• Canvass Revocation of Licenses of Non-Performing Utilities •
Manufacturers, Consumers, Workers Demand Investigation, Public Inquiry into Privatization
Process • Remaining 40 Percent Govt Shares in DISCOs Should Be Sold Immediately
·Workers Write BPE, Demand 10 Percent in Utilities
Following Federal
Government’s decision not to reverse the privatization of the power sector,
stakeholders are now canvassing a radical shake-up of the sector, to stimulate
optimal performance.
They also suggested the revocation of the licenses of non-performing utilities
as deterrent to others.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
Experts,
including workers unions believe the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission
(NERC) as currently established is too weak to execute that mandate.
They
want government to urgently review the Electricity Power Sector Reform Act
(2005) and give NERC full independence free from political interference. With a
wholly independent NERC, a firm regulation of the sector would be guaranteed
and utilities will sit up to their share purchase and performance agreements.
President
of the Nigerian Consumers Protection Network, Barrister Kunle Kola Olubiyo, was
emphatic that the utilities had failed to deliver post-privatization.
Olubiyo,
who is also the President Network for Energy Reform, urged government to sell
off its remaining equities in the electricity sector on the Nigerian Stock
Exchange for serious investors to buy.
According
to him, “The first step is that government should divest its equity. Let it run
strictly as business. The gas operators have a huge indebtedness from the
generation companies. The DISCOs are receiving power from generation
companies and they are not paying. The gas providers are not being paid.
“Government
should let go of its equity in the value chain of the power sector. Government,
should now move to off-grid rural electrification in a build, own and transfer
model in different clusters across the country. The grid system all over the
world is not efficient and not easy to manage. We cannot industrialize by
putting our entire efforts into a grid system. We need to restore hope. The
Change mantra is to drive the system. President alone cannot do it. These are
simple policies.”
He
spoke of the unwillingness of the Presidency to step on toes through reversal
of the privatization process.
But
General Secretary of the national Union of Electricity Employees (NUESS), Joe
Ajaero, did not mince words in calling the privatization a ‘scam’.
“Even
the so-called bidding process was a scam. Some of the companies that won the
bids emerged on the eve of privatization. We need to have a holistic review of
the process. If it has not worked, what is wrong in cancelling it,” he asked
rhetorically.
Meanwhile,
electricity workers in the country have petitioned the Bureau for Public
Enterprises (BPE) demanding 10 per cent of government’s remaining 40 per cent
share in the distribution companies, as part of an agreement reached during privatization.
Ajaero,
who dropped the hint in a phone interview with The Guardian, said: “In
line with the privatization Act, workers were supposed to be allocated 10 per
cent. Our lawyer, Femi Falana, has written the Bureau for Public Enterprises
(BPE) to demand this. Three years later, nothing has been allocated to workers.
“Even government that claims to be retaining 40 per cent in the DISCOs has not received one Naira in dividend since the privatization ended. It means that government sold 60 per cent, but in the real sense, handed 100 per cent of the distribution companies to investors. This is now the case of the buyer being the seller. We have to investigate all these things.”
“Even government that claims to be retaining 40 per cent in the DISCOs has not received one Naira in dividend since the privatization ended. It means that government sold 60 per cent, but in the real sense, handed 100 per cent of the distribution companies to investors. This is now the case of the buyer being the seller. We have to investigate all these things.”
On
his part, President of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Dr. Frank
Udemba Jacobs agrees that the privatization process should be reviewed to make
it more result-oriented.
He
disagreed with calls for outright cancellation, premising his views on the
possible negative impact on the nation’s investment climate.
The
MAN chief was emphatic that the current operators of the sector don’t have the
capacity to deliver on their mandate.
He
added: “I strongly think that government should revisit the entire power privatization
because it is obvious that the current operators do not have the capacity to
achieve effectively. With less than 5000 megawatts (MW) of electricity at the
peak in a country with a population of over 182 million people, you can see
that there is a huge challenge. To improve supply, there may be need to hasten
the introduction of the micro-grid or community-grid system. Embedded
generation has been recommended, as it will increase power generation. More
players with requisite capacity should be brought in. Hiking up tariff is not
the solution to improving sector liquidity.”
Acting
Chairman of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Dr. Anthony
Akah, observed that dissolution of the boards of non-performing utilities was a
possibility.
He, however, asked for patience from the public, stressing that the privatization exercise would need to operate for at least 5 years for desired results to begin to set in.
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