Tag: POWER

  • Power firms target September for adequate gas delivery

    Investors in power sector are banking on the appointment of key government’s officials in September to get gas to improve electricity supply, The Nation has learnt.

    It was gathered that investors who bought the 10 power plants built under the National Integrated Power Project (NIPP) by the Niger Delta Power Holding Company of Nigeria (NDPHC) on behalf of the Federal Government, and the successor companies from the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN), believe that President Muhammadu Buhari will appoint people who would formulate policies that would help power firms to access  gas for optimal performanance .

    The Chief Executive officer, Abuja Power Station, Abaji, Jammel Jammal, said the September date slated for appointment of ministers and heads of parastatals by the president would determine where the pendulum swings in the nation’s energy sector.

    He said investors in the gas powered plants are waiting for the president to appoint officials  that would fix the pipelines in order to ensure the turbines access gas for power generation. He said many of the plants have not been accessing gas due either to pipeline breakage or what he described as collocation – that is lack of proximity between where the pipelines and the turbines are located.

    He said his firm has the capacity to generate 500 megawatts (Mw) of electricity but the company has not been generating power since March  this year, due to lack of gas.

    He said: “We in Abuja Power Station plan to resume production in September, that is six months after we stopped electricity generation. Our decision is based on the statement by President Buhari that he would appoint members of his  cabinet in September. When the president appoints his ministers, the sector would witness positive developments.”

    Jammal said the pipelines and other components vital to the distribution of gas to the power plants are bad, stressing that the appointment of key officials that would manage the sector is the only thing the investors are waiting for. “It is on record that those contacted by the past government to secure the pipelines have been stopped. However, there is need to hire people that would fix and protect the gas pipelines from vandals,” he added.

    Also, the Chief Executive officer, Sahara Power Company (owners of Ikeja Electric and Egbin Power Plant), Kola Adesina said activities in the sector will be improved if President Buhari fixes the sector’s infrastructure. He said gas is a feedstock in the sector and urged the government to give provision and usage of gas priority in order to improve power generation and supply.

    He said the problems facing the sector are many, adding that gas is the major one. According to him, the industry is looking up at the new government to tackle infrastructure problems especially gas to improve electricity generation.

    He urged stakeholders to see power as an economic and not political issue, arguing that it is by doing the right pricing mechanism or model that the power firms will benefit as well as gas producers, and consumers.

    The spokesman, Niger Delta Power Holding Company, Yakubu Lawal said the company has built the power plants under its custody, stressing that gas is delaying the take -off of the plants. He said the company does not concern itself with gas production and distribution, stressing that it has successfully carried out its mandate of building and preparing the plants for investors to take them over, upon meeting all the criteria prepared by the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) for the sale of the plants.

  • Group canvasses power shift in Kogi

    Ahead of the governorship election in Kogi State, a group, under the Kogi Equity Initiative (KEI), has called for power shift from the East Senatorial District to another zone in the state.

    The group alleged that, since the creation of the state in 1991, the slot and other key political appointment have been skewed towards an ethnic group.

    In a communiqué in Ilorin KEI chairman and secretary, Dada Fehinti and Comrade Taiwo Otitolaye said power should shift to give the zones a sense of belonging.

    “We are united by common destiny of political equity, power shift and social justice in line with the collective aspirations of our people that have been marginalized for over twenty years.” the group said.

    The group added: “Since the creation of Kogi State, no non-Igala has been governor and given the backwardness of human and capital development, despite the enormous resources; when compared with other states created at the same time, power shift is inevitable.

    “We express dissatisfaction with the way some positions and offices are been made birth right of the Igalas and, therefore, demand for equity and justice for the people of Kogi West and Central.

  • Way out of power outage and related challenges

    The Akoka Campus of the University of Lagos (UNILAG) enjoys 20-23 hours power supply, baring any electrical fault. The power situation is relatively stable and encouraging for learning, that students and residents are wondering if they are still living in Nigeria, or if they are living in a fantasy land. Power Holding Company of Nigeria is the major source of power supply to the school with support from giant generating sets. Sometimes ago, the university management published that it took a huge sum of money to maintain the generating sets. No serious organisation will wholeheartedly trust the power provided by PHCN, because of their incessant outages. Their excuses, of course, usually range from installation issues to shortage of gas supply, thereby keeping the whole school in the dark. As a response mechanism, management resorts to rationing power among faculties, halls of residence, leaving essential departments like the medical centre and study room to power their facilities with generating sets.

    The importance of power in an academic environment cannot be overemphasized, as there are many activities which are power dependent — from public address systems, projectors, to cooling systems such as fans and air conditioners. A university is not worth the name if it does not encourage research. This can only be realised when students and lecturers are provided with an enabling environment. And yet, in the final analysis, inventions and creativity are fuelled by electricity, a least, to a great extent.

    As a student with great potentiality just like many others, I advise management of federal schools to look inward by developing other sources of power such as wind, solar and waste as these will not only reduce the financial burden of maintaining generators, it will reduce noise pollution and promote a totally noiseless environment. It should encourage researchers to develop plausible means of generating suitable power supply that will power the entire campus. There is no doubt that harnessing other sources of power will provide adequate supply of electricity, thereby improving the standard of living on campus.

    If there is somewhere that should never have issue of power or that should not have generators and PHCN as itssole sources of power is the university campus. This is because,by all intent and purpose,continued research is a major activity of any learning environment. To a large extent, this goes to show our retrogressive move towards development especially as no nation develops without electricity. University management must, as a matter of urgency, devote quality attention towards contributing solutions to this nation’s myriad of power challenges instead of joining in consumption. President Buhari should empower universities by encouraging research projects that are energy driven as it will not only benefit these schools but the entire nation.

    Although the power condition is pretty stable now but the school must forestall a situation where the university is not put in perpetual darkness by PHCN as it can be unpredictable. The school management should be able to look inward as there are great minds waiting for the slightest opportunity to manifest their inventiveness. What they seek is maximum support. It is obvious that management has intention to reinvent other sources in order to boost its power capacity. All of these measures can be sped up to limit the extent of disappointment that will be occasioned byPHCN’s unannounced outage. Resources and strong will are two major constituents meant for the realisation of this laudable dream. It is common knowledge that today, most countries are going green and moving towards the rescue of the depleting ozone layer, thereby using less-harmful means to generate power. University of Lagos, the university of first choice and the nation’s pride, should be able to reposition and lead the entire nation in finding alternative power to drive research and real growth in our economy. The sun, the wind and waste are ever in abundant supply, which make the dream pretty realistic. Universities must take their rightful place in developmental strides of a nation, and government in turn, should be willing to empower them financially and constitutionally in order to truly set the pace. Recently attempts have been made to provide a few lecture theatres with inventers but their duration remains a puzzle yet to be resolved.

     

    Chima, 400-Level Philosophy, UNILAG

     

  • ‘Improved power supply likely to be sustained’

    ‘Improved power supply likely to be sustained’

    Nigerians seemed to have witnessed improvement in power supply in the last few weeks. The said increase in available generation from 4,517 megawatts (mw) to 4,545mw within two weeks as announced by the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN), may have further confirmed that the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) is developing.

    The reason for the noticeable relative stability in supply is attributable to improvements across the electricity supply value chain, which include gas supply, reduced vandalism and upgrade of generation facilities by the new investors.

    Pipeline vandalism, which has been a major challenge to increased  output from the power plants, it was gathered, has reduced drastically since President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration came on board about one and half months ago. The frequency of pipelines vandalisation has reduced significantly, The Nation learnt.

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Joint Venture companies also confirmed that there have not been any incidents of vandalisation of pipelines in the past one month. This has resulted in increased and sustainable gas supply to the power sector.

    Besides, the result of investments made by the privatised successor companies, which unbundled the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN), has started to manifest after one and half years the companies were handed over to them.

    For instance, Egbin Power Plc and Transcorp Ughelli Power Limited have added more than 1000 megawatts (mw) to the capacities they inherited at the time of handover.

    As at the beginning of this week, generation from Egbin power plant rose from 1000mw two weeks ago to 1016MW as against a maximum output of 500MW at handover. Sahara Power Group and Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO), owners of Egbin power plant and Ikeja Electricity Distribution Company confirmed that gas supply to the plant increased considerably. They said the improvement in generation was also due to continued investment and upgrade activities on the plant. They assured that the improvement in supply will not only be sustained, but improved upon adding of the six turbines of the power plant that are currently operational. “This is the first time the plant with installed capacity 1320mw is generating above 1000mw,” the firm said. Egbin’s Chief Executive Officer, Dallas Peavey said about N50 billion has been invested in the power company post-privatisation with continuing investment in new technology, innovativeness, professionalism and human capital development.

    The owners of Transcorp Ughelli Power Limited just announced that it has increased output from the asset from 160MW on takeover on November 1, 2013 to 635MW and plans to expand it to 2,200MW in the next three years.

    The Group Executive Director, Gas and Power, NNPC, Dr David Ige said the Corporation is making a lot of progress in the East-West gas pipelines. According to him,  as at the end of May, the Corporation was   supplying over one billion standard cubic feet per day (I bscf/d) of gas to the power sector, adding that by now the production could have risen significantly.

    Ige, however, noted that the Corporation’s expectations is that  it will make significant increase in supply by the end of the year, adding that cumulative production for domestic use is about  two bscf/d.

    He also said some of the available gas is stranded because some power plants are not ready and where possible, the stranded gas will be redirected to operational plants.

    “Over the next couple of months, Nigerians will see increase in gas supply and power. For example, we have gas at Gbarain-Ubie power plant; we have gas at Omoku, which is awaiting the power plant and we have gas at Egbema power plant. When you bring all these gas volumes together, we have close to 2bcf/d, but not all of these are in active generation today. It is either the power plant is not ready or the power evacuation is not ready.

    “On the western side of Nigeria, the Lagos pipeline is almost completed. We have completed and commissioned Lagos to Oben; completed Emure to Itoki and the line from the Benin end to Emure is progressing very well. The expectation is that before the end of August, the Escravos-Lagos Pipeline would have been completed. With all these on stream power supply will improve considerably,” he said.

  • The power of atmospherics

    President Muhammadu Buhari recently rejected a proposal by the State House bureaucracy to procure five armoured Mercedes Benz cars worth N400 million for his comfort and safety. On Friday, he and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo announced a 50% cut in their salaries.

    Last week also, he met with within the confines of Aso Villa with the activists from the BringBackOurGirls (BBOG) group which has been campaigning for the rescue of hundreds of kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls. Not only did he meet with them, both sides ended up posing for a group photograph.

    This marks a sea change in relations between the seat of power and this influential citizens group. Before now Jonathan used to barricade himself within the villa while sending some female minister to engage BBOG leader, Dr. Oby Ezekwesili and her team in a shouting match. That is when former presidential aide Dr. Doyin Okupe wasn’t accusing the group of being in cahoots with the evil opposition APC and antagonizing the military. Back it always felt like Jonathan was threatened by BBOG.

    These populist moves that may not significantly change the state of the average citizen’s pocket. But it affects the overall atmospherics and sustains that sense that a new day has dawned in the country and things can never be the way they were ever again. Such symbolic gestures shouldn’t be dismissed lightly.

  • South Africa’s jobless ignite creative power with solar kits

    A motorbike accident two years ago in the Cape Town suburb of Milnerton left Pascal Kassongo with a leg fracture, multiple cuts and a written-off bike, crippling his courier business.

    Two weeks in hospital, followed by several more of physiotherapy and recovery, drove the father of four into near destitution.

    Too weak to buy and deliver goods to clients, his opportunity to earn 300-400 rand ($24.40-$32.60) a day was gone.

    Originally from Uvira in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, Kassongo fled the war there in 2007, and had only a few friends he could call on for help in South Africa.

    One of them was a pastor who took him to Scalabrini, a centre that helps migrants settle and find an economic foothold in South Africa.

    As well as receiving regular food parcels, Kassongo was recruited for the “Amandla!” Project, whose name means “power” in the Xhosa and Zulu languages.

    The scheme trains unemployed people, especially migrants, to run small businesses using a solar-powered kit called Ecoboxx.

    The Ecoboxx is a lightweight, portable power supply, charged with two solar panels, that can provide 50 hours of power. It comes with two LED lights, a USB-driven fan, hair clippers and a charging cable for cell phones and other devices.

  • The awesome power of the President

    “I know only two ways in which societies can permanently be governed –by public opinion and by the sword” –Thomas Babington Macaulay.

    Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay, British author and historian, even at 24 had carved a niche for himself as an advocate for ‘good governance’. At 30 he was elected to parliament; but even at that, he did not believe ‘democracy’ was sufficiently self-regulating to be left all on its own to function. In fact, in a letter once to a Jefferson biographer, he jived the American Constitution as being “all sail and no anchor”.

    Lord Macaulay seemed to suggest that ‘democracy’ even as it is a guide, must be guided to achieve the effective management of the affairs of societies.  And just as it is dangerous for the ‘ship of democracy’ to be left anchorless, without harbour, so it is that it should be left adrift without a rudder!

    Many philosophers have argued that the ‘due democratic process’ alone may not always take democratic societies to the Eldorado promised by ‘democracy’, and that left on auto-pilot, the process may even be a ‘spanner’ in the works rather than the ‘lubricant’ at work to breathe life to the system.

    Thus a little moulding of the ‘democratic process’ by ‘public opinion’, some interference by the ‘party’ in loco parentis or even the occasional intervention of a fatherly-President, may be necessary from time to time to ease ‘swallow’ and to facilitate ‘digestion’ in the complex system of democratic governance.

    This may be why although Lord Macaulay was “against government by the sword”, yet he argued for “assertive -meaning ‘forcefully strong’- leadership”, which he said would be legitimate if it “earns the support of the people”. Thus ‘democracy’ –like ‘law’- is not averse to the application of reasonable ‘force’ where such is approved or condoned by the very ‘people’ in whom ultimate sovereignty lies.

    Meaning that a little tinkering -when necessary- with the ‘democratic process’ by political leaders imbued either with conventional or constitutional powers, is not the enemy of democracy. Rather it is democracy in action. And if backed by the very people for whom and by whom the democratic system is brought about, ‘democracy in action’ has the liberty to function even against the grain of ‘its own norms’, –whether those norms are enshrined in the ‘statute books’ or etched in political text of books!

    The ‘law’ –both in statute and in action- is only sufficient to regulate the conduct of elected representatives. It has never been sufficient to regulate the revolutionary or majoritarian temperament of the people who have freely elected their governments into office. The people can, even against the grain of law, re-mould, retain or altogether overthrow the governments they have elected to office!

    And since the people are their own ultimate sovereigns, they alone determine what is democratic from what is not. What is ‘democratic’ is not necessarily what Constitutional Law says it is or what political scientists say it should be; rather it is what the people chose to live with; – nor is it material that what they choose to live with is not approved by law or that what they choose to oppose is lawful.

    Said Lord Macaulay “The law has no eyes; the law has no hands; the law is nothing … till public opinion breathes the breath of life into the dead letter.” And maybe this is the reason philosophers of law like David Ingram argue that “Democratic majorities can (and do) behave tyrannically”, – a privilege which he said “has led many to conclude that democracy does not protect the rule of law”. It cannot; because the ‘free will’ of the people should always be superior to the letter and spirit of the law which it permits.

    The ‘rule of law’ is not to be protected in spite of the ‘will of the people’. On the contrary since laws are promulgated to serve the people, any laws inconsistent with the democratic whim and caprices of the people are sacred only to the extent allowed not by the Constitution, but by the people.

    I have related in my previous writings postulations which argue that “in a presidential system, the President –constitutionally- is not only a composite check on the legislature, he even exercises ‘conventional’ powers which are not contemplated by the constitution and yet which are not in conflict with it.”

    In fact many other postulates insist that a populist President can even get away with the exercise of conventional powers which are EXPRESSLY IN CONFLICT with the Constitution, provided that such liberty resonates with the whims and caprices of the people. He can for example blatantly refuse to implement a legislation which he has vetoed but which veto has been overridden by the legislature. Provided he acts in the national interest, the President’s belligerence would be aptly on the side of righteousness.

    And because this power is rooted more in ‘democratic convention’ than in the letters of the law, reliance on it is usually contingent upon a vibrant public opinion which not only sides with the President but which is ready to swim with him or to swing for him whenever necessary.  Several American presidents including as recently as Bill Clinton had deployed this conventional power to great effect to call especially erring parliaments to order –Clinton exercised this power even at the expense of a total shutdown of government of the United States for months under his administration. In fact in deference to the revolutionary anger of the people, a strong and daring President can even dissolve a manifestly anti-people Parliament –even though dissolution of parliament is not an action supported or even contemplated by the Constitution.

    The Adolphus Wabara National Assembly, after President Obasanjo announced in a national broadcast he had caught many of its leaders and rank-and-file red-handed in the infamous ‘Bribe-for-Budget’ scandal, was virtually ripe for such presidential over-kill, – if only Obasanjo had exploited the anger of Nigerians and the sudden dip in the public perception index of that assembly.

    And so since the law need not actually advance the common good to be legitimate, the morale is equally legitimate that elected presidents need not actually be lawful to advance the common good of those who elected them into office! “When the law will do no right” as Shakespeare wrote, “let it be lawful that the law bars no wrong”!

    In a presidential democracy, a president whose ‘unconstitutional’ actions or intentions are in total synch with the will of the majority needs not apologize for anything. And although in going against the grain of the law he would be walking right ‘in the valley of the shadow of death’ as the Bible would say, yet he needs fear neither harm nor evil coming to him.

    Second Republic Governor of Kaduna State, Balarabe Musa, virtually said as much to the APC; and to President Buhari. So President Muhammadu Buhari should take a hint. Let your ‘righteousness’ exalt our ‘democracy’.

    ord Thomas Babington Macaulay, British author and historian, even at 24 had carved a niche for himself as an advocate for ‘good governance’. At 30 he was elected to parliament; but even at that, he did not believe ‘democracy’ was sufficiently self-regulating to be left all on its own to function. In fact, in a letter once to a Jefferson biographer, he jived the American Constitution as being “all sail and no anchor”.

    Lord Macaulay seemed to suggest that ‘democracy’ even as it is a guide, must be guided to achieve the effective management of the affairs of societies.  And just as it is dangerous for the ‘ship of democracy’ to be left anchorless, without harbour, so it is that it should be left adrift without a rudder!

    Many philosophers have argued that the ‘due democratic process’ alone may not always take democratic societies to the Eldorado promised by ‘democracy’, and that left on auto-pilot, the process may even be a ‘spanner’ in the works rather than the ‘lubricant’ at work to breathe life to the system.

    Thus a little moulding of the ‘democratic process’ by ‘public opinion’, some interference by the ‘party’ in loco parentis or even the occasional intervention of a fatherly-President, may be necessary from time to time to ease ‘swallow’ and to facilitate ‘digestion’ in the complex system of democratic governance.

    This may be why although Lord Macaulay was “against government by the sword”, yet he argued for “assertive -meaning ‘forcefully strong’- leadership”, which he said would be legitimate if it “earns the support of the people”. Thus ‘democracy’ –like ‘law’- is not averse to the application of reasonable ‘force’ where such is approved or condoned by the very ‘people’ in whom ultimate sovereignty lies.

    Meaning that a little tinkering -when necessary- with the ‘democratic process’ by political leaders imbued either with conventional or constitutional powers, is not the enemy of democracy. Rather it is democracy in action. And if backed by the very people for whom and by whom the democratic system is brought about, ‘democracy in action’ has the liberty to function even against the grain of ‘its own norms’, –whether those norms are enshrined in the ‘statute books’ or etched in political text of books!

    The ‘law’ –both in statute and in action- is only sufficient to regulate the conduct of elected representatives. It has never been sufficient to regulate the revolutionary or majoritarian temperament of the people who have freely elected their governments into office. The people can, even against the grain of law, re-mould, retain or altogether overthrow the governments they have elected to office!

    And since the people are their own ultimate sovereigns, they alone determine what is democratic from what is not. What is ‘democratic’ is not necessarily what Constitutional Law says it is or what political scientists say it should be; rather it is what the people chose to live with; – nor is it material that what they choose to live with is not approved by law or that what they choose to oppose is lawful.

    Said Lord Macaulay “The law has no eyes; the law has no hands; the law is nothing … till public opinion breathes the breath of life into the dead letter.” And maybe this is the reason philosophers of law like David Ingram argue that “Democratic majorities can (and do) behave tyrannically”, – a privilege which he said “has led many to conclude that democracy does not protect the rule of law”. It cannot; because the ‘free will’ of the people should always be superior to the letter and spirit of the law which it permits.

    The ‘rule of law’ is not to be protected in spite of the ‘will of the people’. On the contrary since laws are promulgated to serve the people, any laws inconsistent with the democratic whim and caprices of the people are sacred only to the extent allowed not by the Constitution, but by the people.

    I have related in my previous writings postulations which argue that “in a presidential system, the President –constitutionally- is not only a composite check on the legislature, he even exercises ‘conventional’ powers which are not contemplated by the constitution and yet which are not in conflict with it.”

    In fact many other postulates insist that a populist President can even get away with the exercise of conventional powers which are EXPRESSLY IN CONFLICT with the Constitution, provided that such liberty resonates with the whims and caprices of the people. He can for example blatantly refuse to implement a legislation which he has vetoed but which veto has been overridden by the legislature. Provided he acts in the national interest, the President’s belligerence would be aptly on the side of righteousness.

    And because this power is rooted more in ‘democratic convention’ than in the letters of the law, reliance on it is usually contingent upon a vibrant public opinion which not only sides with the President but which is ready to swim with him or to swing for him whenever necessary.  Several American presidents including as recently as Bill Clinton had deployed this conventional power to great effect to call especially erring parliaments to order –Clinton exercised this power even at the expense of a total shutdown of government of the United States for months under his administration. In fact in deference to the revolutionary anger of the people, a strong and daring President can even dissolve a manifestly anti-people Parliament –even though dissolution of parliament is not an action supported or even contemplated by the Constitution.

    The Adolphus Wabara National Assembly, after President Obasanjo announced in a national broadcast he had caught many of its leaders and rank-and-file red-handed in the infamous ‘Bribe-for-Budget’ scandal, was virtually ripe for such presidential over-kill, – if only Obasanjo had exploited the anger of Nigerians and the sudden dip in the public perception index of that assembly.

    And so since the law need not actually advance the common good to be legitimate, the morale is equally legitimate that elected presidents need not actually be lawful to advance the common good of those who elected them into office! “When the law will do no right” as Shakespeare wrote, “let it be lawful that the law bars no wrong”!

    In a presidential democracy, a president whose ‘unconstitutional’ actions or intentions are in total synch with the will of the majority needs not apologize for anything. And although in going against the grain of the law he would be walking right ‘in the valley of the shadow of death’ as the Bible would say, yet he needs fear neither harm nor evil coming to him.

    Second Republic Governor of Kaduna State, Balarabe Musa, virtually said as much to the APC; and to President Buhari. So President Muhammadu Buhari should take a hint. Let your ‘righteousness’ exalt our ‘democracy’.

    ‘In a presidential democracy, a president whose ‘unconstitutional’ actions or intentions are in total synch with the will of the majority needs not apologize for anything. And although in going against the grain of the law he would be walking right ‘in the valley of the shadow of death’ as the Bible would say, yet he needs fear neither harm nor evil coming to him’

  • BoI, firms partner to provide alternative power  

    BoI, firms partner to provide alternative power  

    The Bank of Industry (BOI) has partnered with two indigenous firms in the country to provide alternative source of power supply through renewable energy that will open up the industrial space for more entrepreneurs.

    The bank presented two cheques worth  N 75 million to two off-grid solar home system providers, GVE Projects limited and Arnergy Solar limited, under the BOI/UNDP Solar energy programme, to kick start the pilot scheme in six states across Nigeria.

    The Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, BOI, Mr. Rasheed Olaoluwa, at the presentation over the weekend, said the initiative is to alleviate poverty in the country by tackling the menace of inefficient power supply killing businesses in the country.

    The six states are Kaduna, Osun, Delta, Gombe, Niger and Anambra and according to Olaoluwa  “It will be tailored along the Pay As You Go  (PAYG) module used  successfully  by the telecommunication companies in the country and other states will be added  in the course of the programme”.

    Olaoluwa said: “The less than 4,000MW total electricity supply on our national grid relative to the conservatively estimated 40,000MW electricity demand, for a leading African economy like Nigeria, with a population of 170 million people, is grossly inadequate”.

    He said the partnership is essentially a programme aimed at poverty alleviation and rural economic development with the focus on remote communities that are not on the national grid.

    Tracing the history of power generation in Nigeria, the managing director said; “The first power plant in Nigeria was installed in Lagos in 1898 by the then colonial government and by the end of the last century, it was clear that central power plants had lost their economies of scale and could no longer deliver competitively cheap and reliable electricity to more remote customers through the national grid.

    He said renewable energy sources such as hydro (16 per cent), wind (three per cent) and solar (one per cent) are growing in relevance and commercial adoption on a global scale and the recent G7 meeting in June had agreed to de-carbonise the global economy by phasing out the use of fossil fuel by the end of this century, over the next 85 years, hence the need to embrace other source of energy.

    He said the medium term vision is to have 100,000 homes installed with solar systems in the next five years through a combination of micro-grid and stand-alone solar home systems

    On the partnership benefits, the Divisional head, Large Enterprises, BOI, Mr Joseph Babatunde rather than wait in vain for the national electricity grid, there is a golden opportunity for our rural communities to be empowered with affordable off-grid solar home systems that are operated on a PAYG basis.

    At the presentation were government delegates from Gombe, Kaduna, Osun and Niger states with the head of Arnergy Solar limited, Mr Femi Adeyemo asserting that the project will run for 25 years and will be effectively done so that Nigerians can benefit from it.

  • Ughelli power plant eyes 2,200Mw

    Ughelli power plant eyes 2,200Mw

    Transcorp Ughelli Power Limited, the core investors in Ughelli Power, says it plans to increase the generating capacity of the plant from 972 megawatts (Mw) to 2,200Mw in the next three years.

    Speaking during the visist of the post-privatisation monitoring team of the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE)  to the plant, its  Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Adeoye Fadeyibi, an engineer said on takeover of the plant on November 1, 2013, the core investor inherited only four operational turbines generating only 160MW of power.

    Fadeyibi, who was represented by the Chief Finance Officer, Mr. Olukunle Fagbayi, noted that by last month, the core investor had rehabilitated and made 13 out of the 18 units fully operational and generating about 635MW of available capacity.

    He said in the company’s generation forecast, by December, this year, the generation capacity would be raised to about 850Mw and in December 2017 to about 1,650Mw and 2,200Mw in 2018.

    He however lamented that due to the quality and quantity of gas available to the plant, only about 350Mw could be made available to the grid.

    He noted that another major challenge facing the company was the wheeling capacity of the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN).

    He urged the Federal Government on investment in the transmission segment of the value chain of the power infrastructure to strengthen the wheeling capacity of TCN.

    He said since takeover in November 2013, the company had engaged an additional 45 staff, assuring that Transcorp was going to surpass all the key performance indicators (KPIs) covenanted in its Post Acquisition Plan (PAP).

    The Chief Executive Officer also said as part of its corporate social responsibility, the company runs a model school with about 1,000 student enrolment as well as skills acquisition schemes for the host communities.

    The BPE is charged with monitoring the performances of privatised enterprises to ensure adherence to the tenets of the Share Purchase Agreements (SPAs), Performance Agreements (PAs) and full implementation of investors’ Post Acquisition Plans (PAP).

    The BPE Post-Privatisation Monitoring team to Ughelli Power Plc was led by the Director, Post Privatisation Monitoring Department, Mr. Chigbo Anichebe.

  • Egbin generates over 1000Mw

    Egbin generates over 1000Mw

    For the first time since inception, Nigeria’s largest generation plant, Egbin Power Plc has consistently generated above 1000 megawatts (MW) due to continued investment and upgrade activities on the plant by the Sahara Power Group and Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO).

    Eight years ago, the plant hit the 1000MW mark for about two hours and never attained it again until now. Prior to the privatisation of the plant in November 2013, the average generation was below 500MW as a result of poor state of its six turbines. At some point, only two of the six units were operational.

    The Chairman, Egbin Power Plc, Mr. Kola Adesina said the feat signposts the unfolding success of the privatisation process and power sector reform in Nigeria. He attributed the achievement partly to the direct intervention of the Federal Government in its determination to resolve the power crisis, which has resulted in recent improvement in gas supply. “This is driving the increase in power supply in the nation, boosting socio-economic development. Prior to this, we had invested heavily and had the plant ready to generate power at full capacity but there was no gas to do so. This is indeed a good development for the power sector in Nigeria,” he said. He commended the government for the recent intervention in the gas situation that has impacted power generation positively, and called for more dynamic policies and incentives for sustainable gas supply across the nation.

    The company’s Chief Executive Officer, Dallas Peavey said the transformation in Egbin commenced following its acquisition by Kepco Energy Resource Limited (KERL), in collaboration with its technical partners, Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO).

    He said: “Through the injection of close to N50 billion in new capital into Egbin post-privatisation, the Sahara Power/KEPCO partnership has brought to the power plant an unprecedented level of innovativeness, professionalism, human capital development and continuing investment in new technology. The control room panels, installed at the plant’s inception have been removed and upgraded to state of the art digital panels. The highlight of the main plant rehabilitation occurred in the first quarter of 2015, when the company successfully rehabilitated steam turbine (ST) Unit 6 bringing an additional 220mw to the national grid and restoring the power plant to its installed capacity of 1320mw,” he said.