In the face of the current epileptic power supply being faced
by Nigerians, The Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola
has appealed to industrialists, directors of companies and other employers of labour
in the country not to panic or downsize their staff strength saying that the
Federal Government has put in place a plan that would ensure progressive supply
from incremental to steady and then uninterrupted electricity regime
nationwide.
The minister according to a statement from his senior aide on
communications, Mr. Hakeem Bello Friday in Abuja said this at two major events
– the Quarterly Business Luncheon of the Institute of Directors (IOD) and the
13th Distinguished Electrical and Electronics Engineers Annual Lecture in
Lagos.
As a guest speaker at the IOD Business Luncheon, the
statement said Fashola underscored his optimism that the current challenges
facing the power sector would soon be over, saying the present administration
was committed to ensuring a sustainable power supply in the country.
He equally spoke at the Distinguished Electrical and
Electronic Engineers Annual Lecture of the Nigerian Institution of Electrical
and Electronic Engineers (NIEEE), and told industrialists, entrepreneurs,
directors and other employers of Labour in the Organised Private Sector (OPS)
not to panic by downsizing, shutting down or laying off their staff.
He noted that the nation would overcome the challenges of
unsteady power supply just as it had overcome other critical national
challenges.
He said he inherited a privatised power sector where majority
shares of the sector was sold to private companies after the government
unbundled the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) and sold the generation,
and distribution processes to private companies but retained the Transmission
Company of Nigeria (TCN).
Government, the minister said, also created regulatory
agencies like the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trader (NBET) the Nigerian
Electricity Management and Safety Agency (NEMSA) and the Nigerian Electricity
Liability Management Company (NELMCO), adding that by unbundling the PHCN into
18 companies, government stopped producing and distributing power as well as
issuing meters.
“Therefore the power sector I inherited is one that the role
of government is reduced to policy and regulation,” Fashola said.
While stating that the power sector would have been in
transition for three years in November this year out of which the present
administration has spent one year and he would have spent seven months as
minister, Fashola asked, “The context, therefore, is, between 1950 and 2013
what did we achieve in power?”
According to him, in all that time, only 4,000MW was
generated while not all consumers were metered out of the six million known
consumers.
“What is reasonable to expect within three years of
privatisation and one year of a new government in respect of a problem that
could not be solved in 63 years?,” he asked again, adding, “It is in this
context that we can discuss my role as policy maker, regulatory supervisor and
enabler for the private sector-led electricity market.”
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