Nigeria’s
largest electricity companies will shut down power supplies unless the
government pays longstanding bills it owes them and improves gas supplies, a
joint statement said on Wednesday.
In 2013,
Nigeria — famous for blackouts — started selling parts of its moribund state
electricity firm, in a privatization that was meant to improve power supplies and
attract billions of dollars in new investments – neither of which happened.
If the
companies make good their threat, most industries and residential homes will be
in darkness except for those that rely on expensive diesel generators.
Six power
generating companies, known as Gencos, which had bought parts of the state
firm, said they would shut down electricity generation imminently if a debt of
N156 billion ($485 million) owed from a government agency was not paid. They
also said banks were recalling loans made to them, Reuters reports.
Nigeria has
paid arrears of N186.7 billion. The central bank has stepped in with a N213
billion loan to keep the system afloat and allow the power firms to access
credit, but more is needed as the oil price slump pressures Nigeria’s currency.
The companies,
which include Transcorp’s power subsidiary and Forte Oil’s power unit, said
they struggled to repair their networks because imports of spare parts had
become too expensive due to naira devaluation.
"In 2013,
exchange rate was 150 naira per dollar. Today it is 310. How can we repair,
equip, acquire new turbines at this rate of 310 naira per dollar and yet still
operate with an old tariff?," said the companies.
"(A)
shutdown is indeed imminent," they said in a statement.
The naira has
lost 40 percent of its value since Nigeria ditched its 16-month-old peg of 197
naira to the dollar in June in a bid to lure back foreign investors who fled
both the equities and bond markets after the plunge in crude prices.
After the
privatisation, the government pledged to review tariffs as more power is
generated and upgrade the transmission network to give more people access to
the grid. But tariff reviews have not kept pace with rising cost, worsened now
by the naira devaluation, analysts say.
In February,
the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) increased tariffs by 45
percent, triggering protest from consumers, already under pressure from rising
inflation, which hit a 10-year high in June. But the tariff increase was not
enough to cover their cost, generating companies say.
As of July, the
generating firms have received only 28.6 percent of their April invoices, they
said.
Chronic power
shortages are one of the biggest constraints on investment and growth in
Africa’s largest economy. Producing less than 4,000 megawatts, Nigeria’s
requires ten times the amount it currently produces to guarantee power to its
170 million people.
However, the
generating firms are holding off on expansion. Generating companies have around
5,000 megawatts of spare capacity which has no access to gas, they say.
Source: NewTelegraph

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