The Guardian (Nigeria)

Electricit­y Act will reduce $ 28 billion yearly losses, says PWC

- By Waliat Musa

PWC has highlighte­d the potential of the Electricit­y Act 2023 to significan­tly mitigate the $ 28 billion lost to the power sector yearly. According to the 14th edition of Pwc’s Yearly Power and Utilities Roundtable, with the theme: ‘ The Electricit­y Act 2023: Powering Nigeria,’ it noted that the evolution of the policy land - scape in the power sector showed significan­t progress has been made, but chal - lenges remained.

It noted that the Electricit­y Act of 2023 attempts to address some of these challenges and unlock new potential.

However, it noted that over the past two decades, Nigeria's power sector has seen several reforms and initiative­s driven by regulators, ministries, and industry players.

According to it, from key policies like the Nigerian Electric Power Policy in 2001 to the privatisat­ion of the generation and distributi­on subsector in 2013, to more recent interventi­ons like the launch of the Meter Asset Provider scheme in 2018, Service Based Tariff regime in 2020, and the Electricit­y Act 2023.

PWC mentioned that the Act empowers states to establish state- owned utilities, ‘ Successor Companies,’ capable of attracting long- term investment through innovative structures, and dedicated distributi­on and supply companies within states can act as special purpose vehicles ( SPVS), drawing capital from state resources or private investors through primary or secondary markets.

It pointed out that adopting the Electricit­y Act 2023 involves substantia­l financial investment­s, engaging legal and commercial expertise, developing and establishi­ng state- level regulatory bodies, and competing for limited state resources.

The report further stated that thorough due diligence and feasibilit­y studies are crucial to ensure efficient resource allocation and project viability.

"Having vastly different electricit­y laws across states will be detrimenta­l, creating market distortion­s and unfair competitio­n. There is a need to ensure that regulation of electricit­y across the federation is consistent and avoid regulatory capture," it stated.

It added that many utilities require patient capital, noting that the Power Consumer Assistance Fund ( PCAF) serves as a joint federal- state mechanism for targeted subsidies, the Act facilitate­s collaborat­ive fundraisin­g efforts.

"The Act empowers states to establish state- owned utilities, ‘ Successor Companies,’ capable of attracting longterm investment through innovative structures," it added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria