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Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target - Politics - Nairaland

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On The Verge Of Collapse, 13 Gencos Drag FG To Court / Why We Can’t Deliver On Our Promises – Osinbajo / Discos, Gencos Bringing Shame To Govt – Fashola (2) (3) (4)

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Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by osahonmk(m): 8:59am On Dec 13, 2016
Contrary to the expectations of Nigerians that they would soon have improved electricity supply of 6,000 megawatts in the country, which was the target for 2016 set by the federal government earlier in the year, operators in the sector have confirmed that the country cannot achieve this target due to issues of gas shortage, debts and transmission challenges confronting the power companies.

LEADERSHIP learnt that electricity generation crashed to 3,050.20MW last weekend. An official of the Nigerian Electricity System Operator of Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) disclosed that electricity generation had been dwindling due to challenges of accessing gas by generation companies.

Also, the executive secretary, Association of Power Generation Companies, Joy Ogaji, said debts owed them, which stood at more than N400 billion, was one of the major reasons for the poor power supply in the country.

In an interview with LEADERSHIP recently, the managing director, Mainstream Energy Solutions Ltd, Engr Lamu Audu, the concessionaire of Kainji and Jebba Hydro Power Plants, said that, if put together, the available installed capacity of all the generating plants in Nigeria may reach the 6,000MW target, but the fact that some power plants cannot run due to lack of gas while some have the gas but cannot transmit into the grid because of transmission problems make it unlikely that they would achieve the 6,000MW target by the end of the year .

‘‘There are so many issues at getting that availability on the grid; it’s not just getting the generators in place,’’ he said.

Just last week, the power generation companies and distribution companies (GENCOs and DISCOs) said they recorded a shortfall of N809.8 billion as at November, due to the scarcity of foreign exchange.

Foreign exchange has been identified as a critical challenge to operators who are hamstrung in replacing ageing equipment. Operators have also blamed some of its woes on inconsistency and ineptitude on the part of the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), as they seek federal government’s intervention toward finding a lasting solution to the problem of shortfalls in the sector.

They said that selling gas for local consumption in local currency; providing security against Forex fluctuation; re-engineering the DISCos’ balance sheet and making it bankable and having an effective tariff mechanism, among others, are the options left to save the country from being plunged into total darkness.

Since the privatisation of the sector, the 11 DISCOs said they had been running at a loss of not less than N10/KW of energy arising from the numerous problems affecting the industry.

The operators insist that much needs to be done in terms of regulation and unfavourable policies, noting that the industry lost N12.8 billion to the one-month delay in the take-off of the current tariff regime, which became effective in February 2016 instead of January, after being conceived in December 2015.

For the DISCOs, the major cause of the crisis is the persistent increase in the exchange rate after the December 2015 rate of N197 to $1.

Also, the GENCOs are made to buy gas from the suppliers in US dollars, tender their invoices to the DISCOs to pay at the prevailing value of Forex and charge their tariffs based on the fixed exchange rate, thus leading to the shortfall.

By June 2015, the exchange rate had gone up to N293 to $1, and now to about N360 at the official rate, meaning that the Forex value had doubled such that the same quantum of energy bought from the GENCOs at N10.50 now goes for about N18, while the DISCOs cannot reflect this in the tariff for the end users to pay.

The operators further contend that if they should pay at the fixed rate of N197 to $1, they will still have a shortfall.

Experts said that though the privatised electricity firms may have been freed of the state bureaucracy that previously hampered their operations, these utilities still encounter myriad if structural problems that continue to hamper the growth of the power sector.

They identified some of these to include shortage of gas for thermal stations, high level of unpaid electricity bills and outdated and poorly maintained transmission network, which government still owns but put under private management since 2012.

Many of the new power operators have struggled to make progress, especially as they have had to contend with ageing facilities requiring substantial amounts of investments to upgrade and expand.

With a total installed capacity of 8,457.6 MW (81 percent of total) in early 2014, thermal plants (gas-fired plants) dominated the Nigerian power supply mix. The rest of the country’s capacity is in the form of hydropower plants.

On face value, thermal capacity alone is nearly double of Nigeria’s recorded peak generation (4600 MW in 2014). Pipelines, the veins of gas-powered generation, had been consistently vandalised.

The minister of power recently put the cost of the vandalised Escravos-Lagos pipeline per day across the entire power sector supply chain to N470 million.

Nigeria, known to be ninth most proven gas reserve entity in the world, is unable to provide gas needed for its thermal plants.

With this scenario, the quantity of electricity that can be generated at any point in time is not determined by installed capacity but, rather, by the total available capacity.

The available capacity is the percentage of the total capacity that is not prevented from working, through planned/unplanned outages and/or lack of required fuels. Experts, however, welcomed federal government’s decision to pay legacy debts totalling N213 billion in 2014 as part of the process of boosting gas supply to the power sector.

CEO of Eko DISCO, Mr. Oladele Amoda, while reacting to gas supply constraint in the sector, said the company currently receives only 200MW from the national grid instead of 1,300MW which, he said, is not enough to sustain supply stability across its network.

Amoda also disclosed that the company is spending N700 million to replace 138 transformers in order to boost supply within the festive period.

The non-availability of gas supply to the 10 plants under the National Independent Power Projects (NIPP) is said to be responsible for their failure to generate 4,541MW of power expected of them to feed the national grid.

However, an official with the Niger Delta Power Holding Company (NDPC) told LEADERSHIP that the country was close to achieving stable gas supply to the power stations. The official, who would not want to be named, said some of its plants had started receiving supply, though still not enough to boost power generation as envisaged by government.

Aside generation, the country is battling with issues around the technicalities of power transmission.

Transmission is the transportation of the power from the generation plants to the distribution companies, which then take it to the homes, offices, factories, etc., and this work is done by the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) which was not privatised.

Today, it can only transport 5,000 MW.

The power minister, Babatunde Fashola, who revealed the low wheeling capability of the company, said about 907 containers of various equipment imported in the ports, and paid for, had been abandoned, having accumulated demurrage, port charges and all sorts of costs, by contractors who had deserted their contracts.

He, however, disclosed that approvals had been given by President Buhari for their release.

The containers, expectedly, contain all sorts of equipment which, when recovered, will hopefully help to solve some of the nation’s transmission problems.


http://www.energywatchng.com/power-why-gencos-cant-deliver-6000mw-target-leadership/

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Pokermon: 9:21am On Dec 13, 2016
This will be the darkest christmas ever. Apc is shame.

14 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Nobody: 9:57am On Dec 13, 2016
It's alright.

We're used to generating power ourselves so what's the BIG Deal?

I know this country is treating us way better than we deserve, I also know that these idiots will not go unpunished for inflicting such hardship on the Nigerian populace.

4 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by herzern(m): 10:30am On Dec 13, 2016
grin
Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by veekid(m): 10:30am On Dec 13, 2016

when DISCOs are unable to get potential from GENCOs; pls tell me how distribution wll occur

Ah don talk am before; I was banned, and I'll still say it again ....... Fashola is a lawyer a very competent one but he is a failure on this engineering field #cestfini

13 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by TINALETC3(f): 10:30am On Dec 13, 2016
Who won read al dis tins undecided

3 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by bigFOOTcaveMAN(m): 10:30am On Dec 13, 2016
Obj = $16billion ....... stolen!



Thats enough reason, shikenan!

9 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Agangz031: 10:30am On Dec 13, 2016
Dats bad
Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Nobody: 10:30am On Dec 13, 2016
ok
Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Chrisozone: 10:31am On Dec 13, 2016
Which way 9ja?
Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by LEOSIRSIR(m): 10:31am On Dec 13, 2016
but you are quick to blame the last administration

16 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by katchagboro(m): 10:33am On Dec 13, 2016
Just passing by
Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Nobody: 10:34am On Dec 13, 2016
True..and even 6000MW does not mean 24 HOURS LIGHT.

It means everyone would at best get 12 hours of light a day.

1 Like

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Nobody: 10:34am On Dec 13, 2016
grin grin grin grin
Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by 2shur: 10:35am On Dec 13, 2016
we are forever doomed in constant darkness.
the only african country blessed with trillions of natural resources but yet live in poverty,ridicule,darkness,corruption,backwardness, the list is non endin abeg.

if in 2016 we cant still attest to having a whole constant electricity for at least a year then forget apc pdp or any mega party shiit.
we would remain in the bondage of illiteracy,greed and long suffering for decades
i mean it

24 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Firefire(m): 10:35am On Dec 13, 2016
Where is the Minister of Darkness and Rock Science??

6 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by elgizzyuplifted(m): 10:35am On Dec 13, 2016
LEOSIRSIR:
but you are quick to blame the last administration
politicians and their empty promises n lies sef....I don tire

2 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by TherWasACountry: 10:36am On Dec 13, 2016
Thereis a country
Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Nobody: 10:40am On Dec 13, 2016
Looking at the report...the problem appears to be

1.Increasing cost of supplying power due to importation of gas.

2.Poor transmission system.

2 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by ednut1(m): 10:40am On Dec 13, 2016
the solution to this quagmire is to give Chinese,Japanese, and German power coy oil blocks in exchange for power . after all who indimi,alakija,ty danjuma and co epp grin. The generators companies in uk,german, japan and china have nigerians as shareholders so we can never have light. wetin u wan make perkins and mikano do dan to frustrate our plans . all i can say is ayele ooo

9 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by MutantMetahuman: 10:40am On Dec 13, 2016
Always excuses


It's pdp all over again


Useless government

6 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Segadem(m): 10:43am On Dec 13, 2016
Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by wins18(m): 10:43am On Dec 13, 2016
School Group Photo::: Headmaster to Photographer... "N20 is too much. There are over 2000 students here. Charge Only N10 its sufficient!! Headmaster To Teachers " Please tell all Kids to Get N30 each - for their Photo tomorrow Teacher In Class to Kids " Listen all must Get N50 from home tomorrow for the photoshoot!! Kid to the Mom "The Teachers have asked Us to Get N100 each for the Group Class Photo!! Mom To Dad : Are You Listening, these school People have Gone Mad oo, they want N500 for the Group Photo from each Kid! Ridicoulous!! NOW where Will this Corruption End??

14 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by OlajumokeBread(f): 10:45am On Dec 13, 2016


I don't want good/improved electricity

I don't want good economy

I don't want good roads

I don't want anything good

All i want is Buhari to rule Nigeria for 100 years

I want to see the zombies suffer till death

5 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Emassive(m): 10:48am On Dec 13, 2016
Minister of Power and Rocket Science Oya Gbberaaa...
Do something and put the Light to shame. Yeye dey smell Minister wey no know something. Dunce

1 Like

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Forwetinnah: 10:49am On Dec 13, 2016
Useless Sadists. .they cant generate electricity but can dispatch outrageous bills for people to pay monthly. The way I hate PHED officials now ehn, i see them as cockroaches invading my space. You look at the people giving out these bills and begin to wonder if they can pay a quarter of the bills they share
Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by anonymuz(m): 10:49am On Dec 13, 2016
Let's forget about regular power supply in nigeria.it wouldn't work because of incompetence our so called leaders.
Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by three: 11:00am On Dec 13, 2016
This is not Rocket Science Na

1 Like

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Okeikpu(m): 11:00am On Dec 13, 2016
Zoological republic of Nizooria
The story I was hearing since I was a kid
Now am almost 40 n still dey hear d same story
Up NEPA then n uptil now

6 Likes

Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Nobody: 11:08am On Dec 13, 2016
its almost 2017, every country in africa has solved their electricity issue except the giants of africa.
Re: Why Gencos Can’t Deliver 6000MW Target by Topshow2010(m): 11:18am On Dec 13, 2016
The more reason dis adminstration must revisit dis pseudo-privatisation of a tin shabbily carried out by d previous adminstration.

2 Likes

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