By Sunny Anderson Osiebe...
Senate President, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki has urged the Senate
Committee on Power, Steel Development and Metallurgy to conduct a public
hearing into declining electricity generation in the country that
currently stands at 3000 megawatts capacity.
Also, the public hearing is expected to verify the claims and counter
claims of non-remittance of revenues between the Nigeria Bulk
Electricity Trading Company (NBET), Electricity Distribution Companies
(Discos) and Generation Companies (Gencos) as well as uncover how the
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) disbursed the N213 billion intervention
fund to the power sector.
Saraki who spoke at the weekend during a special stakeholders meeting to
proffer solutions to the worsening electricity generation in the
country said the public hearing should look at the role of the Bureau of
Public Enterprises (BPE) which serves as Board members in the Discos
and Gencos, thereby making it difficult for the BPE to effectively
supervise and audit the electricity generation and distribution
companies.
He had in his opening comments lamented the poor electricity supply in
Nigeria and the consequences of the negative development in the efforts
to move Nigeria out of the present economic recession.
He told the stakeholders in the power sector led by the Permanent
Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Louis
Edozien that the essence of the meeting was to proffer solutions to an
imminent collapse of the electricity system in the country.
Briefing the meeting, the Permanent Secretary, Edozien, lamented that
power generation has gone down to 3000MW/H from a 7000MW/H generating
capacity with a 12000MW/H connected load.
Edozien also said there was poor and declining revenue collection
capacity as the Discos are remitting about 45 per cent of collectable
revenue instead of the performance agreement target of 65 per cent.
He further cited low tariff and what he described as 'payment
transparency and discipline' as some of the challenges facing
electricity generation and distribution.
In their contributions at the meeting, representatives of gas producers
and suppliers traced their inability to supply adequate gas to the
electricity generating companies to vandalization and the inability of
the GENCOs to pay for the already supplied products, insisting that the
terms of gas supply and payment is on the basis of 'willing sellers and
buyers'.
The gas producers and suppliers consisting mostly of SHELL Petroleum and
TOTAL Petroleum complained of security challenges that usually result
in the vandalization of their pipelines and hence their inability to
meet demands in some cases.
The meeting was shocked when s representative of NBET, Dr. Marilyn
Amobi, who is the managing director and chief executive officer,
revealed that the DISCOs can't account for most of the revenue remitted
to it by consumers due to what she described as 'bad behaviour', an
euphemism for corruption.
She further said that revenue generated by NBET was better before the
liberalization exercise when compared to post-liberalization period,
blaming it on lack of proper accountability and supervision of the
DISCOs by BPE and lack of proper auditing.
Other stakeholders blamed the distribution companies for lack of
compliance with the agreed terms on remitting generated revenues from
consumers, manifesting in consumer discontent, payment default as well
as unstructured and unserviced debts.
The complaint of lack of transparency in the remittance of revenues
collected prompted the Senate President to direct that a public hearing
be conducted by the Senate Committee on Power, Steel Development and
Metallurgy to identify the problems and make recommendations on the way
forward.
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