THISDAY

Power Sector Investors Demand Settlement of N50bn Debt, Call for Tariff Hike

Dogara: N2.74tn spent on sector in 16 years with no results

- Damilola Oyedele in Abuja

Investors in the nation’s power sector have called for the settlement of N50 billion owed them, while also calling for the introducti­on of a realistic tariff structure, reflective of the current rate of inflation and foreign exchange rate.

The Chairman of Heirs Holding/Transcorp Power Ltd, Mr. Tony Elumelu, speaking yesterday at a two-day interactiv­e dialogue/ workshop on the Nigerian power sector, organised by the National Assembly, said investors in the sector could not be expected to perform miracles, with the N50 billion owed them.

The workshop with the theme, “Nigerian Power Challenge: A Legislativ­e Interventi­on,” had in attendance Senate President Bukola Saraki, Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara, Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, and other stakeholde­rs.

Elumelu also cited overregula­tion by the government as one of the factors impeding growth of the industry.

“The tariff structure has to be cost-reflective for the sector to work, especially as we are not taking into account the rate of inflation and the exchange rate.

“The cost of gas also is there and too much regulation is stifling the take off of the privatisat­ion of the sector. The sector must be allowed to flow freely, like the telecommun­ications sector did before tariffs began to crash years later,” he said.

“With debts of up to N50 billion, it is unfair to expect that investors will perform miracles. The system must encourage them and we all must be sincere with

ourselves,” Elumelu added.

In his address, Dogara expressed dissatisfa­ction over the fact that the N2.74 trillion expended on the power sector in the past 16 years had not yielded commensura­te results, but has resulted in perpetual outages instead.

Dogara advocated for new strategies to be formulated by stakeholde­rs in order to address the challenges in the power sector.

“Perhaps the most important question is what happened to the N2.74 trillion spent on the sector from 1999-2015? Why is it that the more we spend on the power sector, the more darkness we attract?” Dogara queried.

“Why are most of the companies licensed by Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission not able to start their projects,” he demanded to know.

Some of the challenges in the sector, Dogara said, run across the entire power value chain of generation, transmissi­on and distributi­on, which have been made worse by inadequate funding, poor energy mix, fuel supply issues, a flawed regulatory framework, and commercial issues, among others.

“The diagnosis includes but is not limited to

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