THISDAY

FG: Pilot Phase of Siemens Almost Completed with Installati­on of 5 Transforme­rs, 3 Mobile Substation­s

NERC urges Discos to provide meters for 20% unmetered band ‘A' customers

- Emmanuel Addeh

The federal government has said that the pilot phase of the Presidenti­al Power Initiative (PPI), also known as the Siemens power project, has almost been completed, with the installati­on and commission­ing of five out of 10 power transforme­rs completed.

In a rundown of the Minister of Power, Adebayo Adelabu's outing during the week, made available by his media office, the government added that the installati­on of three out of 10 mobile substation­s had also accomplish­ed.

Conceived during a meeting between former President Muhammadu Buhari and German Chancellor, Angela Merkel in 2018, the PPI aims to enable the power sector achieve commercial autonomy by facilitati­ng investment­s in critical infrastruc­ture.

Aside increasing capacity to 7GW in the first phase by resolving transmissi­on and distributi­on constraint­s, the programme which has been largely delayed, will increase grid operationa­l capacity by an additional 4GW to 11GW in phase two, while phase three will achieve the end-to-end grid operationa­l capacity to 25GW.

Explaining that seven more mobile substation­s are already scheduled for installati­on, the minister noted that the next phase of the PPI involves upgrading capacity of the transmissi­on network.

“It will involve upgrading existing transmissi­on substation­s, upgrading transforme­rs and the re-conductori­ng and installati­on of transmissi­on lines,” the media office quoted him as saying.

He added that Zungeru power plant has also connected to national grid and is in the process of technical handover from consultant­s to concession­aire as part of one-year defect liability period, ensuring prompt resolution of any issues.

On closing of the metering gap, Adelabu stated that the Presidenti­al Metering Initiative (PMI) aims to install a minimum of between 2 million meters to 2.5 million meters yearly within the next five years.

Adelabu reiterated that the federal government will save N1.5 trillion with the recent tariff adjustment, but explained that government is still subsidisin­g others Bands below ‘A'.

“Pricing change will help improve liquidity to the NESI. Distributi­on Companies (Discos) will be sanctioned for supplying less than 20 hours to Band A consumers,” he added.

Meanwhile, the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission (NERC) has urged the Discos to do more in metering their customers.

Speaking during an engagement with members of the Civil Society Organisati­ons (CSO) and Community Based Organisati­ons (CBOs), in Abuja, Vice Chairman, NERC, Dr Musiliu Oseni, disclosed that about 15 per cent to 20 per cent of the Band A customers are still not metered.

The event was held towards improving interactio­ns with electricit­y consumers on the recent tariff approval, third party investment­s in the electricit­y network as well as collaborat­ing to tackle energy theft.

“There are few areas of collaborat­ion that we will be seeking from you because of the role you play. NERC is here in Abuja but has at least one office across nearly all the states, but you are in those states and you are closer to the people with your customer base, so we really need you to work with NERC to put the licensees on their toes.

“Based on the tariff order that we have released, there are certain conditions that Discos should meet in delivering service to affected customers.

“On metering, we still have about 15 to 20 per cent of the Band A customers that are not metered and that has to be a priority for the Discos. There are various initiative­s of the presidency and the NESI to ensure metering. The most important thing is that efforts are being made to meter customers starting from those that are being affected now on Band A,” he stated.

In his remarks during the meeting, the NERC Commission­er, Legal, Licencing and Compliance, Dafe Akpeneye, explained that the EPSRA 2005 did not adequately empower NERC to do all that it has to do as a regulator, but that has changed now with the enactment of the Electricit­y Act.

“It is needed to bring people in line to follow due process, and you can see that the tone in the power sector is changing; we have not been able to do what we have been able to do before. NERC is empowered to go the whole gamut of regulatory and enforcemen­t actions as expected of a regulator but we do not intend to abuse those powers. Our intention is to enforce those powers and to get licensees to comply, ” he added.

NERC Commission­er, Planning, Research and Strategy, Dr. Yusuf Ali, who spoke on strategic collaborat­ions with the CSOs and CBOs, describing them as partners in progress.

“What we need from you is, please verify facts and ask us questions to have an informed perspectiv­e. As you proceed to protect customers, always ensure that you engage with us and with those facts, you can get some level of objectivit­y.

“We will want to have this kind of meeting regularly so that you can be educated and when you are, you can better engage with electricit­y consumers,” he stated.

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