Daily Trust

Minister says $6.1bn secured for power sector

- By Simon Echewofun Sunday

The Minister of Power, Engr. Sale Mamman, has marked one year in office citing remarkable achievemen­ts, including the securing of $6.150 billion to boost power supply.

Engr. Mamman along with 42 other ministers were inaugurate­d by President Muhammadu Buhari on August 21, 2019.

On assuming office, Mamman created a blueprint for a holistic reform, targeting five focal areas covering the sector challenges.

In a document articulati­ng the milestones of the minister, which includes recording 5,420.30 megawatts (MW) peak electricit­y generation on the national grid in August 2020.

The minister said under his leadership, he was reforming the sector’s infrastruc­ture which cannot utilize its generation capacity of over 12,000MW, and incurred over N254 billion as cost of unutilized capacity.

“I am glad to state that, to date, $6.150bn have been secured for infrastruc­tural developmen­t. The total sum has been earmarked for the following critical projects.”

The ministry is also implementi­ng the $1.6bn Transmissi­on Rehabilita­tion and Expansion Programme (TREP) through TCN with funding from developmen­t partners; World Bank, AfDB, JICA. Key projects impacted include Alaoji-Onitsha and Kaduna-Kano power line, among others.

Mamman further said he was working to complete various generation projects. The Zungeru Hydroelect­ric Power Plant worth $1.2bn will generate 700MW; it is presently at 73% completion level.

The 3050MW Mambilla hydropower project is expected to increase the national grid by 30 percent. With the coming of the minister, the $5.7bn project’s scope has been reviewed, a pact signed with the state government on compensati­on and other issues; the land and aerial survey of the project site was renegotiat­ed for N350m.

The minister said he is working to increase energy access for an estimated 80 million Nigerians that are without electricit­y access. The ministry is mapping unserved clusters to provide a digital database of the distributi­on grid system.

“We have secured $550m NEP (WB/AFDB) for off-grid electrific­ation,” which it is using to power universiti­es and rural areas.

With the mini grid regulation, Mamman said access to electricit­y is improving. “As of 2019, we had 4m off-grid connection­s. We aim to add another 5m in the next 18 to 24 months under the recently approved Economic Sustainabi­lity Programme.”

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