Oil & Energy
PH DISCO Tasks MDAs On Bills Payment
The Port Harcourt
Electricity Distribution Company (PHED) has said that payment of outstanding debt by government’s ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) is of paramount importance if the electricity supply industry is to survive in Nigeria.
The Chief Executive Officer, PHED, Mr Jay Mccoskey, who stated this in a statement, said the country’s electricity industry was in dire straits due to huge unpaid debt and this informed its recent decision to publish disconnection notices to all MDAs indebted to it.
Mccoskey, stated that the refusal of MDAs to pay their long-outstanding debt represented the biggest worry of the distribution companies (DISCOs) in the country today.
According to him, the DISCOs were already grappling with too many issues such that adding MDAs would constitute a burden too big for the industry to bear.
“As a distribution company, PHED inherited a weak network, a relatively small customer base compared to the population, massive electricity theft and several other social ills related to electricity supply. For MDAs, therefore, to join these barrage of problems by continuously refusing bills payment is like a death sentence to the industry”, he said.
The DISCO boss explained that given the huge revenue shortfall that PHED, like other distribution companies, were experiencing, mass disconnection would have to be done to force a change in the payment habits of consumers.
“We have issued disconnection notices to all MDAs while at the same time engaging all other indebted customers to ensure that they pay their bills. The industry no longer runs on government subvention”, he noted.
Mccoskey further said that there would be marked improvement in service delivery once there is better collection from customers, especially MDAs, adding that PHED had already demonstrated this by recent initiatives that it has embarked upon.
According to the CEO: “Our goal is to provide our customers reliable service in terms of power supply and overall customer experience. That is why we recently launched a 24/7 call centre and invested heavily in several building commercial lines that provide dedicated power to commercial users.
“We believe that by giving power to companies, factories and industrial outfits, such organisations will be able to continue to produce their goods and offer services competitively and keep people employed. We hope that we will get government’s support through prompt payment of bills and historical debts by MDAs”.
Chris Oluoh
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Take Concrete Action To Boost Oil Production, FG Tells IOCs
Speaking at the close of a panel session at the just concluded 2026 Nigerian International Energy Summit, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Oil), Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, said the government had created an enabling environment for oil companies to operate effectively.
Lokpobiri stressed that the performance of the petroleum industry is fundamentally tied to the success of upstream operators, noting that the Nigerian economy remains largely dependent on foreign exchange earnings from the sector.
According to him, “I have always maintained that the success of the oil and gas industry is largely dependent on the success of the upstream. From upstream to midstream and downstream, everything is connected. If we do not produce crude oil, there will be nothing to refine and nothing to distribute. Therefore, the success of the petroleum sector begins with the success of the upstream.
“I am also happy with the team I have had the privilege to work with, a community of committed professionals. From the government’s standpoint, it is important to state clearly that there is no discrimination between indigenous producers and other operators.
“You are all companies operating in the same Nigerian space, under the same law. The Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) does not differentiate between local and foreign companies. While you may operate at different scales, you are governed by the same regulations. Our expectation, therefore, is that we will continue to work together, collaborate, and strengthen the upstream sector for the benefit of all Nigerians.”
The minister pledged the federal government’s continued efforts to sustain its support for the industry through reforms, tax incentives and regulatory adjustments aimed at unlocking the sector’s full potential.
“We have provided extensive incentives to unlock the sector’s potential through reforms, tax reliefs and regulatory changes. The question now is: what will you do in return? The government has given a lot.
Now is the time for industry players to reciprocate by investing, producing and delivering results,” he said.
Lokpobiri added that Nigeria’s success in the upstream sector would have positive spillover effects across Africa, while failure would negatively impact the continent’s midstream and downstream segments.
“We have talked enough. This is the time to take concrete actions that will deliver measurable results and transform this industry,” he stated.
It would be noted that Nigeria’s daily average oil production stood at about 1.6 million barrels per day in 2025, a significant shortfall from the budget benchmark of 2.06 million barrels per day.
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The energy expert further warned that repeated public admissions of incompetence by NNPC leadership risk eroding investor confidence, weakening Nigeria’s energy security framework, and undermining years of policy efforts aimed at domestic refining, price stability, and job creation.
He described as most worrisome the assertion that there is no urgency to restart the Port Harcourt Refinery because the Dangote Refinery is currently meeting Nigeria’s petroleum needs.
“Such a statement is annoying, unacceptable, and indicative of leadership that is not solution-centric,” he said.
The PETROAN National PRO reiterated that Nigeria cannot continue to normalise waste, institutional failure, and retrospective justification of poor decisions stressing that admitting failure is only meaningful when followed by accountability, reforms, and a clear, credible plan to prevent recurrence.
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