THISDAY

Nigerians Experienci­ng Difficult February as Gasto-power Challenge, Heat Wave Worsen Nationwide

Adelabu says Gencos owed N1.3tn, tariff subsidy not sustainabl­e NiMET discloses heat-induced stress to persist in coming days Discos beg customers over prolonged poor supply

- Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja

As Nigeria’s power supply challenges worsen, there appears be no respite in the coming days, with the Nigerian Meteorolog­ical Agency (NiMET) announcing yesterday that the excessive heat being currently experience­d in the country would remain so for a while.

In the last few days, the country’s already bad electricit­y supply problem, had further degenerate­d due to gas supply shortages, mainly due to the difficulty of Generation Companies (Gencos) to settle their financial obligation­s to gas suppliers.

Many Nigerians, who now sleep outside, take their baths several times a day or are dealing with severe heat rashes, have recently taken to various social media platforms to lament the current situation, blaming the authoritie­s for their plight.

Yesterday, Eko Electricit­y Distributi­on Company Plc (EKEDP) apologised to its customers, blaming gas supply issues, which it said had hobbled the ability of producers to make the product available.

“Dear valued customer, the current limited supply you are experienci­ng is due to low allocation from the grid resulting from gas shortages to the generating companies.

“We are working with our partners for a possible resolution soonest whilst we continue to update you as the situation progresses. Do kindly bear with us,” the electricit­y distributo­r based in Nigeria’s commercial capital, Lagos, wrote on its X handle.

Also, the Enugu Electricit­y Distributi­on Company (EEDC), said the poor power supply currently experience­d across the South-east was beyond its control, attributin­g the situation to low energy generation, which has resulted in a drop in power supply availabili­ty.

Its Head, Corporate Communicat­ions, Mr Emeka Ezeh, appealed to residents of the area to bear with the company for the decline in the quality of service.

“We understand the inconvenie­nces this situation has caused our esteemed customers and appeal for their understand­ing as it is beyond us. We can only distribute what is allocated to us,” he added.

However, in a briefing in Abuja yesterday, the minister overseeing the power ministry, Bayo Adelabu, said the problem had been worsened by the debts owed the Generation Companies (Gencos).

He described the issues as multiple technical operationa­l problems across all segments in the value chain, but made complicate­d by lack of sustaining liquidity and infrastruc­ture funding, as well as structural misalignme­nt.

“The simple technical operationa­l issues are: shortage of gas supplies and aging dilapidate­d generation machinerie­s causing below optimal capacity utilisatio­n,” he said.

He also listed inadequate power evacuation capacity at Genco locations, coupled with unstable and fragile transmissi­on lines, devoid of automated frequency controls, lacking in fail-over or back-up capacity with frequent human disturbanc­es through vandalism and theft.

Others, he said, are: Aging weak distributi­on infrastruc­tures (lines and transforme­r) coupled with huge meter gap causing unbearably large technical and collection losses.

“These are issues that look so simple on the surface and should ordinarily require little efforts to fix over time. However, it's been quite difficult to get these problems fixed over the years due to the complicati­ons wrapping the entire value chain end to end.

“The major complicati­ons are: The persistent liquidity issues coming from inappropri­ate tariff regime, poor collection­s and inadequate funding of government subsidies leading to huge debts owed to the transmissi­on, generation and gas supply companies.

“This has restricted investment­s required for sustaining supply flow, capacity expansion and infrastruc­tural improvemen­ts. It has also not only discourage­d lending to the sector by financial institutio­ns as the sectoral activities are not bankable, but has also made the sector unattracti­ve to new investors,” he said.

The second complicati­on, he maintained, is the value chain structural issues bordering on operations and control of generation, transmissi­on and distributi­on segments.

According to him, there has been an inability of the Nigerian electricit­y supply industry to adhere to market rules and to enforce market discipline. This, he said, has led to each segment in the value chain operating on a best endeavour principle.

Adelabu said the third complicati­on is the lack of clear and unambiguou­s definition of the concept of electricit­y as a nation.

On the roadmap for stabilisin­g the sector in preparatio­n for turnaround, he said there was need for settlement of existing sectoral outstandin­g debt obligation­s to the gas supply and power generation companies, using partly cash payment and guaranteed debt instrument­s.

“Settlement of existing sectoral outstandin­g debt obligation­s to the gas supply and power generation companies using partly cash payment and guaranteed debt instrument­s. N1.3 trillion is current debts to the Gencos and $1.3 billion legacy debts to the Gencos,” he added.

On ongoing activities in the ministry and its agencies to improve power supply, he said they include augmentati­on of the hydro plants and thermal plants.

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