THISDAY

Expert Decries Dearth of Infrastruc­ture in Energy Sector

Says energy poverty, bane of economy growth

- Kasim Sumaina in Abuja

An Energy Expert and Director, Council on African Security And Developmen­t (CASADE), Prof. John Ifediora, has decried the dearth of infrastruc­ture in energy sector as the major problem affecting power supply. He also said that, given Nigeria’s vast fossil fuel reserves, all it needs was a national will to solve the problem and the dedication of efforts by the policy makers.

Speaking on behalf of the council at a briefing in Abuja, to announce CASADE forthcomin­g energy summit, Ifediora, identified energy poverty as the bane of Nigeria’s economy growth.

According to him, “You cannot drive the economy without any meaningful steady state of electricit­y and there can’t be steady power supply without adequate infrastruc­ture. No economy has ever developed without steady state of power supply. And, if you don’t manufactur­e goods, if you don’t industrial­ised, you cannot develop.”

The Don asserted: “Once we get it right in power supply, once we solve our energy problem, Nigeria will rise. All we need is the right equipment from abroad, get smart grid, energy meters, the techical-know-how and, as the largest market for electricit­y consumptio­n in the world, the right investors will come in because, we have the population.”He stated that experts in the Nigerian electricit­y industry, were performing poorly because, those who invested in the power sector lacked the technical know-how to handle the hurdles adding rivalry in the sector was a major bane for its growth.

“Poor power supply is the major reason why investors shy away from Nigeria to other countries of the world, as many of them prefer going to places where you have infrastruc­ture and some level of expertise that you can’t get here in Nigeria.

“Our power sector has been backward primarily because, most of the investors who bought over the successor distributi­on and generation companies have no ideas of how to run the business effectivel­y.

Those who invested in old technology, see those in renewal energy companies as rivals. All they need is to work hand-in-hand.”

“If you don’t have security and developmen­t, investors won’t come in. Investors need conducive environmen­t for their investment.”

Ifediora, a Professor at the University of Winconsin, United States of America, stated that given the country’s vast fossil fuel reserves and the abundance of renewable energy sources, it has potential to generate up to 11,000 gigawatts of electricit­y through a combinatio­n of solar power, wind energy, natural gas and hydroelect­ricity.

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