The Federal Government has said that it will not approve a fresh electricity tariff hike at least for now, stating that it is still meeting with stakeholders in the country’s electricity sector, including the World Bank to provide some level of interventions to the market.
Speaking on Monday in a Channels
Television Talk Show, Sunrise Daily, which was monitored in Abuja, the
Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, said the
government was meeting with the World Bank to find solutions to the
financial challenges of the power sector.
Fashola by this, confirmed a THISDAY report in December 2016 that the government and the World Bank had initiated efforts to bail the country’s power sector from the existing liquidity challenges threatening its survival.
Fashola by this, confirmed a THISDAY report in December 2016 that the government and the World Bank had initiated efforts to bail the country’s power sector from the existing liquidity challenges threatening its survival.
Also, the Nigerian Electricity
Regulatory Commission (NERC) is expected to, this month, announce new
cost-reflective electricity rates to reflect current operational indices
in the industry. Statutorily, NERC undertakes periodic reviews of the
tariff to factor in changes in operational indices like foreign exchange
and inflation rates, price of gas for power, as well as changes in
generation capacities.
Fashola, however, said that if the
government’s deliberations with the World Bank on the financial
challenges of the market end well, Nigerians would be protected from a
possible electricity price hike.
He said: “Government still has to deal
with how to stabilize the value of the naira to the dollar, and again
that will be impacted by how much money we get from oil production,
which is still our major foreign income earner. We have used our
leverage in OPEC to get OPEC to agree to a production cut, which
heralded a price rise but can we as a protagonist take advantage of this
by stopping to fight?
“People must be clear that if government
accepts the recommendations that we will make to intervene, it is not
to give the Discos a golden parachute, but first to protect citizens
from price hike in terms of power for now and also to keep the
subsectors so that they don’t lose their businesses.”
Fashola provided an insight to the
deliberations with the World Bank, saying: “You would have heard that
there are liquidity issues in the power sector that came from the way
the privatisation itself was structured, essentially through bank loans.
Most of the people who bought them had very little if any skin in the
game in terms of their own private equity.”
He said technically, the banks owned the
power assets, explaining that that was part of the problems of the
Discos because of their debt burden, which had made it difficult for
them to get more money to expand their distribution assets, their
transformers and to get meters.
The minister explained: “Now all of that
underperformance is not necessarily only their faults, it is also the
way the economy has played out. Assets they bought and loans they took
at N197 to a dollar has certainly lost value. We had a tariff increase
to cushion that effect but all of that was almost wiped out by the
depreciation in the naira to the dollar.
“Gas as a component of power production
is indexed in dollars but the collection is in naira, so the bills that
you could pay if you need only N200 to pay, you now need N400 to pay and
you can’t increase the tariff to deal with that and those are the
liquidity gaps.”
He explained further: “What we have seen
in many parts of the world where these things have taken place, [is
that] there have been a transitional funding support and when we
recommended it or proposed it to the World Bank, they looked in their
books and saw very correlative historical precedents that government
still needs to intervene but not necessarily by giving money to the
Discos and this is not a concluded policy, but perhaps in a way in
helping them manage their debts with certain conditions either in
governance, diminution of shares, requiring them to recapitalise or take
some technical expertise.”
Fashola also said that the Transmission
Company of Nigeria (TCN) had increased its electricity wheeling capacity
to 7200 megawatts (MW), claiming that the transmission network was no
longer the weakest link in the sector as often stated by stakeholders.
According to him: “The generalisation
about the grid not been able to carry what we generate is really an
inaccurate reflection of realities. We have expanded the grid;
additional projects are going on, and the Kudenda substation in Kaduna
is part of the grid expansion.”
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