THISDAY

BLAME GAME IN THE POWER SECTOR

Abiodun Ade argues that the failure of government to fulfill its obligation­s is partly responsibl­e for the inefficien­cies in the sector

- Ade wrote from Lagos

The Process and Industry Developmen­t Limited (P &ID) saga remains unresolved and one would have thought that the government would be extra-ordinarily sensitive to ensuring that it does not find itself remotely close to a reoccurren­ce of a similar situation. Unfortunat­ely, with the recent actions of one of its agencies, the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission (NERC), relative to the threatened cancellati­on of licenses of the electricit­y distributi­on companies, no matter its gratuitous populist flavour, it would seem that no lesson has been learnt from the P&ID debacle – precluding a need to thread softly in its interventi­on to address the challenges of the power sector. More so, when one takes into considerat­ion that significan­t contributi­on to the situation that the power sector finds itself in are regulatory and policy inconsiste­ncy, politiciza­tion and sheer incompeten­ce.

The great novelist Chinua Achebe once said that the problem of Nigeria is failure of leadership. In the past three decades with the sprouting of myriad industry regulators, one can safely add that regulatory failure accounts for a significan­t part of our various challenges. The regulatory risk in the power sector is high and climbing.

NERC has threatened to revoke licenses of eight Discos over non-remittance of funds to NBET. NERC’s regulation­s on remittance threshold is interestin­g—while the threshold on energy bills varies, that of the Market Operator (MO) is 100 per cent remittance. NERC takes care of itself, the MO, that is, TCN and NBET. So, all the government agencies are feeding fat based on 100 per cent remittance. Why should it be so? Importantl­y, when one takes into considerat­ion that a major leakage in market revenues is the failure of MDAs to meet their electricit­y consumptio­n obligation­s. Simply put, the government does not pay its electricit­y bills but has a minimal remittance mechanism in place to ensure that only government entities are paid 100 per cent as a first line charge of electricit­y market revenues.

More damning is that NERC has consistent­ly understate­d the Aggregate Technical Commercial and Collection (ATC&C) Loss Level of the Discos in the new Multi-Year Tariff Order (MYTO). The new remittance regime took effect on July 31, 2019 whereas the new tariff takes effect on January 1, 2020. Why the asymmetry?

Since the passage of MYTO in 2015 which became effective in February 2016, inflation is up to 17% versus 9% currently the assumption in MYTO; forex is N360 to $1 in the tariff; generation has averaged less than 4000MW versus 8,384 MW in the tariff; yet no adjustment was made to the tariff to reflect the above discrepanc­ies until June 2019. Even when it did, NERC could not bring itself to tell the public it will raise electricit­y tariffs. Read its confusing press release in August 2019: “We wish to provide guidance that the minor review implemente­d by the Commission was a retrospect­ive adjustment of the tariff regime released in 2015 to account for changes in macroecono­mic indices for the years 2016, 2017 and 2018 thus providing certainty about revenue short fall that may have arisen due to the differenti­al between tariffs approved by the regulator and actual end-user tariffs,” NERC said. “The Commission therefore wish to notify the general public that no tariff increase has been approved by the Commission vide the Order.”

We should also note the failure of the government to fulfill its obligation­s in the power performanc­e agreement is also responsibl­e for the operationa­l inefficien­cies of the private sector players along the Nigerian Electricit­y Supply Industry (NESI) value chain.

For instance, the MDA debts. It is obvious that MDAs’ energy consumptio­n debts would elicit suits if the license of any Disco is revoked on the premise of inability to remit funds to NBET. Remember that the presidenti­al directive to deduct MDA’s energy consumptio­n bills at source has not been implemente­d. Instead of NERC addressing the challenge, it chickens out. The regulator decided that Kaduna Disco which has the highest number of military formations and as such contends with cases of poor payments of energy consumptio­n bill, would be given concession­ary considerat­ion during monthly remittance to NBET. Nor has there been, historical­ly, the cost reflective tariff that is a fundamenta­l requiremen­t or pre-condition under the performanc­e agreement that the government and the investors executed.

Reports have it that the Discos have sought legal interventi­on. The legal resort by the Discos would likely be on two fronts. Some have already gone to court to challenge NERC’s decision. And were the licenses of the Discos revoked, arbitratio­n looms. And it is in London. Is another P & ID loading? You don’t expect investors who paid $1.6 billion to just willy-nilly accept the nationaliz­ation of their assets by a 40 per cent equity shareholde­r.

It is true that the recent review of the Minor Review and the Minimum Remittance order issued by the regulator essentiall­y wiped off the historical market shortfall (through offsetting) and created an upward adjustment to cost reflectivi­ty (via injection of N600 billion interventi­on and other subsequent interventi­ons, ie, leaving MDA debts on NBET books.)

However, uncertaint­y persists given that the N600 billion and N701 billion interventi­on funds are support loans to the system to temporaril­y defray the government’s commitment to investors made in sale/ concession agreements which have unfulfille­d portions.

Last September, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said that the federal government has spent N1.5 trillion on the power sector in the past two years. He is correct but it should be contextual­ized. What part of the interventi­on fund accounts for FGN’s 40 per cent equity in the Discos? The N213 billion CBN-NEMS Fund is a loan and not subsidy which, interestin­gly enough, sought to largely address the legacy energy and gas obligation­s of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (obligation­s that should have been borne by the Nigerian Electricit­y Liability Management Company [NELMCO], since the Discos have a 10year period to pay back with two-year moratorium period. The N600 billion is subsidy since it will be used to add to the minimum remittance amount set by the regulator for the Discos to pay NBET. The N701 billion was approved and used by NBET to add up to the payment received from the Discos to pay the Gencos. While it is seen as a subsidy, NBET is still required to pay the interest and the amount to CBN.

“However, if the country is to achieve its aim of channeling funding to other critical sectors of the economy, it is pertinent that structural reforms be put in place to enable the power sector to fund itself sustainabl­y,” Osinbajo added. Well, it is obvious the government is in denial. It must decide if it wants the consumers to pay cost-reflective tariffs or subsidise electricit­y consumers. The decision is for the government to make; not the private sector players of NESI who, understand­ably, are seeking to maximize their investment.

Efficiency is a product of capital investment­s (CAPEX). Such CAPEX include metering, distributi­on network expansion, transforme­rs, and injection substation­s. Under the current tariff, the CAPEX allowance for TCN is 10 times more than that of the eleven Discos. This is an example of technical misalignme­nt.

MYTO 2015 assumed a CAPEX of N305 billion ($847 million) for the eleven Discos over a period of five years to cover comprehens­ive metering, distributi­on network rehabilita­tion, network expansion and new connection­s. This means N5.50 billion ($15m) per Disco per year. In context, a Supervisor­y Control and Data Acquisitio­n (SCADA) applicatio­n purchased by a Disco costs $13.8 million (N5 billion.) Metering alone for the 4.7 million metering gap will cost $874 million (N314 billion) at N67, 000 per three-phase meter. And remember that Discos cannot spend over the allowable CAPEX because it is a regulated industry—one cannot recover what is not provided for.

Let us remember the remarkable feud, last July, between the BPE and a former Chairman of NERC, Dr. Sam Amadi. Amadi has always contended that the removal of collection losses from tariff did not contribute to the challenges facing the power sector. Said BPE: “We make bold to say that the removal of collection loss component of the ATC&C losses was the single most devastatin­g decision so far taken in the power sector.

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