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 ‘Nigerians ‘waste’ N12tr yearly on power’

‘Nigerians ‘waste’ N12tr yearly on power’

THE NATION

A former Commissioner, National Electricity Regulatory Company (NERC), Mr. Eyo Ekpo, has said Nigerians “waste” N12 trillion every year, considerably higher than the national budget, by self-provision of power with backup generators rather than being supplied from the national grid.

According to him, Nigerian homes and businesses produce 40,000 megawatts (Mw) of electricity with diesel and petrol generators daily while they are supplied only about 4,000Mw through the national grid. Ekpo likened this to “burning money” because of the N40 per kilowatt per hour difference between the cost of self-generated power (about N130 per kilowatt hour) and grid power (N90 per kilowatt hour).

He spoke during the European Business Chamber (EuroCham Nigeria) stakeholder conference on “Gaining Traction in Power Sector Reforms” held at Eko Hotel and Suite, Lagos. The conference was organised to galvanise policy reforms that will unlock investment in the power sector and deliver stable electricity supply to Nigeria.

Ekpo criticised the “patronising” decision of the government to hold down electricity tariffs, saying  “Nigerians want reliable supply of electricity through the national grid, Nigerians do not want low tariffs for grid-supplied power.”

He argued that there is no shortage of electricity in the country, adding that Nigerian homes and businesses provide themselves 10 times more electricity through petrol and diesel generators than the country’s electric power companies supply them through the national grid. Mr. Ekpo pointed out that the real problem with the power sector is that Nigeria is stuck with a power delivery model that is “extremely costly and inefficient”.

He explained that government’s decision to keep power tariffs low condemns Nigerians to perpetual dependence on “extremely expensive” backup generators as it starves the power sector of critical investment. Nigerians will not have reliable supply of cheaper electricity from the national grid until investors see a tariff that can cover the cost of the investment required to provide it, he posited.

Ekpo said the problems of the power sector are rooted in governance challenges rather than technical or financing difficulties. He noted that on the part of the government, “policy making and regulation have not been focused or comprehensive”, hence have not attracted the appropriate levels of (private sector) investment. He also noted that private firms in the sector also have governance challenges.

Ekpo, who was former Commissioner of Market Competition and Rates at the NERC, said the privitisation of the power sector in 2013 has not achieved its aims because Nigerians still overwhelmingly depend on backup generators.

“As at the time of privatization, average capacity delivered to the country via the national grid was about 3,400Mw. There has been a 20 per cent growth to about 4,200Mw. But our population in the same period has grown by 24 per cent, from about 175 million to 212 million. The number electricity customers have more than doubled. Backup power supply has doubled, growing exponentially to about 40,000Mw,” he said.

He blamed the failure to increase power generation and supply to homes and businesses through the national grid partly on the fact that the privitisation exercise did not attract quality power sector investors.  According to him, “we had a group of people who had to depend on borrowing and expected that inflow from the market would be able to help them pay back but that hasn’t worked out”.

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