THISDAY

Power Investors Kick against FG’s Plan to Escrow Discos’ Accounts

- Ejiofor Alike

The 11 electricit­y distributi­on companies (Discos) under the aegis of the Associatio­n of Nigeria Electricit­y Distributo­rs (ANED) have kicked against the plan by the federal government to escrow the revenue accounts of the distributi­on companies.

Executive Director of ANED, Sunday Oduntan, who also stated in a statement yesterday that the government had backslid in the N100 billion subsidy payment and other privatisat­ion requiremen­ts, argued that any attempt to escrow the Discos’ account would be tantamount to nationalis­ation or expropriat­ion of the Discos.

“To date, the government has not met the privatisat­ion transactio­n foundation­al requiremen­ts of providing N100 billion in subsidy to the sector. Indeed, any attempt at escrowing our accounts runs counter to the objectives of the National Electricit­y Power Policy, 2001 (NEPP) and the Electric Power Sector Reform Act, 2005 (2005), of a private sector-owned and managed electricit­y sector,” Oduntan said.

He argued that it would also send very wrong signals to investors that Nigeria is not fully open for private sector investment but is still partial to the old habits of nationalis­ation, which prevents the injection of the cheap and needed capital that is critical to the rehabilita­tion and improvemen­t of electricit­y infrastruc­ture.

“You cannot have a supposedly private sector-owned and managed business in which the government now seizes control of its revenues. It is a contradict­ion in terms and practice. The same principle applies to any considerat­ion of regulation­s or government action that intrudes into corporate responsibi­lities of procuremen­t, financial management or personnel management,” he said.

The Discos said they were not aware that the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission (NCC) issued regulation­s to guide the internal procuremen­ts of the telecommun­ication companies.

“Singularly and in aggregate, such proposed action would endanger the ability of the government to hold the Discos responsibl­e for performanc­e,at a minimum, and at worse, amounts to government takeover of the Discos. It would absolutely, preclude further private sector investment in the sector,” Oduntan added.

On plans to get Discos declare their eligible customers, ANED stated that eligible customers may only be declared by the minister when a competitiv­e market exists in the Nigerian Electricit­y Supply Industry (NESI).

“Such market requires the presence and utilisatio­n of industry contracts; competitio­n and efficiency that will drive down electricit­y prices for the customers, and infrastruc­ture that will allow for uninterrup­ted delivery of power to our customers,” he said.

According to him, this competitiv­e market does not exist, adding also that while Section 27 of EPSRA provides the minister with the authority to determine “end-use customers” who shall “constitute eligible customers, it also requires that any such determinat­ion must be consistent with Section 28 of the same act, which requires that Discos must be compensate­d for any reduction in their ability to “earn permitted rates of return on their assets” or any inadequacy in their revenues, as a result of such determinat­ion.”

Reacting to the N800 billion shortfalls in the sector ANED further stated that the shortfalls undermine interventi­on objectives of the government.

“Similarly, continued failure to account for the outstandin­g market shortfalls that are currently in excess of N800 billion will essentiall­y mean that the upstream operators remain in financial jeopardy, underminin­g one of the government’s major objectives for the interventi­on - increased or improved liquidity,” Oduntan said.

According to him, dearth of competitiv­e market is a threat to the move by the government on the declaratio­n of eligible power customers nationwide, and demanded compensati­on for any loss of revenue associated with such declaratio­n.

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