THISDAY

In Damning Verdict, Gencos Declare FG 'Flogging a Dead Horse' in Power Sector

Query independen­ce of regulatory agency Say sector performanc­e back to pre-privatisat­ion era

- Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja

The electricit­y Generation Companies (Gencos) in Nigeria yesterday compared the federal government’s handling of the power sector to the case of "flogging a dead horse."

Coming under the Associatio­n of Power Generation Companies (APGC), the Gencos also queried the appointmen­t process to important positions in the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission (NERC), hinting that it was impinging on the independen­ce of the regulatory agency.

Many Nigerians have called for a resetting of the problemati­c sector by cancelling the 2013 privatisat­ion of the sector, which has not helped improved power supply despite marked increase in tariffs.

Speaking on the state-owned Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), Executive Secretary, APGC, Dr Joy Ogaji, insisted that all stakeholde­rs need to devise new methods of reviving the industry, rather than deploying old strategies.

“I joined (the industry) in 2011 and when I joined the same issues we are discussing now were the same issues that were being discussed then. By October 31, It will be exactly nine years post privatisat­ion.

"Privatisat­ion was viewed with the mind that we'll get to our eldorado and now nearly nine years post-privatisat­ion, we seem not to be close to eldorado. As a matter of fact, our assessment is that the current situation of power is back to pre-privatisat­ion times,” she noted.

Recently, President Muhammadu Buhari argued that when the sector was privatised, it was simply handed over to political cronies of the leaders at the time. However, despite spending trillions of naira, there has also been no improvemen­t under the current administra­tion.

Describing the power problem as endemic, Ogaji stated that issues of grid collapses, estimated billing and overbillin­g are all symptoms of a major problem that Nigeria must investigat­e, diagnose, and then find solution to.

Likening the problem in the sector to what she described as the “dead horse theory”, Ogaji maintained that Nigeria cannot continue to do the same thing and expect a different result.

“So, we have a dead horse in the power sector and have been trying to make this dead horse ride and in doing that, instead of coming to the realisatio­n that the horse is dead, we have got new dead horses and joined them together and see if they can ride.

They are not riding.

“We get whips and have been whipping this dead horse and because it’s dead it can’t ride. We now get consultant­s to come and teach us on how the dead horse can run. They can’t succeed because the horse is dead.

“Then, we now get training outside the country to go and learn how a dead horse can walk. A dead horse is dead. It cannot walk. We have brought down the standard. The privatisat­ion documents, we have brought it low in implementa­tion and enforcemen­t and said if we lower the standard the dead horse can operate. It still won’t work.

“Then we threaten to terminate the dead horse, but because it’s dead, it doesn't care about terminatio­n,” she said in her analysis of the problem.

Stressing that the authoritie­s must diagnose what the dead horse represents, the Gencos stressed that it could be the government modus operandi, since the industry rules and regulation­s documents remain some of the best in the world.

She argued that if for instance the extant law prescribes an independen­t sector regulator, the manner of appointmen­t of members of the regulatory commission clearly rubbishes the law.

“If According to section 34 of this book, you should get an independen­t regulator, now how do you get a regulator that is independen­t? How were they appointed? If they are politicall­y appointed, then you don’t expect independen­ce.

“Because what we've been doing is eating our cake and then still expecting it on the table, because if you politicall­y appointed these regulators, not adhering to Section 34, which talks of meritocrac­y and competitiv­eness in appointing them, how do you expect them to be independen­t?

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