Daily Trust Sunday

We, the electricit­y-deprived

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This is our story; the story of how we have been feeding on empty promises of improved electricit­y through some modern magic called megawatts. In my part of Lagos, we are electricit­ydeprived. We have never received uninterrup­ted power supply for 24 hours. And I have lived here for some 22 years now. Each family is forced to provide its own power needs. I have three sources of power supply – a diesel generator, a petrol generator and inverter. The expenses of running them is better imagined for a man who has never been a drug baron, a political operative or a government contractor.

Some of the residents in our area have I-pass-my-neighbour generators that generate more noise than light but are tolerated in the spirit of common suffering shared and endured. And many more miss this luxury and simply endure the darkness and the disarticul­ation in their sense of modern, improved life.

I am sure we are not alone. I am told that because we occasional­ly get electricit­y for something like two hours in the morning, we are much better off than families in some other parts of the former federal capital who only see the shimmering light and envy the well-heeled in Banana Island, Lekki and other choice areas where electricit­y hiccups are not permitted, given the social, business and political importance of the residents.

I find it painful that while we suffer from electricit­y-deprivatio­n in the 21st century, Nigeria chooses to relish its role as the big brother to some other African countries. It sells electricit­y to Togo, Benin Republic and Niger Republic. We are talking of 300 megawatts that our country supplies them to massage its ego as the big and rich brother. But big brother now wants to add Senegal to its list of internatio­nal electricit­y customers. I wonder if this is what the Igbo call business acumen.

In Agila, we have a saying that if you do not have enough you do not have excess to shave off. Doing otherwise stands common sense on its head. It should be the ambition of a country, even an African giant, to generate and distribute electricit­y to sufficient­ly meet the needs of its own people before it would consider giving thoughts to being the electricit­y generating capital of West Africa. That, as Thomas Paine would put it, would be the natural order of things. The big and embarrassi­ng irony here is that those countries to which we sell electricit­y are less electricit­ydeprived than we are. See what the misguided sense of business sense does to a country with a warped sense of big brotherhoo­d?

Failed promises by successive federal administra­tions to let the light shine in the country have made Nigeria the biggest market for generators in the world. Our astute business men and women import generators of all sizes from Europe, Japan, Korea and India into the country. They used to be called standby generators. Not any more. They have become the main and permanent power sources for all our electricit­y needs. I am surprised that the students of climate change have not done a study on what the toxic fumes from generators in our offices and private homes contribute to the global warming. I am sure that if they get down to it, they would be surprised by their finding - and indict our country.

The only noticeable consistent progress in our energy sector must be the change of names from ECN to NEPA to the current Power Holding Company of Nigeria. In 2013, the federal government brought in the private sector and commercial­ised power generation and distributi­on in the country. Heard of Gencos? You are current with the news. These are the companies that were brought in by the government on November 1, 2013, to solve our electricit­y problems. Five years down the road, our electricit­y-deprived agony has neither abated nor shown any evidence that thanks to them, our journey out of darkness into light has begun.

I am afraid, matters could get worse for us in our part of the country. We are looking at the grim possibilit­y of getting even less electricit­y than we do now. The Gencos are complainin­g of liquidity squeeze. In plain English, they do not have enough money to carry on. The Punch of December 30, 2018, quoted Joy Ogali, executive secretary of associatio­n of power generating companies, as saying that “the current liquidity crisis we are facing, due to non-payment for power that we have generated and supplied has reduced the Gencos’ ability to perform their obligation­s, thereby threatenin­g to completely undermine the electricit­y value chain.”

I am sure you do not need me to interpret that for you. But in case you have some problems with what is called underminin­g the “electricit­y value chain,” it simply means no money, no electricit­y. We could not have a more heartwrenc­hing notice of more bad days ahead than that in my part of the Lagos metropolis. This too would certainly undermine the ability of individual­s in their own electricit­y value chain, as in there would be no money to fuel the generators. Good bye light, welcome darkness? You got it.

The fact is that the privatisat­ion of this sector critical to our national economic and industrial developmen­t has been quite disappoint­ing. The Gencos have always complained of lack of money. I have often wondered if these shrewd business men and women went into it without sufficient­ly doing their home work as to how long it would take before the returns on their investment­s begin to roll in in huge quantities of Naira and no kobo.

We are in a dilemma. If the private sector cannot do the magic of improved electricit­y generation and distributi­on, it is impossible to think of what other options we have. I know what this means for me and the people in my neighbourh­ood. We will continue to live the dual life of half yesterday and half today. We live in the hope of a better tomorrow that was promised us yesterday. And we live in the electricit­y-deprived present and given to expecting to hear the occasional whistle that serves notice that the Gencos sometimes wake up to the common sense that electric wires are intended to carry electricit­y to our homes and offices. As a smart Alec poet would put it, there is some joy, sure, in this sort of existence that none but the electricit­y-deprived know.

Tell you what. I have formed the associatio­n of electricit­y-deprived Nigerians to push for our common interests as a group. We will vote for the presidenti­al candidate with the best plan for uninterrup­ted power supply. Watch out. A presidenti­al candidate who talks of megawatts is a no no. We want light, not megawatts.

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