N4tr Power Liquidity Crisis: Stakeholders Urge CBN To Review Interventions

Govt Support For Sector Hits N1.5trillion

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Stakeholders in the Nigerian power sector are unsettled on the need for the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to continue its support for the sector after aiding the industry and preventing it from imminent collapse eight years after privatisation.

Although privatised to run with funding from local and international investors, the Nigerian power sector failed to perform according to projections as challenges stalled the sector, which should have spurred growth across the economy.

Fueled by tariff shortfall, receivable collection, technical, commercial and collection losses, financial liquidity in the power sector hovers around N4 trillion as of the apex bank alongside the Federal Government had to initiate a series of interventions to douse tension and avert a collapse of the 2013 electricity privatisation exercise.

In about eight years, CBN would have spent over N1.5 trillion to keep the nation’s power sector afloat although the sector was privatised with the intention of surviving by itself.

Some of the interventions of the apex bank in the sector include Power and Aviation Intervention Fund (PAIF), hovering at about N300 billion, Nigerian Electricity Market Stabilisation Facility (NEMSF) at about N213 billion, N140 billion Solar Connection Intervention Facility, over N600 billion tariff shortfall intervention as well as a recent N120 billion intervention designed for mass metering among others.

Recall that in August 2019, the Federal Government signed the release of N600bn for the power sector to bridge the shortfall in the payment of monthly invoices by key stakeholders in the sector. The Federal Executive Council (FEC) also approved the N701 billion CBN facility in March 2017 as Power Assurance Guarantee.

Seeing that the sector was heading for the worst with visible illegality, CBN had last year directed Deposit Money Banks to take charge of the collection of electricity bill payments. A circular signed by Hassan Bello, director of banking supervision, had linked the move to the recommendation of the Power Sector Coordination Working Group to improve payment discipline in the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI).

Recall that the Distribution Companies (DisCos) are responsible for the sector’s revenue collection. While there was clamour for an increase in tariff, the sector’s inability to improve on the collection and reduction of losses, a basic part of DisCos Key Performance Indicators, as well as inability to make remittance to the Bulk Electricity Trading Company almost grounded the industry.

The General Manager, Market Operations of the transmission company of Nigeria, Edmund Eje, told The Guardian that improvement was being witnessed in the remittances due to the agency.

The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) had noted that revenue to Nigeria’s power sector improved since late 2020, adding that consumers now pay over 78 per cent of their electricity bills to electricity distribution companies.

Although stakeholders, who spoke with The Guardian yesterday noted that the efforts of CBN in stabilising the industry remained crucial and must be lauded, they insisted that it was high time the sector survived by itself. Their worries were that the essence of the privatisation exercise stands to be defeated if the sector is not compelled to find its path to enable the Federal Government channel resources to other critical sectors of the economy.

The CBN had noted that apart from bridging the metering gap in the sector, the power interventions led to the recovery of power generation capacity of about 1,200 megawatts and allowed DisCos to carry out projected capex through the issuance of letters of credit (LCs) for the purchase of over 704,928 meters; rehabilitation of over 332 kilometres (km) of 11 kilovolt (kV) lines and 130km of 0.45KV lines; 511 transformers purchased and installed and construction of 56 new distribution substations as well as the acquisition of a mobile injection substation.

An expert at PWC, Habeeb Jaiyeola noted that the interventions by the government to keep the sector afloat remained necessary, adding that the move has yielded necessary benefits.

According to him, the interventions are not unexpected for an industry that’s still growing, noting that the situation remained the same in most developed countries.

However, Jaiyeola said there was a need for the industry to outgrow consistent support, stressing that the earlier that happened the better it is for the government, so it could pump resources into other critical sectors.

Former Chairman of Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Sam Amadi, who said the intervention remained critical, noted that the commission was relevant to the success of the financial intervention.

“We are not hearing about all the monies from the regulator and that is worrisome. It is the regulator who should be speaking about funding for the sector because it has the capacity to regulate expenditure and ensure it goes to what is relevant and prudent,” Amadi said.

Speaking specifically on the intervention for metering, Amadi said: “I support the funding for meters but I doubt if it will solve the problem because the Discos will use the fund to largely replace bad meters and control revenue loss. But the rebate of unmetered customers will remain high and undermine any movement to the cost-reflective tariff.”

An energy scholar at the University of Lagos, Prof. Yemi Oke called for the immediate requisition or recapitulation of the sector stressing that government funding of the sector is not sustainable.

Oke noted that there was a need for consumers to pay a necessary tariff and adjust to realities, noting that the current federated structure of the market would work.

President of Nigeria Association for Energy Economics (NAEE), Prof Yinka Omorogbe said the country must immediately restructure and redesign the existing system, stressing that constant regulatory interventions are signs of an existing suboptimal system.

An energy lawyer, Madaki Ameh insisted that the real issue in the sector remained lack of capacity by the owners of the Gencos and Discos.

According to him, the investors have little or no experience in running the power sector and have also not invested sufficiently in the sector to warrant being handed the companies to run. “And because they are aware of the critical nature of power to the Nigerian economy, they are obviously blackmailing the government into providing them subsidies where none is required,” he said.

– The Guardian

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