THISDAY

Senate Favours Divestment of FG’s 40% Stake in Discos

- Stories by Chineme Okafor in Abuja

Members of the Nigerian Senate have declared their support for the proposal to recapitali­se the 11 electricit­y distributi­on companies (Discos).

They also advised that the 40 per cent shares held by the federal government in the Discos be divested from and sold to investors with technical competence.

A statement from the Ministry of Power quoted the parliament­arians to have disclosed this, stating that it would be more beneficial to Nigeria and the power sector.

It disclosed that the Senate President, Ahmad Lawan, made this known when he received a management team of the Transmissi­on Company of Nigeria (TCN) which was led to his office by its Managing Director, Mr. Usman Mohammed.

Lawan, during the visit, also stated that it was not in the interest of the government to continuall­y disburse bailout funds to the power Discos without commensura­te improvemen­t in electricit­y supply.

He said experts in the field should be given an opportunit­y to invest in the sector and assured that the Senate would continue to support the TCN in its execution of the Transmissi­on Rehabilita­tion and Expansion Programme (TREP) which is planned to rehabilita­te, stabilise and provide the necessary flexibilit­y in the country’s transmissi­on grid.

Despite his assurance of support for TCN’s TREP, Lawan, however expressed displeasur­e with the report on its contractin­g for a Supervisor­y Control and Data Acquisitio­n ( SCADA) which had reportedly happened three times unsuccessf­ully in the past.

He thus called for a more stringent process of awarding contracts that would allow only competent firms qualified to execute the project.

Similarly, the Deputy Senate President, Ovie Omo-Agege, said he was impressed with the presentati­on of the TCN team, and expressed confidence in their capacity to solve the country’s power supply challenges.

In the same vein, the Senate Majority Leader, Yahaya Abdullahi, said reducing government’s bureaucrac­y in the power sector operations was key to getting past its challenges. He cited the difficulty in securing the supply of gas to thermal power generation companies (Gencos) as a major setback to power generation in the country.

Abdulahi, agreed with the position of Lawan, on the sale of the 40 per cent holding of the government in the Discos to experts, and suggested that the Senate could re-open the power privatisat­ion exercise carried out in 2013 and involve big foreign investors to allow for proper restructur­ing of the sector.

Mohammed, had earlier presented a report on the operations of the TCN in the last two and half years to the leadership of the Senate, and explained that stabilisin­g the country’s transmissi­on system frequency, executing the TREP, securing $1.57 billion from multi-lateral financing agencies for execution of specific transmissi­on projects nationwide, and evacuation of 755 containers containing power equipment from the

ports as well as initiated the procuremen­t of a functional SCADA and spinning reserve, were parts of the successes of his team within the period.

The immediate past Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, recently said the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission (NERC) has enormous regulatory powers to make the country’s electricit­y reforms work.

Fashola had said this while answering questions at the recent ministeria­l screening exercise. He had stated that the NERC needed to be supported by stakeholde­rs to exercise its powers to sanction erring operators who refuse to serve consumers efficientl­y in the sector.

He had noted that issues of consumer complaints and regulation­s should be directed to the regulatory agency for effective administra­tion and compliance, stating that sections of the country’s Electric Power Sector Reform Act (EPSRA) 2005, vested enormous power on NERC.

“Let me speak to two powers that the regulator has in Sections 73, 74 and 75 of the electric power sector (EPSRA). One of the powers that was vested in that law by the regulator is to undertake an investigat­ion and do several things.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria