Hon. Minister of Power, Works & Housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola, SAN |
BEING THE REMARKS BY MR BABATUNDE RAJI FASHOLA, SAN AT THE MONTHLY POWER SECTOR OPERATORS MEETING HELD IN KANO ON MONDAY 14TH AUGUST 2017
I
welcome you to another of our monthly meetings at which I feel the need to make
fairly extended opening remarks, in order to properly place on record the steps
we are taking, the progress we are making and the challenges we still have to
overcome, as we pursue our road map of incremental, steady and ultimately
uninterrupted power.
I
am compelled to start on a sad note, to acknowledge an electrical accident that
occurred in Minna, Niger recently, and to commiserate with the victims and
extend our heartfelt sympathy to their families and to the people and Government
of Niger state.
As
soon as the incident was brought to my attention, I asked the officials of
NEMSA, our safety and standards agency to visit the scene, condole the victims
and conduct an investigation, the report of which reached me by e-mail over the
weekend and whichwe will review
and implement.
As
you will re-call, Government has approved the Power Sector Recovery Programme,
a series of actions, Policies and Programmes aimed at re- engineering the
shortcomings of the
privatisation process, supporting the process through this transition and
learning period, and ultimately delivering a stable, competitive and efficient
Power Sector for Nigeria.
Some
of the policies, programmes, actions which have started taking effect include:
a. Payment
assurance guarantee of N 701b
b. Constitution
of some boards of agencies like NERC and REA, with more still to come
c. Verification
of MDA debts, now completed with plans to get approvals on how to pay
d. Expansion
of transmission capacity with the completion of Kukwaba Sub-Station last month to bring
relief to Katampe in Abuja, Completion of Aja Sub-Station in Lagos and last
week to completion of the repairs at Ikot Ekpene switching station to activate
the full 1,300MW evacuation capacity of the Calabar to Ikot Ekpene double
circuit transmission line.
e. FEC
approval of the compromise agreement that frees the Federal Government of
Nigeria of Judgement Debt of N119Billion,
and also releases N 39 Billion
towards the supply of meters to customers of Discos
I
will pause here to expatiate on how this will work
Please
re-call that Government had in the past attempted to intervene in meter supply
through CAPMI which ultimately I decided we should wind down because of the
distrust and disaffection it was creating between consumers and Discos with
Government caught in the middle with
numerous petitions by customers who paid for meters that were not delivered
within the approved time or
atall.
Some
Discos have come back to say that their customers still want to pay for meters
and they can reach agreements with them on how to pay for it.
Government will not
stand in the way of such an agreement. It is consistent with the intent of
privatization envisioned by The Electric Power Sector Reform ACT (EPSRA) or at
least it does not violate the Act.
What
I will reiterate is that the Discos have the obligation to meter customers,
because they are the ones who charge for electricity which must be measured.
If
the customers and the Discos reach an agreement between themselves, where the
customer assumes the responsibility of the Disco of his own free will, and NERC
sanctions this agreement,
then so be it.
The
difference between this kind of agreement and CAPMI, is that it is not a
government initiative which CAPMI was. However, through
NERC, Government will monitor and regulate to ensure that Discos do not use
this as an excuse to abdicate their responsibility to provide meters.
In addition to this kind of agreement, what
government has decided to do is optimize the EPSRA provision to democratize
access to meters, starting with the N 39 Billion,
which will be a loan to the meter provider.
While
it is true that Discos have the obligation to meter customers, the law did not vest
a monopoly of meter supplies, or even retail sales, in Discos. Anybody who
qualifies under safety regulation by NEMSA and under licenses issued by the
NERC can supply meters to customers under conditions stipulated by NERC.
In
other words, meter supply is an open
but regulated business. You need a license from NERC to undertake it. You need
to comply with testing and safety standards of NEMSA to produce, import or
install it but it is not a monopoly for
Discos alone.
Therefore,
pursuant to the provisions of the EPSRA, NERC will issue regulations for :
a. Meter
service providers
b. Meter
and retail franchise operators
c. Community
Aggregation Services for sale of electricity and provision of meters
d. Low
cost meter supply
Once
the regulations are ready we will work with NERC to clarify and announce how to
licence and implement the metering programmes.
We
have met with investors of Discos and discussed these intentions with them, and
we will work with them through NERC to formalize the details.
The
successful implementation of this programme will help to reduce conflict
between Discos and customers, ensure collection of tariff, reduce losses,
improve liquidity and bring some relief to the finances of some Discos who cannot
afford to fund meters.
In
addition to the meter issue, we have made some progress with generation. I have
previously reported that unlike in 2016, damage to Gas pipelines and assets
have reduced in 2017 as a result of Government effort and significant progress
is being made with repairs and supply of gas.
Although
this does not mean that we have enough gas for all our power plants, we are at
least getting closer to where we were in February 2016 when we hit 5074 MW
mainly by the gas plants before the attack on pipelines started.
Today’s
improved gas supply also coincides with the onset of the rains which gives us
added power from the Hydros. The available power that can go on the Grid as at
August 10, 2017 is6,863 MW. The transmission capacity is at 6,700MW. The
primary constraint at the moment is the inability of the distribution
companies’ 33kV infrastructure to collect all the power that can be delivered
at the 750 33kV delivery points at transmission substations and distribute the
energy to paying customers.
This
is progress, that is consistent with our road map of Incremental Power, showing a growth of
generation from 2690 MW in May 2015
and growth of transmission from 5,000 MW in May 2015.
But
I regret to inform that this progress creates a new problem. The Discos are
unable to take and sell the power. This is the first time we have more power
than the Discos can distribute. It shows that some problems in Generation and
Transmission are being solved, while there are still challenges in the value chain.
As
you know, the assets that Discos inherited were largely aging, investment by
them has not been sufficient, foreign exchange volatilities have affected their
asset value base and their ability to access credit.
We
need every part of the value chain, from Gas to Generation, Transmission to
Distribution to operate efficiently.
Therefore,
just as the payment assurance guarantee has provided some comfort for gas and
Gencos and transmission investment by Government budget is translating to
Incremental Power, we have declared the policy of eligible customer and
also the mini Grid regulations.
These
are also what was intended by the
EPSRA which I urge all Nigerians to take time to read. It is a profound piece
of Legislation.
If
we read and understand its provision
and we are patient with its
steady implementation, we will reap its rewards.
Eligible Customers
What
the law prescribes is the solution to the problem that the Discos currently
have with aging distribution equipment at their 33kv and 11kv distribution
points and with distribution transformers.
Large
Power consumers to be prescribed by NERC, such as state Government
secretariats, large estates, industrial complexes and even generation companies
can apply to NERC to build the distribution assets that Discos cannot fund,
defray the cost over time, or pay a user charge to the Disco under an
arrangement approved by NERC in order to get more reliable power, at a price which is higher
than public tariff of N29Kw/h but less than N80kw/h of diesel power.
This
creates a new window of investment in the Sector to supply power on a willing
buyer and willing seller basis at a price to be negotiated over
the public Tariff of N29Kw/h and below Diesel power of at least N80Kw/h.
I
have heard statements that raise questions about limitations of state
Government to participate in power production.
I
will like to say that whether it is under the Eligible customer principle or
Embedded Generation principle, there is nothing in the Law that limits a state
Government except to get a licence from NERC.
Mini Grids
This
is also consistent with our policy of Incremental power, and the provisions
of the EPRSA which shows that within a Disco’s licence, a new licence can be
granted by NERC: because no monopoly was intended by the law unless is
expressly stated in the licence.
Mini
Grids are already a feature of many parts of the world where privatization has
taken place and they democratize access to power for those who want to produce
below 1MW of power.
The
Regulations, released by NERC today show the process for qualification and
application. I can only ask that we all embrace it and allow it to work.
I
see many possibilities. First access to power, economic boost, relief to Disocs
from unsatisfied customers, an opportunity for Discos to re-invent their
businesses with a chance in the future to buy power from mini grids or even buy
out the Grid owner.
Ladies
and Gentlemen, these and more are what the EPSRA clearly intended. This is what the Government is
determined to deliver to the people by administering the law, and this is our
progress report from last month.
Babatunde Raji
Fashola, SAN
Honourable Minister
of Power, Works and Housing
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