Electricity:
FG yet to release ₦701bn gas supply guarantee fund 5months after
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The much famed ₦701.9bn Payment Assurance Fund (PAF) meant to provide more liquidity for
Generation Companies (GenCos) to pay for gas and increase electricity supply,
has not been released five months after it was announced, Daily Trust reports.
The
Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola, while berating the
11 Distribution Companies (DisCos) for their poor payment of energy bills at
the 15th Power Sector Meeting in May 2017, said the fund saved the grid from
crashing the GenCos that couldn’t pay for gas to generate power.
Details
available indicate that the fund from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN),
announced in March by Fashola, is for the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Plc
(NBET) to bridge GenCos’ liquidity issues from January 2017 to 2019 to ensure
more gas supply and increased power generation.
In
an interview with Daily Trust in June 2017, the minister said the payment had
commenced with visible improvement in power generation. “The payment has
commenced and that is why you see we are around 4,000 megawatt (MW) now,” he
had said.
The
Permanent Secretary for Power, Mr Louis Edozien, at the July sector meeting in
Abuja confirmed the payments to GenCos for January and February while those for
March and April were been processed, under the ₦701 billion funding
arrangement.
Explaining
the ₦701bn disbursement procedure to the GenCos, the spokesperson of NBET,
Henrietta Ighomrore, last weekend told Daily Trust that, “The payment assurance
is to make up whatever the DisCos pay monthly as their energy bill to the
GenCos. That means we need application on a periodic basis for that.”
“We
had met with the GenCos to explain what the fund is about. They are fully aware
as we have made presentations to them,” Henrietta also said.
She
confirmed the use of NBET capitalization saying, “Rather than allowing gas
constraints to continue, we had gone ahead to use some of our capitalization
with the understanding that it will flow back when the CBN fund comes.”
Accessing
the ₦701bn hurdles
Our
investigations have shown that NBET was yet to access any tranche of the fund
from the CBN as at yesterday. Even the payments made for January and February
to the GenCos were drawn from NBET’s capitalization.
“They
used their capitalization to pay for January and February and they do not have
enough to continue the payment without the ₦701bn fund being released,” a
sector official privy to a meeting held by critical stakeholders and the then
Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on July 28, over the fund delay, said.
The
industry source said Mr Osinbajo at the meeting directed NBET to make payment
for March and April to the GenCos within 14 days that elapsed on Friday, August
11.
Among
the Conditions Precedent (CPs) for CBN to release the fund, NBET must present a
sovereign guarantee from the Ministry of Finance, which the minister, Mrs Kemi
Adeosun, promised at the meeting. It must also apply for the fund in tranches
through the Debt Management Office (DMO). Both conditions as at the weekend
were yet to be met completely.
At
an NBET meeting on August 9, the CBN still requested for the Sovereign
Guarantee from the finance ministry as part of the CPs. “The minister
said she has to admit some documentation from NBET to grant that, but as of
last week, NBET didn’t get that done as the managing director, Marilyn was absent
for about three days,” another industry expert revealed.
Another
source said the delay in getting the instrument was because NBET had frustrated
a move to constitute executive directors from the existing team to ensure
seamless operation in the absence of the MD as was the procedure.
NBET
had to complete GenCos invoices for the first two months because Fashola
announced the fund over two months before CBN issued the Offer Letter.
An
official said, “As we speak, CBN has not issued any fund yet. It is now that
NBET is trying to meet the Conditions Precedent (CPs).
“NBET
felt since the CBN has agreed to release the fund; it applied to the Presidency
to grant the authority to use the capitalisation pending when CBN releases the
fund.”
Administrative
glitches delay process
It
was further gathered that sour relations between the leadership of NBET and key
officials tied to the fund added to the delay. “Leadership of NBET has poor
relationship with the finance ministry; it has antagonized so many in the power
ministry and that has undermined the ability to operate in a team work,” an
official said.
For the GenCos, “The fact remains, if government wants the power sector to succeed, payments have to be made. If the GenCos don’t get enough fund to pay for gas, generation of electricity will crash,” one of their experts further stated.
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