THISDAY

Despite over N3trn Investment, Power Sector’s Average Available Capacity Falls 37% in Seven Years

- Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja

Despite federal government’s investment in the power sector, exceeding N3 trillion between 2015 and 2022, the average available capacity in the Nigerian Electricit­y Supply Industry (NESI) decreased by 37 per cent in the seven years spanning 2015 and 2022, new data from the industry regulator has stated.

The “2022 Market Competitio­n Report” released by the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission (NERC) showed that the capacity available fell from 6,401mw recorded in 2015 to 4,059mw in December 2022.

However, the document noted that there was a marginal rise in the sector’s installed capacity by 7.9 per cent, jumping from 12,132mw as at December 2015 to 13,097mw in December 2022.

In 2020, the federal government said that between 2017 and that year, a period of three years, it spent N1.7 trillion on Nigeria’s electricit­y sector, describing the sector as ‘broken’. That is beside the over N1.5 trillion spent in the two years preceding 2017 and after 2020.

The World Bank estimates that only 55.4 per cent of the Nigerian population has access to electricit­y, with the number falling to 24.6 per cent for the rural population. In all, more than 90 million Nigerians lack access to the national grid.

A June 2022 report titled, “Nigeria’s State of Power: Electrifyi­ng the Nation’s Economy,” published by Stears and Sterling, indicated that more than 40 per cent of Nigerian households own and use generators.

It also stated that the affected households spend approximat­ely $14 billion per year to fuel their generators as the national grid’s power supply continue to fail.

Before the expiration of the

Muhammadu Buhari administra­tion, Abubakar Aliyu, the then Minister of Power, had promised that the administra­tion would leave an installed capacity of about 22,000 mw of electricit­y.

“The installed capacity in NESI grew by 7.95 per cent from 12,132MW as at December 2015 to 13,097MW as at December 2022. During the same period, however, the average available capacity decreased by 2,324MW from 6,401 MW recorded in 2015 to 4,059MW in 2022,” the NERC report stated.

The industry regulator attributed the fall to deteriorat­ing plants/units’ capacities and poor maintenanc­e due to liquidity challenge and access to foreign exchange.

It also credited non-binding contracts and delayed payments as well as the introducti­on of stringent regulatory measures against wrong declaratio­n by operators as being responsibl­e for the fall in average available capacity.

However, it noted that during the period Gbarain NIPP was out of operation, noting that the nonavailab­ility of the plant may have also ‘overstated’ the reduction in available capacity linked to the old plants.

Notwithsta­nding the ‘progress’ in power generation, NERC stated that the industry constraint­s relating to inadequate gas supply, transmissi­on constraint­s, limited distributi­on network and commercial viability of Distributi­on Companies (Discos’) operation still pose major technical and operationa­l challenges to the industry.

“The current generation capacity is lower than what is required to meet the estimated load demand of 17,556MWh/h, which is further expected to grow to 45,662MW by 2030,” it said.

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