “When we choose to dedicate the 220 megawatts to Lagos, the Vice President, Osinbajo stood by us,” he added.

  • Solar energy best solution to power problem

    SIR: The energy deficit in Nigeria that lingered for several decades often fuels a sense of fatalism and paralysis. Inadequate and unreliable electricity undermines economic growth, development and investments. The social, economic and human costs are devastating. Many of our citizens are living without electricity.

    Energy is the single most important key to eliminate poverty. If Nigeria wants to reach its target of vision 20/20, affordable, reliable and accessible electricity has to be available to the populace. Nigerian economy may be booming and the largest in Africa, but continuing growth and quality of life can be jeopardized by lack of electric power.

    NEPA/PHCN has delivered tonnes of excuses and disappointments to Nigerians. During his presidency, former President Olusegun Obasanjo told Nigerians that the electricity deficit was caused by the distribution not generation of power. Back in 2011 former vice president Namadi Sambo earnestly informed us that the use of generators as power sources in the households across the country will be a thing of the past within two years.

    In his inaugural address, President Muhammad Buhari stated that the government has spent over $20 billion in the electric power sector from 1999 to date. He promised to set up a committee to handle the crisis in the energy sector.

    It was revealed that Nigerians spend about $6 billion annually to fuel their generators. The country boasts the highest concentration of small scale generators in the world.  An average Nigerian spends on electric energy about 60 times more than the citizens of Canada, Russia, America or Belgium.

    Yet on the flip side of this crisis are enormous opportunities for Nigeria. As the population increases so do the electric power consumption. For Nigeria to meet up with its energy needs, it must diversify and look for alternative sources. The electricity generation should diversify to include significant share of different sources such as diesel, coal, biomass, wind and solar.

    Solar power system can become a viable solution to Nigeria’s electricity crisis. Nigeria has some of the world’s most abundant and least exploited renewable energy sources especially solar power. Solar energy technology can be sized to fit the energy needs anywhere in this country, from light to business, households, schools, hospitals, ministries to an entire village. Apart from the initial cost of  installing solar systems, the technology does not require any running cost, unlike the traditional petro/diesel generators .

    Nigerian Government should encourage and support the use of solar systems in various part of the country by educating the population on its cost effectiveness, introducing specific programmes to help facilitate rural energy access, implementing tax exemption on all solar products and encouraging the private sector, NGOs and distributing companies to get involved in the provision and development of solar technology.

    • Hassan Musa,

    hmringman@yahoo.com

  • Power restored in Ondo communities

    Power restored in Ondo communities

    After eight months of darkness, power has been restored in four Ire-Akari communities in Ose Local Government Area of Ondo State.

    The development came after the resolution of disagreement between the Benin Electricity Distribution Company (BEDC) and the communities.

    BEDC’s Head in Ondo and Ekiti states Ernest Edgar, after the meeting, promised to restore power in the area immediately.

    Consequently, some areas have been lit as part of the fulfillment of the agreement reached.

    Power has been restored at the Federal Government College, Ido-Ani.

    State Electricity Board (OSEB) Chairman Olatunji Oshati had promised to intervene in the crisis, which left the communities without power for eight months.

    Oshati said it was the duty of the government to be responsive to the plight of the people.

     

  • The Power Bug

    Senegal’s President Macky Sall last week slashed his term of office by two years, making good on a proposal he made last year. The Senegalese constitution stipulates a seven-year term limit, which had been in place since 1960 when the country secured independence from France. But President Sall, who was elected in 2012, cut his own term to five years, meaning the next presidential election will be in 2017 and not 2019. The president was reported as saying the decision was part of a 15-point constitutional development action plan he is advocating for. By last week’s announcement, he preempted a referendum that had been proposed to hold in the West African country in April 2016, but on which there was partisan bickering over cost concerns. Sall’s predecessor, Abdoulaye Wade, who took power in 2000, had promised to get the tenure reduced to five years, but failed to do so in his 12-year . While making the term reduction proposal last year, Sall reportedly said: “Have you ever seen presidents reduce their mandate? Well, I’m going to do it. We have to understand, in Africa too, that we are able to offer an example, and that power is not an end in itself.”

    One isn’t sure if President Sall’s unilateral pronouncement is legally valid under Senegal’s constitution, but there is no question that his move is uniquely ennobling and refreshingly un-African. I mean, this is one continent that is blighted by power potentates and life presidents. For whatever his pronouncement is worth, Sall is in a class of his own. Nguema Mbasogo has ruled Equatorial Guinea since 1979 and is holding firmly on, same as Eduardo dos Santos in Angola, also since 1979. Robert Mugabe has been in power in Zimbabwe since 1980, and Paul Biya in Cameroon since 1982. Yoweri Museveni has ruled Uganda since 1986, while Sudan’s Omar Hassan al-Bashir has been in power since 1989. Before he fled power amidst a violent uprising in October 2014, Blaise Compaore had ruled Burkina Faso for 27 years and was actively plotting a constitutional amendment to extend his rule. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, Joseph Kabila, who came to power in 2001, has pushed forward by up to four years the presidential election that was constitutionally billed to hold in November 2016. Congo-Brazzaville, last October, passed a constitutional amendment to extend the reign of Denis Sassou Nguesso, who already has ruled the country for 31 years. And there are many more.

    We needn’t say much here about seminal literary interventions, like Wole Soyinka’s A Play of Giants, that have satirised the unwholesome trend. There is a recent peer critique that is significant enough. During his three-nation tour of East Africa in July 2015, President Barack Obama jabbed at calcified regimes in Africa and the failure of leaders to respect constitutional provisions on term limits. In an address to African Union heads of governments in Addis, Ethiopia, he tutored his African peers on some rudiments of leadership morality. “Nobody should be president for life. Your country is better off if you have new blood and new ideas,” he told them.

    The American leader, who himself serves out his own second term in office this year, presented himself as a model for giving up power when term limits are reached: “I’m still a pretty young man, but I know that somebody with new energy and new insights will be good for my country. It will be good for yours too.” To make the point, he allowed himself some immodesty: “I actually think I’m a pretty good president. I think if I ran, I could win. There’s a lot that I’d like do to keep America moving. But the law is the law, and no person is above the law, not even the president.” He also submitted that the familiar argument from necessity by perpetual rulers won’t wash: “When a leader tries to change the rules in the middle of the game just to stay in office, he risks instability and strife, as we’ve seen in Burundi. And this is often just a first step down a perilous path. Sometimes you’ll hear leaders say, ‘Well, I’m the only person who can hold the nation together.’ If that’s true, then that leader has failed to truly build their nation.”

    Burundi as an example of the disgraceful power bug was spot on. The country has been wracked by violence since President Pierre Nkurunziza announced his intention to seek another five-year term in office. Nkurunziza has ruled his country for 10 years, and Burundi’s constitution allows a president to be elected twice – making a total of 10 years in power. But the president went hair splitting with his country’s constitution, saying he had been elected only once, as it was the Burundi parliament that posted him in power in 2005, following which he stood for election five years later. He defied protests by his countrymen and the international community to stand for re-election last year. And though he was declared winner, observers adjudged the poll as not free, fair, credible or inclusive, and the United Nations mission said it held “in an environment of profound mistrust by political rivals.” Nkurunziza regardless took oath for another five-year term in August 2015, which would see him stay in power for 15 years – that is, if constitutional provisions are henceforth respected.

    The latest tribesman of the bug is Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame, who has confirmed that he will seek a third term when his present tenure expires in 2017. Kagame became president in 2000, but he has effectively been in power since 1994 when his rebel forces entered Kigali to end the genocide by Hutu extremists in which some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed. Rwanda’s constitution stipulated two seven-year presidential terms until a recent change that effectively opens the way for Kagame to stay in power until 2034; because by the amendment, he can run for another seven-year term in 2017, followed by two five-year terms. Kagame is celebrated as a restorative leader who brought stability and economic growth to the formerly war-torn country, and more than 98% of Rwandans voted in a referendum last December to lift the term limit and allow him to extend his time in power. But he is also widely perceived as repressive of opposition and the media. In any event, if good performance accords a leader an indefinite right to power, Africa is really miserable to have a paucity of eligible persons. Besides, only a negligible number of Africa’s potentates can be said to be good leaders.

    By all means, Sall is an African example that deserves to be celebrated. Here in Nigeria, there is some respect, if only nominally, for constitutional term limits. Former President Goodluck Jonathan, in 2015, assayed the Nkurunziza formula, but the electorate drew the line; and he has since eminently redeemed himself with the graceful concession of defeat. But the power bug pulsates in the mindset of politicians who ignore their governance responsibility once elected and actively scheme for another term, even though as permitted by the constitution. Or those who, knowing they are no longer eligible for an office, employ all chicanery to post surrogates as successors. The words of Macky Sall should be instructive: Power is not an end in itself.

  • Why push for review of power privatisation is gathering momentum

    Why push for review of power privatisation is gathering momentum

    Two years after the privatisation of the power sector, Nigerians, especially manufacturers, are yet to enjoy improved electricity supply. They are being slapped with arbitrary tariff increases and unwarranted disconnections. Disengaged electricity workers are agonising over non-payment of their gratuity, severance allowance and other entitlements. These have prompted calls for a review of the exercise, Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports.

    The Chairman, Economic Policy Committee (EPC), Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Mr Reginald Ike Odiah, is angry.

    He does not hide his anger and frustration over the huge toll irregular electricity supply is taking on manufacturers and others operators in the economy. Odiah, the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Bennett Industries Limited, was forced, at a forum, to raise the alarm that despite the handover of the power sector to private investors under privatisation, two years ago, manufacturers still spend a whopping N500 billion yearly for running and maintaining their power plants.

    The forum was the 48th Annual General Meeting (AGM) of MAN Ikeja branch, Lagos. Presenting a paper titled: ‘Serious constraints to sustainability of the real sector (From a manufacturer’s perspective),’ he expressed regrets that the handover of the 18 successor companies of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) to new core investors has failed to provide the anticipated reprieve in the form of improved electricity supply to Nigerians especially manufacturers. He said the huge cost of providing alternative electricity is largely responsible for the high production cost for manufacturers.

    Giving details of the unsavoury consequences of skyrocketing cost of production to manufacturers as a result of irregular power supply, Odiah said: “Manufacturing cost in Nigeria is twice that of Ghana, four times that of South Africa and Europe, and nine times that of China and Malaysia.”

    He listed other crippling effects of high production cost to include low Gross Domestic Product (GDP) contribution by the real sector, especially manufacturing to the economy; lack of interest in investing in Nigeria by both local and foreign investors; closure of factories and migration of surviving ones to greener pastures and others.

    For instance, while Nigeria’s real sector contribution to GDP, according to Odiah, currently stands at 9.5 per cent, those of the United States (U.S) and China stand at 35.6 per cent and 49.5 per cent  respectively. Also, Japan, India and Germany boast of 38.2 per cent, 38.4 per cent and 35.9 per cent real sector contribution to GDP, respectively. He said the sector’s low GDP contribution to the local economy caused by lack of basic infrastructure, especially electricity, is also responsible for the huge losses in tax revenue for the government as well as the high unemployment rate.

    Indeed, manufacturers’ productivity and competitiveness have continued to nosedive despite the power sector privatisation. MAN President, Dr. Frank Udemba Jacobs admitted this much when he said a survey by MAN on manufacturers’ energy consumption in 2014 showed that on monthly average, manufacturers expended over N73.12 million on alternative sources of energy.

    Speaking during an interactive session between the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and MAN, he said the share of energy cost to total cost of production in the sector was about 40 per cent.

    The Federal Government had in November 2013 unbundled PHCN into 18 successor companies and subsequently handed over the power assets of the successor companies to private investors. The exercise was expected to set the stage for a major transformation of the power sector to guarantee uninterrupted electricity supply to the manufacturing sector and Nigerians in general. But two years after, this has not happened. Rather than enjoy significant improvement in electricity supply, Nigeria’s electricity generation capacity has been wobbling between 3, 500 Megawatts (Mw) and 4, 000 Mw in the last two years, leaving sour taste in the mouth of consumers.

    While Nigerians, in their usual never-say-die-disposition, would probably have taken the deplorable and unfortunate situation in their stride, the arbitrary and startling increase in tariff and other discomforting developments such as fixed charges and unwarranted disconnections by electricity distribution companies (DisCos) have continued to rob salt to injury. The fixed charge is that component of the tariff that commits electricity consumers to paying an certain amount of money mostly on a monthly basis, irrespective of whether electricity is consumed during the billing period or not.

    The DisCos have been clamouring for tariff increase even before privatisation. They however, had their way penultimate week when Federal Government, in what could pass as ‘Christmas gift’ to DisCos, approved new electricity tariffs in the country. The new tariff regime increased tariff by about 45 per cent.

    According to NERC Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Dr. Sam Amadi, electricity consumers would no longer pay the contentious and vexatious fixed charge included in the monthly electricity bills issued by the 11 DisCos in the country. Consumers would now only pay for what they consume monthly (pay-as-you-consume).

    But it is doubtful if Amadi’s explanation doused growing public outcry that Nigerians are being short-changed by DisCos while NERC allegedly looked the other way.

    For Mr Henry Boyo, an economic analyst, the most worrisome of the shoddy privatisation exercise was the fact that despite not getting improvement in power supply, Nigeria ended up with a loss of N400 billion after selling the DisCos. “The same group of people to whom we sold the distribution and generation companies and made a loss of N400 billion incurred from the allowances and outstanding payments to contractors and all that, suddenly find that they don’t have the money to run the companies efficiently,” he said.

    Boyo told The Nation that it was curious that in spite of the fact that Nigeria ended up with N400 billion in debts as a result of selling the DisCos, government still went ahead to give the private investors soft loan to enable them run supposedly privatised entities.

    “In view of the abysmal performance in the power sector, President Muhammadu Buhari should take a closer look at how Nigerians were left with over N400billion debt after the privatisation of the distribution network of the former PHCN.

    “It is equally curious that two years thereafter, government continues to breastfeed the DisCos with selective interest waivers, which have not guaranteed low tariffs or improved performance,” Boyo said.

    For electricity workers, privatisation of the power sector was the height of shoddiness. They are, therefore, advocating a review. Acting under the aegis of National Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE), the workers insist that the review was necessary in view of the fact that the new core investors have failed to make significant investment in the growth and development of the sector.

    Speaking with The Nation at the its  fifth Quadrennial/10th Delegates Conference in Lafia, the Nasarawa State capital, its immediate past National President Comrade Mansur Muhammed Musa said apart from the investment the Federal Government made in the sector before the sale, the investors have not considered it expedient to invest in the sector’s growth. This, he said, was why despite the privatisation, Nigerians still groan in darkness, lack of metres, dearth of power infrastructure and high tariff, among other issues.

    While accusing the investors of smiling to the bank at the expense of Nigerians, especially workers who have little or nothing to show for their hard work, Musa pointed out that the investors have failed to meet most of the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs), which the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) spelt out to them before privatisation. “I strongly advocate for a review of the privatisation exercise,” Musa emphasised, noting that the terrain and industrial climate of the sector has been gloomy after the handover of the sector to the investors about two years ago.

    “If you look at what is happening in the power sector, you will see that nothing has changed. The proponents of privatisation, that is government as the leader, said there would be foreign direct investment inflow into the sector, and that there will be efficiency.

    “But two years after, we have not seen investments and the owners of the new companies do not have the competence to run the power sector. All of them did not run any power sector before they came to buy,” he told The Nation.

    Musa said what Nigerians are experiencing is tariff review or adjustment in collaboration with NERC despite the fact that power production is still wobbling at between 3, 00 and 4, 000 Mw while tariff keeps rising.

    “NERC was to cap the ceiling of estimation; they will tell the investors or the companies that they cannot charge an estimated bill beyond certain amount. That would have encouraged the companies to supply metres to the customers, but they did not do that.

    “So, what the companies are doing now is that they give estimated bills. So, you find out that you don’t have electricity, but you must pay higher bills,” he lamented.

    It is not electricity workers’ grouse that is fuelling the call for a review, disengaged workers of the power firm have one complain or the other aginst the process.

    At the last count, over 5, 000 disengaged staff of PHCN’s 50, 000 workforce are yet to be paid their gratuity, severance and other entitlements two years after privatisation.

    NUEE General Secretary, Joe Ajaero, lamented that the government reneged on its promise to pay the gratuity and pension arrears of the workers. “The government has not fulfilled its obligation to pay the gratuity and pension of PHCN workers because each of the about 50, 000 staff of PHCN has one case or the other,” he said.

    Ajaero said, for instance, over 1, 000 death benefits were yet to be paid to the next-of-kin of workers who died in service, while many former PHCN workers are yet to be paid their leave bonuses by the government. Others are also yet to get their bulk housing rent, which, before privatisation, was usually paid once a year.

    “We pay bulk housing once in a year. So, if your monthly housing is N10, 000,  nobody will pay you the N10, 000 at the end of the month; they will pay you N120, 000 either at the beginning or at the end of the year depending on the category you fall into to enable people pay house rent in bulk. So, many people fall under this category and they have not paid them,” he  said.

    He expressed regrets that the government failed to meet its obligation on the payment of workers’ entitlements despite signing agreement with the union around June 2012. He said workers’ entitlements were calculated up to that month. “By that time, if you had worked for 10 years up to June 2012, government did not pay this entitlement till October/November 2013, and there was a period of 16 months in-between. You now pay the person for those 10 years when there is additional 16 months entitlement and even pension contribution.”

    He said though the union insisted that the additional 16 months cannot be national service, the government, at a stage, said it was going to pay only pension, which is 7.5 per cent, leaving the gratuity and severance component.

    Ajaero, who described the power sector privatisation as an ‘arrangee’, argued that before liquidating a company, the liquidator must address the issue of creditors, and the first in the issue of creditors is employee creditors. “Under the Company and Allied Matters Act (CAMA), employee creditors are paramount,” he said.

    Ajaero pointed out that the Nigeria Electricity Liability Management Company (NEMCO) Limited, which was set up to take over PHCN’s core assets, ought to have known that since PHCN has an old workforce and a pool of retirees, their pension is supposed to continue.

     

    NERC’s position

    Amid growing agitation for review of the power privatisation, NERC says it believes in the sanctity of the privatisation process. Dr Amadi said his commitment to the on-going privatisation of the power sector remains unwavering. He also reassured investors, both within and outside the country, of the regulator’s commitment to drive the reform process to a conclusive end.

    On the new tariff regime, the Commission said: “It was the result of a transparent, rigorous and credible rate review process that will lead to greater reliability in the provision of electricity. It added that with the review, “more people will progressively have access to the grid, more meters will be deployed and the need for self generation would be gradually reduced.”

    NERC said it expects DisCos to provide better customer service in all aspects of their operations and would hold them responsible for their service level agreements.