Tinubu, Nigeria needs stable electricity supply
It is very disheartening that
in 2024, the provision of a stable electricity supply remains a political
campaign rhetoric. Nigeria is a laughing stock of the global community as a
country whose citizens rely on different sizes and shapes of private
electricity generators to power their homes and businesses. Billions of dollars
of investments in the power sector have only yielded a mere 4,500 megawatts of
public electricity supply. All the various reforms including privatisation of
electricity generation and distribution haven’t impacted positively on the
electricity supply chain. Even the payment of subsidies to power distribution
companies has not made electricity readily available to consumers.
Nigeria at present has 27 electricity
generating companies popularly called GenCos and 11 power distribution
companies better known as DisCos and they include Abuja, Benin, Eko, Enugu,
Ibadan, Ikeja, Jos, Kaduna, Kano, Port Harcourt and Yola DisCos. The Minister
of Power, Chief Adebayo Adelabu, recently disclosed that the Federal Government
is subsidising the electricity bills of consumers nationwide by about 65 per
cent.
Quite unfortunately, despite
the widespread blackout and the worsening state of electricity supply in
Nigeria, the recent figures on the daily load summary of power distribution
companies indicate that the firms failed to distribute about 1,769.91 megawatts
of electricity between February 1 and 14, 2024. According to the March 5, 2024
edition of this newspaper, “Findings revealed that some distribution companies
were deliberately not taking up power supply from the Transmission Company of
Nigeria while some power lines were also damaged by vandals in Abuja, Benin,
Port Harcourt and Ibadan regions.”
There are myriads of
challenges facing Nigeria’s electricity sector. There is the problem of
vandalism of electricity installations including transmission lines and cables.
The Guardian newspaper of March 26, 2024, reported that between January 2022
and March 2024, 117 transmission towers have been vandalised by unscrupulous
elements. It cost the TCN N110m to repair each of the vandalised towers. Poor
wheeling capacity and grid collapse have kept the transmission of electricity
below 4, 500MW. Meanwhile, over $7bn was borrowed by the immediate past
administration of President Muhammadu Buhari to fix the transmission
infrastructure. Can sabotage be ruled out of these acts of vandalism?
Aside from this, the Federal
Government owes gas suppliers and electricity-generating companies huge sums of
money. Likewise, customers – government ministries, departments and agencies,
hospitals, military institutions and individuals – owe distribution companies
billions of naira. On Monday, February 19, 2024, the Abuja Electricity Distribution
Company threatened to disconnect the electricity supply to the Presidential
Villa and 86 Federal Government’s MDAs over N47.195bn outstanding debts as of
December 2023. Some of the affected MDAs are Chief of Defence Staff – Barracks
and military formations owing N12bn, the Federal Capital Territory ministry,
Ministry of Finance, Ministry of State Petroleum, Ministry of Health, Ministry
of Information, Ministry of Education, Ministry of Agriculture.
Others are the Federal Inland
Revenue Service, Ministry of Education, Central Bank of Nigeria, Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Budget and National Planning, Ministry of Culture
and Tourism, Ministry of Interior, Head ECOWAS, and Ministry of Transport,
among others. Furthermore, the Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company better
known as IBEDC has disconnected electricity supply to the University College
Hospital, Ibadan thrice this year alone over N495m debt.
Other challenges being faced
by DisCos include energy theft whereby unscrupulous customers bypass meters and
connect their high-electricity consuming devices such as air-conditioners and
cookers directly without any meter reading. On the part of the electricity
consumers, they still face the problem of estimated billings for homes, offices
and businesses without pre-paid meters. Supply of pre-paid meters has been
tardy even as customers pay exorbitant fees for what was initially meant to be
supplied to them for free. Clearing faults is not prompt as many technical
staff members of distribution companies demand bribes before coming around to
clear faults at the transformers or electricity poles. SERVICOM does not exist
in the lexicon of DisCos. Every opportunity to exploit customers is explored.
Corruption from top to bottom
is one of the major afflictions of Nigeria’s electricity sector. Early this
month, President Bola Tinubu suspended indefinitely the Managing Director/Chief
Executive Officer of the Rural Electrification Agency, Ahmad Salihijo,
alongside three executive directors of the agency. The president also ordered a
wider investigation into the conduct of the officials in “a fraudulent
mis-expenditure amounting to over N1.2bn over the past two years, some of which
has already been recovered by anti-graft agencies.”
If Nigeria is not doing well
in the supply of public electricity to her citizens, she’s in a good company.
Most African countries are similarly performing woefully. My research shows
that Africa has 18 per cent of the world’s population, but just 3 per cent of
the world’s electricity generation. However, South Africa and Ghana are the
shining lights. According to the Ministry of Mineral Resources and Energy,
South Africa’s total domestic electricity generation capacity is 58,095MW from
all sources. The total installed
capacity for existing plants in Ghana is 5,134 MW, with a dependable capacity
of 4,710 MW. Thermal generation accounts for the largest share of Ghana’s power
generation, representing 66 per cent, with hydro accounting for 33 per
cent. Ghana exports power to Togo,
Benin, and Burkina Faso.
What are the likely impacts of
the lack of public electricity supply? The first is the exponential increase in
the cost of doing business. With petrol selling at about N700 per litre and
diesel at about N1,500, it costs a lot more to run factories, industries and
even small-scale businesses on power-generating sets. Doing so will make the
cost of goods and services to be expensive. The noise pollution generated by
private electricity generating sets and the carbon monoxide fumes emitted from
the exhaust pipes of these devices pollute the environment and have killed many
people who operate these devices in ill-ventilated enclosures.
Epileptic electricity supply
has prevented many wives from making bulk purchases as their fridges and
freezers lack electricity to power them to preserve items meant for storage. In
this heat period, many people are suffering from heat rashes and meningitis due
to lack of electricity to power their air conditioners and fans. It’s quite
frustrating when there is no public electricity supply. This is because most
Information Communication Technology and electronic gadgets are powered by
electricity thus, once there is no electricity to power them, they are just
like a piece of monuments.
Tinubu and his Minister of
Power, Adebayo Adelabu (grandson of the maverick politician, Adegoke Adelabu of
Penkelemes fame in Ibadan), should do all they can to deliver a stable
electricity supply to Nigerians because there lies the key to unlock Nigeria’s
economic growth and development. I do hope taking electricity from exclusive to
concurrent legislative list and other legal reforms recently initiated by
President Tinubu will yield positive results.
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