NIGERIA'S electricity generation has dropped to 1,714.89
Megawatts Hour/Hour (MWH/H) as at yesterday, compared with 3,563 generated in
December last year, 2013.
The country’s electricity generation since the inception of the Jonathan government is so bad that nothing good can be writing about.
The current drop in electricity generation may not be
unconnected to electricity bottleneck such as the prolongation of Interim Rules
Period (IRP), this was the position of the Chairman of Presidential Taskforce
on Power, Beks Dagogo-Jack, said recently that there was every indication that
the IRP designated to terminate on March 1, 2014 or “such other time as the
commission may designate” shall not occur on the said date.
‘’He went further to say that the prolonged Interim Rules Order (IRO) and continued delay in the declaration of Transitional Electricity Market Stage (TEM) could encourage the power Distribution Companies (Discos) to engage in avoidable sharp practices especially those with “favourable” minimum monthly invoice settlement conditions.
‘’He went further to say that the prolonged Interim Rules Order (IRO) and continued delay in the declaration of Transitional Electricity Market Stage (TEM) could encourage the power Distribution Companies (Discos) to engage in avoidable sharp practices especially those with “favourable” minimum monthly invoice settlement conditions.
He explained that the Discos may be collecting a lot more
and yet short-changing the market ...a situation which could seriously threaten
service delivery sustenance owing to mounting unpaid upstream liabilities which
can cause a serious decline in gas and generation availability in a matter of
months, such that sustaining even 3000MW on the grid could become a herculean
task under these conditions .
He said that deliverable milestones
contained in the very bold and ambitious Nigeria Power Sector Reform Roadmap
launched had been achieved except two, which are the declaration by the
Minister of Power of the TEM that would kick-start a fully contracted and
rules-governed electricity market wherein the sanctity of contracts shall be
full to protect market liquidity, and incentivise increased investment and a
well incentivised and liberalised domestic gas market expected to be delivered
by the pending Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB).
Dagogo-Jack hinted that conscious of the
risks associated with handing over the companies for privatised company
operation without TEM or a substitute, the Presidential Task Force on Power
made repeated representations to the Ministry of Power, Nigeria Electricity
Regulatory Commission (NERC) and Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) leading
eventually to an acceptance by NERC to develop and institute a set of interim
rules to conduct the market in the pre-TEM phase. Such would be done until the
declaration of TEM with a commitment that the IRP shall not be in operation for
more than three months.
Dagogo-Jack noted that unfortunately the IRO issued by NERC in December
2013 appears to have some significant sources of concern which are capable of
impacting very negatively with the sustainability of the market especially as
it appears the IRP would stretch much longer than the three months originally
committed to by NERC.
He noted that a key implication of the non-declaration of TEM was the
necessary suspension of all the industry agreements and contracts between the trading parties. “The
main effect of this during the IRP is that the market participants (gas
suppliers , Gencos , TCN , Discos , MO , NBET ) have no enforceable and fully
risk-allocated contractual basis for extracting performance from one another.”
I would never allow Beks Dagogo-Jack , to fool me with
his technical jargons; Interim Rules Period (IRP), prolonged Interim Rules
Order (IRO), Transitional Electricity Market Stage (TEM), Petroleum Industry
Bill (PIB). Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and Bureau of
Public Enterprises (BPE) etc.etc , all what Nigerian are asking for is regular and
uninterrupted power supply.
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