Daily Trust

FG should inject funds in GenCos, DisCos to solve power problem – Igali

- By Simon Echewofun Sunday

The privatisat­ion of the power sector seems to be faulty. What is the way forward for the sector?

The power sector story is simple. With the privatisat­ion, we should look forward and very fast. Our privatisat­ion was termed by the World Bank as the most comprehens­ive sector privatisat­ion in the world ever. You have to know that the people who bought those assets must have borrowed money to buy.

The government has to guarantee the borrowing of cheap money from Developmen­t Financial Institutio­ns so that instead of going to borrow from the local market at about 20 percent interest rate which will make the tariff too high, they can borrow from World Bank or the African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) at about six to seven percent interest rate. They will make this money available to the privatised companies as loans repayable over a long period of time for them to upgrade and improve their infrastruc­ture because the assets that were sold were old ones.

What do you make of the privatisat­ion so far?

NEPA assets were dilapidate­d and there is a level that the firms, particular­ly the DisCos

Ambassador Godknows Boladei Igali was the Permanent Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Power who superinten­ded over the power sector privatisat­ion of 2013. In this interview with Daily Trust, he spoke about how to fix the current liquidity crisis and teething problems. are modernisin­g. Before now, if a medium issue and very soon, you go to some places, the poles Nigerians will see power because were bent and cables fallen off. everything is there. We have the They had to do a lot to build all capacity to generate 12,000 those things and they need to megawatts (MW). borrow a lot of money to do that. When I was in charge of the

When I was acting Minister sector, each time we got to about of Power for about seven 4,800MW, everybody was happy. months in 2015, I told President During that period for about Muhammadu Buhari that we four months in 2015, they said have to borrow money. Under the new sheriff is in town and former President Goodluck people said it was Buhari’s body Jonathan, the Central Bank of language that was responsibl­e Nigeria (CBN) borrowed the for the stable power supply. I GenCos and DisCos about N213 know the things I did; I had to billion and they were able to go to the creeks and talk people improve but there is a big market saying don’t vandalise, and I gap that has to be done by heavy engaged the people in the power borrowing. industry and moving from Abuja DisCo to Ibadan DisCo and to others to see what is happening and make things functional.

Fortunatel­y, the minister of finance has said government is borrowing $3 billion for the power sector. That is what should have been done since. There is a repayment mechanism in the power sector through tariff payment.

The investors could not borrow from the local banks where they had borrowed to buy the assets. There is also the

How should this borrowing be done?

Government is still 40 percent owner of the DisCos, so if we are borrowing, it is the right thing to do as government is still the owner, and government still reserves the right to take these things back. Government is the 20 percent owner of the GenCos, so if you are borrowing it is for itself. What we need to do is to increase the number of presence of government officials in the privatised companies. Instead of low level officers, it has to be directors and permanent secretarie­s sitting there; or government can appoint very senior people that are nongovernm­ent people to sit on the board of Abuja DisCo and others.

If government is not satisfied with the civil service, it can appoint from any place but not junior officers . If you appoint seasoned people, they will talk when they see things are not going right.

Do you think the power sector challenges would be resolved soon?

The power sector solution is issue of wrong assumption­s by the privatisat­ion transactio­n adviser which did not turn out well. There is an assumption that power will increase but power is not increasing because of this trap they found themselves in. New generation is not coming up and even the 14 licensed solar Independen­t Power Plants (IPPs) have not taken off; we are not increasing capacity to generate.

However when government borrows the money, let it have greater control and supervisio­n at two levels. First, the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission (NERC) should not sit in Abuja. The officials should follow the companies all the time, monitoring them. They should not borrow money and spend it on luxurious cars but they can buy operationa­l vehicles to solve problems.

Secondly, government should have senior men and serious people on the boards that will not be compromise­d.

For now, let the money government is borrowing come and they should give it to the companies on a performanc­ebased term. Some of the money can be paid directly to the Original Equipment Manufactur­er (OEM) for those things that needed to be fixed in the sector.

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 ??  ?? Ambassador Igali
Ambassador Igali

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