Dayo Oketola, Gbenro Adeoye, Okechukwu Nnodim and Jesusegun Alagbe
Nigeria may be set for a total blackout
as power generation as well as distribution companies say over N400bn
debts are stifling their operations.
While GENCOs’ debt is put at over N300bn, DISCOs have complained of being owed over N100bn by customers.
With such a huge debt burden, the power
firms said they lack the funding required for their operations,
including the purchase of equipment and spare parts.
The Executive Secretary, Association of
Power Generation Companies, Dr. Joy Ogaji, said, “The debt is over
N300bn that GENCOs are being owed. If the situation is not checked,
there will be blackout. It is so imminent that I don’t know if most of
the generation we are having now can go beyond Christmas if the payment
problem is not solved. We can’t pay contractors; most of the machines
are packing up.”
Ogaji said the Nigerian Bulk Electricity
Trading Company Plc should be blamed for the problem, saying, “As
GENCOs, we don’t really have any direct relationship with DISCOs at the
moment; GENCOs are meant to generate power and government brought NBET
as a wholesaler, which takes all the power being generated by GENCOs and
sells to the DISCOs. So the onus lies on NBET to collect the money from
the DISCOs.
“The claim on whether DISCOs are
remitting money or not should not be the problem of the GENCOs, but that
of NBET. Government told us that NBET is properly capitalised and has
enough money to meet all of the GENCOs’ payments. But unfortunately,
NBET has not been able to do that.”
However, different operators in the
sector blamed the DISCOs for the drastic illiquidity in the power
market, as they argued that the DISCOs were not doing enough with
respect to revenue collection from electricity consumers.
Officials at NBET told one of our
correspondents on Friday that regardless of the fact that the
organisation was established to support the sector financially, the bulk
electricity trader would not use taxpayers’ money to settle the huge
debts owed the GENCOs.
Aside the NBET, the Niger Delta Power
Holding Company recently urged the DISCOs to ensure adequate remittance
to the bulk trader in order to enhance smooth operations of the power
business.
The Managing Director/Chief Executive
Officer, NDPHC, Mr. Chiedu Ugbo, stated that the indebtedness to his
company by the power market as of August 2016 was over N105bn.
He particularly stated that the huge
debt to the NDPHC and the power market was primarily because the DISCOs
were not remitting more than 50 per cent of what they should remit to
the bulk trader for onward payments to producers of electricity and gas
suppliers.
“The total energy invoiced by the eight
operational NDPHC plants since they started functioning amount to about
N235bn. But out of this amount and as of August 2016, we were being owed
about N105bn,” Ugbo told our correspondent in Abuja.
He said, “The sector is not generating
enough money. So what we have today is that the DISCOs are collecting
possibly only about 20 per cent of what they should be collecting. And
therefore, there is nobody coming up to pay the GENCOs and the GENCOs
are not paying the gas operators.”
But the DISCOs had argued that aside the
fact that the current Multi Year Tariff Order put together by the
Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission was not cost reflective
enough, the refusal of ministries, departments and agencies of
government to settle their electricity bills was also hampering their
ability in making the required remittances.
The Chief Executive Officer, ANED, Mr.
Azu Obiaya, recently told our correspondent that to avert an increase of
over 200 per cent in electricity tariff payable by residential
consumers in the near future, the Federal Government had to intervene in
the sector.
He explained that the government’s intervention was vital in order to address the N809bn revenue shortfall in the industry.
Obiaya insisted that the intervention
could come in form of subsidy to consumers, access to foreign exchange
by the companies, as well as commercial reasonable financing for the
DISCOs.
He explained that DISCOs were not
willing and could not impose any increase in tariff on consumers, but
maintained that to avoid a situation where the consumers would have to
pay as high as N70 to N105 per kilowatt-hour as energy charge, the
Federal Government must do something.
Currently, the average rate being paid
as energy charge by residential consumers across the country is
N22.8/KWH, but this may increase if nothing is done to address the
N809bn revenue shortfall in the power sector, according to the DISCOs.
The President of Association of Small
Businesses of Nigeria, Mr. Femi Egbesola, who demanded stable power
supply, said a blackout would lead to the closure of small businesses.
Also, a Lagos-based
manufacturer-cum-economist, Mr. Akeem Babajide, said the government
should urgently pay the debts it owed the GENCOs and DISCOs to avoid a
blackout.
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