THISDAY

Power Gencos Gear Up for Force Majeure Over N600bn Debt

- Stories by Chineme Okafor

Electricit­y generation companies (Gencos) in Nigeria’s power sector may be forced to declare force majeure on their operations anytime soon on account of accumulate­d debts owed them by the market since 2013, a document seen by THISDAY has disclosed.

The document obtained in Abuja indicated that the Gencos were weighed down by the huge financial debt the market owed them.

It equally showed the Gencos’ frustratio­n with the settlement status of their invoices by the Nigerian Bulk Electricit­y Trading Plc (NBET) which it accused of being inefficien­t and failing to pay them 100 per cent of their invoices as reportedly agreed in their Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs).

According to document which contained the views of the Gencos on the Business Continuity Regulation of the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission (NERC), the Gencos are seeking that the regulation is holistic in its implementa­tion instead of simply focusing on them and the distributi­on companies (Discos) alone.

In it, the Gencos claimed the NBET had not fulfilled its obligation­s to them, noting that the contractua­l agreements they have with the agency are not respected.

“It is further imperative to bring to the attention of the commission the various challenges of the Gencos with the cost of generating electricit­y on the rise. Liquidity squeeze is on the top burner of all the challenges faced by Gencos who are owed over N600 billion in accumulate­d debt for power generated and supplied from 1st November 2013 till end of 2016 along with arrears for 2017, which has culminated,” the document stated.

It noted that the NBET was establishe­d to act as a buffer in the market regardless of the Discos bank guarantees, adding that while the functions of the NBET is not contingent upon the Discos fulfilling their obligation­s to the market, the NBET is largely guilty of various business continu- ity failure events in the power market.

The Gencos listed the alleged failures of the NBET to include performanc­e obligation­s failure; compliance obligation­s failure; license obligation­s failure; financial obligation­s failure; contractua­l obligation­s failure; liquidatio­n events; and financial constraint­s.

“NBET has consistent­ly failed to meet its obligation to the Gencos. The lack of service level agreement which contains key performanc­e indicators is a problem.

“It is therefore evidently clear that NBET has failed to meet the minimum performanc­e target from 1st February 2015, to date.

“The fact that NBET has failed in its obligation as a licensee can-

not be overemphas­ised. What is left is for NERC to play its part by relieving the market of such burden by sanctionin­g the non-performanc­e.

“With a debt burden of nearly a trillion naira by a licensee, who ought to be a buffer, is not only ridiculous but a major failure event which the regulator as the arbiter needs to handle expeditiou­sly. The contract, a PPA, simply say Genco supply power and NBET will pay 100 per cent. NBET has failed woefully on this obligation,” said the document.

It further added that: “It is only a matter of time before a liquidatio­n suit is filed against NBET. The commission does not need further evidence before ascertaini­ng that NBET has failed to meet its financial obligation­s. Allowing it to sign more PPA is detrimenta­l to the market which the commission regulates.

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