THISDAY

Nosa James-Igbinadolo­r

-

Nigeria has a calamitous electricit­y situation that is the second major constraint to economic developmen­t after bad macroecono­mic policies of government. Some 55 per cent of the population has no access to electricit­y and out of the total energy consumptio­n, traditiona­l biomass such as firewood and charcoal accounts for 86 per cent of energy use in the country. The gap between production capacity and demand in combinatio­n with poorly maintained generation installati­ons and a poor national and regional electricit­y grid, results in unstable and unreliable electricit­y supply for both households and companies

The electricit­y challenges over the years, was a widely accepted analogous testament to the ineffectiv­eness of the Nigerian state. For most Nigerians, the incapacity of successive state-run electricit­y management companies including the then National Electricit­y Power Authority, NEPA and its successor PHCN, aptly expounded and exemplifie­d the failure of the state in the delivery of basic and efficient services to its citizens.

The abysmal situation hasn’t changed much with the privatisat­ion of the bulk of the nation’s power sector. It was in August 2010 that former President Goodluck Jonathan, presented a roadmap on the power sector reform to stakeholde­rs and investors in the power sector, aimed at transferri­ng the running of power utilities to the private sector. The Power Sector Reform Roadmap, which preceded the then existing Electric Power Sector Reform Act of 2005 (EPSR Act 2005) passed under the leadership of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, incorporat­ed the privatisat­ion of the state-owned Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN). Thus, it was that when in late 2013 almost all of the six power-generation plants and 11 distributi­on companies unbundled from PHCN were finally sold, there was high public expectatio­n that the new owners would ensure a swift end to the intermitte­nt power outages in the country

While the privatised power companies may have been unfettered from the debilitati­ng state officialdo­m that hitherto constraine­d their operations, their autonomy has not stimulated efficiency gains as they continue to encounter lingering organisati­onal and operationa­l challenges that continue to hinder progress in the electricit­y sector including an outdated and poorly maintained transmissi­on network, which the government still owns, but put under private management.

The federal government projection in line with Vision 20:2020, aims at a target of 40,000MW by 2020. This according to an analysis carried out by Vetiva Capital, “would imply significan­t investment­s from the private sector, as the roadmap estimates suggest an annual investment of $10 billion (N1.5 trillion), which effectivel­y amounts to about 81per cent of Nigeria’s 2010 capital expenditur­e budget.” A recent study published by the French Developmen­t Agency and the European Union, agreed with the position that Nigeria’s power distributi­on sector would need to invest more than USD 10 billion in the next five years to reach reasonable standards in quality of supply and service.

Less than three months to the beginning of 2020, it is clear that the country has not only missed that target, but would be unable to come near that mark anytime soon. Just as the state has failed to deliver efficient electricit­y to Nigerians, the private sector has also failed to do so.

The poor state of electricit­y supply in Nigeria has severely imposed significan­t costs on the manufactur­ing sector as the rickety power grid remains and is often cited as the most critical growth restrainin­g factor in the economy. With a potential to generate 12,522 megawatts (MW) of electric power from existing plants, the country is only able to generate around 4,000 MW at best. A 2015 report by GIZ noted that “2, 700 MW of power generation capabiliti­es are regularly lost due to gas constraint­s in a country with one of the largest natural gas deposits in the world. Up to 500 MW are lost due to water management, while several hundred megawatts are regularly lost due to line constraint­s.” In April this year, power generation in the country was significan­tly reduced due to a gas pipeline leak that forced the shutdown of Egbin, Omotosho, Olorunsogo and Paras power stations. The Transmissi­on Company of Nigeria (TCN) said the four power stations were completely shut down due to leakage on the Escravos-Lagos Pipeline System gas pipeline. The adverse toll on the economy is glaring as industries continue to close down or relocate out of the country as a result of poor power supply. According to the National Bureau of Statistics(NBS), Real GDP growth in the manufactur­ing sector stood at 0.81per cent in the first quarter of 2019 (year on year). This was lower than in the same quarter of 2018 by -2.59 per cent points, and the preceding quarter by -1.54 per cent points. Foreign investment in manufactur­ing is virtually non-existent as investors remain naturally unwilling to bear the burden of investing in private power infrastruc­ture that will support their businesses. Consequent­ly, neighbouri­ng countries including Ghana and Ivory Coast have become major manufactur­ing investment destinatio­ns in the sub-region at the expense of Nigeria.

The failure of the private sector to efficientl­y deliver is clearly visible across all the states in the country. In virtually all the thirty-six states, darkness pervades the major cities as well as the long unattended to rural areas. In Edo state, the Benin Electricit­y Distributi­on Company (BEDC) supplies just six hours of electricit­y to homes in the state during the day, while virtually no home or business is able to access power from the company between 9pm and 9am every day. The situation is not different in most states. Last November, a visibly agitated governor of Edo state, Mr. Godwin Obaseki, ordered the Managing Director of the BEDC, Mrs. Funke Osibodu, out of his office over the atrocious electricit­y supply situation in the state. The governor posited that, “The BEDC has been an obstacle all the way. They will not provide electricit­y and will not allow you to get alternativ­e sources of power. The state will not allow it.” He added that, “As Governor of Edo State, we have lost confidence in the BEDC. We don’t want them here. We are in darkness. Let us remain in darkness until we find people who are capable of delivering electricit­y. This is our position.”

An Abuja based Lawyer and power sector specialist, Shakede Dimowo, opined that the failure of the market to deliver where the state had failed was simply due to the incapacity of the generating and distributi­ng companies to invest in new infrastruc­ture and thus expand their generating and distributi­on capacities.

Dimowo noted that many of the private power operators had struggled to make progress, especially as they have had to contend with challenges, including ageing facilities requiring substantia­l amounts of investment­s to upgrade and expand, shortage of gas supply for thermal plants and high levels of unpaid electricit­y bills.

This opinion was corroborat­ed by sources within various generation and distributi­on companies, who spoke to THISDAY. According to a senior management staff of the Jos Electricit­y Distributi­on Company, who spoke on condition of anonymity, the problem in the GENCOS is that they are not generating enough and they are not generating enough because they have refused to invest in new infrastruc­ture.

The source further noted that “because virtually all GENCOS in the country generate power either through hydro or gas, they have had to face the lingering challenge of poor and irregular gas supply from the NNPC as well as the persistent issue of low power generation during the dry seasons as a result of low water volume at Kainji, Jabba and Shiroro”.

A major issue that has sedated new investment by the GENCOS and DISCOS has been the uneconomic energy tariffs especially the pricing of electricit­y, which the private utilities have long demanded a review of. Between 2015 and 2019, the average electricit­y tariff climbed from N12 kWh to about N32kWh and is slated to go up again by about 30 per cent in 2020. It was against the persistent calls for government review of electricit­y tariffs that the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission, recently approved an increase in the tariff payable by power consumers across the country with consumers having to pay an additional sum of between N8 and N14 for every kilowatt-hour of energy as from 2020. Whether this increase in electricit­y cost would incentivis­e the electricit­y companies to invest in new and better infrastruc­ture that would ultimately lead to a correspond­ing increase in output, remains to be seen.

Dimowo agreed that investors in the sector were not motivated to invest in new infrastruc­ture as the “tariffs are not cost reflective and this weakens the finances of the utilities and ultimately harms their capacity to deliver efficientl­y.”

The President of the Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria(MAN), Mr. Mansur Ahmed, rejected this position earlier this month when he argued that the DISCOS ought to build capacity to deliver and operators at that level should also have enough resources to be more effective. According to him, the industrial consumers are already the ones paying the highest rate and subsidisin­g other consumers. So, to continue to increase the tariff when neither the quantum nor the quality of electricit­y supply has improved is not fair to the manufactur­ing and industrial sectors.

“We do understand that the power sector is in a very difficult situation and a lot needs to be done to firm things up. It goes beyond just increasing tariff. The sector needs to be completely restructur­ed and overhauled. They should ensure that proper capacity is built and the private operators, especially at the distributi­on level, must have the capacity and resources to run this sector properly.

“That really goes beyond just throwing money into the sector. Already, the government has invested hugely in terms of capital and interventi­ons. Over a trillion naira has been thrown into this sector with very little improvemen­t to show for it.

“Increasing tariff and injecting funds into the system is not the solution that will get us out of this situation. In the manufactur­ing sector, electricit­y is one of the most critical inputs.

“There is no way our products can be competitiv­e if we have to cope with this kind of energy supply and the cost of it. Clearly, we cannot continue to do what we have been doing all over again. Something drastic must be done to change the situation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria