THISDAY

Gencos Seek NNPC’s Interventi­on as Gas Supply Challenge Persists

- Peter Uzoho

With gas supply to thermal power plants around 13 per cent more than seven years after the power sector privatisat­ion, power generation companies (Gencos) have called on the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) to intervene and save the sector. Twenty-eight megawatts (MW) of gas equivalent is required by the thermal power plants in the country, according to the National Control Centre, the data house of the nation’s power sector, and only 13 per cent has been supplier to thermal plants since the last seven years.

Consequent­ly, the Gencos are demanding that the NNPC, as holder of 50 per cent stake in the Joint Venture (JV) with gas producing companies, should intervene by taking over their gas obligation­s to gas suppliers to enable them generate more power. The Executive Secretary of Associatio­n of Power Generation Companies (APGC), Mrs Joy Ogaji, made the request on behalf of her associatio­n during a panel session at the recently held 2021 Nigerian Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition (NOG) in Abuja.

The panel session centred on, “Developing the Domestic Gas Market to Deepen Gas Utilisatio­n.”

Ogaji noted that one of the major challenges facing Gencos was the request by gas suppliers that Gencos provide “securitisa­tion” before they could supply them gas. She explained that the Nigeria Bulk Electricit­y Trader (NBET) was expected to provide the securitisa­tion in the form of a bankable commercial letter of credit from a commercial bank to the Gencos, but that NBET had not given them such since privatisat­ion in 2013.

Ogaji said: “One of the challenges that we generation companies are facing is gas suppliers requesting for securitisa­tion. And again, as lawyers, you know that contracts have to be backto-back. If it is not back-to-back, it is not possible for me to be able to post to you what has not been posted to me.

“So, the way the power sector is designed is such that a value chain is as strong as its weakest link. So, it is designed such that we have a bulk trader, NBET, as a securitisa­tion agent or an obligor or a buffer for the Gencos.

“So, NBET is expected to provide a securitisa­tion in the form of a bankable commercial letter of credit from a commercial bank to the Gencos, who in turn, will now post it to the gas suppliers.

“As you all know, we have not received that and this is why we are not able to post it to the gas suppliers. My propositio­n is, we want NNPC, who has 50 per cent of the JVs to take up the gas obligation of the generation companies, and we will generate as much megawatts as you want, if you are able to consume or utilise it. ”

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