The
Bureau of Public Enterprise (BPE) yesterday responded to a call on the
federal government to reverse the power sector privatisation by the
President of Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, saying it was too
early to condemn the process as a failure.
The
agency which was responsible for the power sector privatisation in
2013, also disclosed that the federal government will soon divest its 40
per cent stakes in the power firms to allow other private investors buy
into the power assets.
Speaking
when he kicked off the roll out of large power users’ (LPU) meters
which the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) procured for
deployment to its about 4000 maximum demand customers, the acting
Director General of BPE, Dr. Vincent Akpotaire said Dangote’s call for a
reversal of the privatisation exercise was unnecessary.
Akpotaire
said the agreement signed with the investors upon their acquisition of
the power assets allowed that they take at least five years to invest in
and stabilise their networks. He explained that based on that,
Dangote’s claim of the exercise’s failure was not factual.
He spoke to reporters shortly after he commissioned one of the LPU meters at the Abuja Archives and History Bureau.
“My
take is that we need to evaluate statements before we make them. That
is the point I think we should put across to Nigerians. We have put only
about three years since the handover of the power sector to private
investors.
“Before
that, the power sector had existed for well over 50 years and in those
50 years, hardly much was achieved due to several factors and the
decision to privatise was a well thought-out decision,” Akpotaire said.
He
further stated: “In three years, the measurement of their performance
is based on a five year index which is under their agreements and that
measurement is not dependent only on the activities of the private
investors alone but also on the tariff structure.
“You
are all aware of controversies the tariff has thrown up and because of
that, there is now a scale back in reviewing of the tariffs, one segment
of the review has just been lost and for every review not done, there
is a gap in the funding.”
He
explained: “In terms of rating, our approach is not to determine what
should be the pass mark but to consider whether the issues of reduction
of losses has been met, as of today we are just starting the issues and I
am confident that in the next few years, most of the results as to
performance will be better checked.”
Akpotaire
explained that he expected thoughts and expressions from business
leaders like Dangote on the sector to be more of proffering solutions to
its challenges and not stoking up pressure.
“What
I expect is solution finding and not reversal of the privatisation.
Best practices demands that this is the way to go. Even in countries as
small as neighbouring Ghana, they have made attempt to privatise
different sectors of their power sector.
“The
concept is not the problem but the management of the outcome. We need
our leaders to speak to the solution and not the problems,” he noted.
Speaking
on the government’s plans for its 40 per cent shares in the power
firms, Akpotaire said: “What we believe is that the 40 per cent held by
the government is not for keeps, parts of it will go to state
governments that made investments in NEPA in the past, as soon as the
valuation process is done by NERC and approval gotten from the Chairman
of the NCP, the vice president, the process to offload those components
to the states will commence and then what is left will ultimately end up
in the private sector.”
“The
intention is for these companies to stabilise to a point where their
equities will become attractive to other private investors and it will
be sold in the stock market where several Nigerians will buy into the
sector,” he added.
Meanwhile,
AEDC said it invested $1.8 million to procure and install the modern
smart meters for 4,000 large users of electricity in its franchise areas
of Abuja, Nasarawa, Kogi and Niger.
Its
Managing Director, Ernest Mupwaya said the meters were meant for
consumers like government ministries, agencies and departments, military
and police barracks, as well as consumers with huge power consumptions.
He
said they were smart meters that had sidestepped the possibilities of
human interface, adding that they are fitted with intelligence
components to curtail instances of breeches and bypass.
Mupwaya
also disclosed that the Disco was already working to accelerate its
small power users’ metering project having placed an order for 30,000
mete
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