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Electricity: Nigerians’ Expectations From Private Owners

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The Federal Government
on October 30,2013 in Abuja handed over share certificates and licences to new core owners of 15 of the 18 Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) succesor companies. President Goodluck Jonathan who presided over the ceremony at the Banquet Hall of the Presidential Villa assured Nigerians of better days in electricity supply with improved economy and employment generations.
In his words: “To the Nigerian people who have demonstrated such great patience and confidence, putting up often with darkness, noisy power generating sets, the related pollution and daily disruptions in their lives, I say better days are coming. We do not expect the sector to be revitalised over night, but we can all look forward to a better time very soon as we have seen in the telecommunication and banking sectors”, adding “I am confident that the power sector will promise no less, knowing the caliber of those who are taking over. Today, we embark on  a journey that will usher us to a destination of enduring gain and fulfillment”.
In separate messages to the handing over ceremonies across the country, Vice President Namadi Sambo, said sanction awaits any of the successor companies that fails to deliver or violates the rules enshrined in the Power Sector Reforms 2005. Sambo said the companies had been tasked to ensure consistent supply of electricity to improve socio-economic development and charged the companies to transform into world class entities in terms of quality of service delivery, social corporate responsibility, customers satisfaction and profitability.
The successor companies are Amperion Power Company Limited (Geregu), Transcorp/Woodrock (Ugheli), Integrated Energy Company (Ibadan), NEDC/KEPCO (Ikeja), Vigo Power Limited (Benin), Aura Energy Limited (Jos), Integrated Energy Company (Yola), Mainstream Energy Limited (Kainji), West Power and Gas (Eko), Kann Consortium (Abuja), 4 Power Consortium (Port Harcourt) and Sahelian Power SPV Limited.
Handing over the physical assets of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) to the 14 successor companies in Abuja, Power Minister, Chinedu Nebo told reporters that the PHCN had ceased to exist but the debt which government incurred and their assets have been transferred to the Nigeria Electricity Liability Management Company (NELMCO).
For many years, Nigerians have passed through untold hardship resulting from uncontrollable epileptic power supply. One will now think that the handover of the power sector to private managers automatically raises the hopes of electricity consumers across the country to begin enjoying constant and steady electricity supply. Nigerians have been patient with the federal government and its agencies that lacked investment potentials hence the engagement of the private sector.
The expectations of Nigerians are that the successor companies will turn around the power sector to meet international standard. Although this may not be done overnight, it is expected that a change is effected considering the fact that electricity consumers in this country had been subjected to many years of suffering. Past administrations in the country had made proposals and efforts at privatising the power sector to no avail while pessimists believed that the feat could not be accomplished. But the President Goodluck Jonathan-led administration has laid an unprecedented foundation for the country by this feat. Kudos to him.
It is hoped that the electricity market would be regulated in a manner that would promote growth and competitiveness while consumers interests would be protected from over-pricing and poor service. It is also expected that with the inauguration of the successor companies, power supply in the country would improve significantly, stabilise   and improve to provide the necessary platform for transformation of the economy as transformation cannot take place without power supply.
With the inauguration of 434 megawatts Geregu II NIPP Power Station in Ajaokuta 2000 megawatts had been added to the grid which would translate to an improvement in power supply in the country. While congratulating President Jonathan’s  administration for the sustained efforts in the power sector, Nigerians, we could say, are beginning to see the fruits of their labour.
Nigerians should be made to get the value of their money by providing quality service and regular light. The private managers of the country’s power sector must deliver to impact positively on the Nigerian people.
As Nigerians continue in their endless patience, efforts must be geared and quickly too, to improve the power supply in the country. It will be unfair and unpatriotic for any Nigerian to frustrate the privatisation efforts. All should cooperate with the government and the private investors to ensure the success of our dream.
Nigerians and governments at all levels should join hands to make the revolution in the power sector total. The Federal Government on its part should endeavour to resolve all the labour-related matters affecting the former workers of the PHCN by paying their severance benefits and all that is due to them.
It would be recalled that the final approval of the preferred bidders by the National Council on Privatisation (NCP) and its announcement for the successor companies was done on October 23,2013. By this development, the Nigerian Electricity Industry has been unbundled into generation and distribution companies and a single transmission company with a view to encouraging private sector participation and attracting foreign and local investors into the power sector to ensure economic and reliable electricity supply.
It, therefore, means that the management of the new successor companies and distribution companies must leave no stone unturned to ensure uninterrupted power supply to the entire country. The federal and various state governments are making efforts in providing injection substations while other stakeholders responsible for the construction of the NIPPs are keying into the transformation agenda for the present administration to boost electricity supply and ensure optimum service delivery.
The distribution companies should brace up to the challenge and ensure the use of both old and new facilities to improve the quality and quantum of electricity available to consumers in the country. The completion and inauguration of the National Integrated Power Projects (NIPPs) scattered across the country are a sign of government’s commitment to ensure uninterrupted power supply to Nigerians. Those projects are meant to strengthen the distribution end in the electricity value chain and ultimately enhance access to stable power supply, which will ensure that Nigerians get power in their individual homes and businesses.
According to the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Power, Ambassador Godknows Igali, government would continue to carryout reforms in the power sector in order to reposition the sector for efficient service delivery hence the commissioning of new power facilities in parts of the country. For government’s plans to achieve the desired success, the problem of shortage in gas supply must be tackled as well as billing system and load allocation just as the electricity tariff should not be increased as Nigerians are still suffering unsteady supply.
While the federal Government should remain forthright and resolute to enable Nigerians benefit from the handover of the power sector to private owners, the successor companies should not subject Nigerians to constant interruption and too much payment without any significant services. Nigerians deserve the best practice as it relates to power business and any sharp practices that would not allow Nigerians benefit maximally from the handover initiatives must be avoided. All hands must be on deck for the smooth operation of the power sector at all levels.
It is also expected that the rural communities would not be left out in the Federal Government’s Transformation Agenda as it concerns power supply. This is why the sum of N16 billion was approved for rural electrification projects for the electrification of rural communities across the country. The new power owners must be reminded that Nigerians are looking forward to enjoying steady supply of electricity and not the epileptic type that bedeviled the unbundled PHCN, which triggered the handover to private owners.
Improvement in power supply will bolster confident that the Nigeria economy is growing and raise hope for an increase in gross domestic product (GDP) as well as stimulate infrastructure development. This will also boost investment confidence in the country. The Federal Government can use coal and solar to boost energy generation in the country as coal and solar energy sources would contribute tremendously to  eliminate erratic power supply.
Power supply or generation has dropped drastically since the new investors took over from PHCN. This is why the president, Nigeria Institute of Electrical/Electronic Engineers (NIEEE), Mr Adekunle Makinde urged the new investors to embark on the maintenance of the facilities of the Power Generation Companies. His words, “most of our generation companies are down due to lack of maintenance and this will not enable them to generate power. Also, gas supply to all these power are not enough and vandalism of power equipment is another hindrance in the sector.
The government and power investors should join hands to make the power sector improvement a reality.
However, the federal government is devoting attention and resources to the power sector because of its critical role in industrialisation. The president had recently approved $3.7bn to improve power transmission across the country  and on that note, the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company started the implementation of some strategic plans aimed at boosting power supply to Niger, Nasarawa, Kogi and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). This is to get stable power supply to consumers in its areas of coverage within the next few months. It is hoped or expected that the Distribution Companies in other parts of the country would follow suit.
The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) recently blamed the drop in gas supply for power generation on pipeline vandalism, which was attributed to the incident of outright sabotage of some critical gas pipelines that significantly eroded  available gas supply to the power plants. Some weeks ago, over 30 per cent (480 MMsf/d) of the installed gas supply capacity was out due mainly to vandalism. The lost gas was equivalent to the gas requirement to generate about 1,600 MW electricity.
The Group Managing Director of NNPC, Mr Andrew Yakubu, however, gave assurance that gas supply would be reinstated in the next few weeks at the completion of various repairs, which is expected to bring a major improvement in power supply.
The power managers should ensure that their output on power improvement equate the determination of the federal government to transform the power sector for the benefit of Nigerians and Nigeria’s economy.

 Minister of Power, Prof. Chinedu Nebo (left), declaring open the 7th Annual Nigerian Association for Energy Economics and International Association for Energy Economics' International Conference in Abuja, last Monday. Photo: NAN

Minister of Power, Prof. Chinedu Nebo (left), declaring open the 7th Annual Nigerian Association for Energy Economics and International Association for Energy Economics’ International Conference in Abuja, last Monday. Photo: NAN

Shedie Okpara

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Supermajors Bet Big on Long-Term Oil Demand

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The world’s largest international oil firms are ramping up production even as crude prices have weakened this year and global supply growth continues to outpace the demand increase, setting the stage for a glut in the coming months.
The European majors are back to investing in exploration and new oil and gas field developments after years of trying – and mostly failing – to generate profits and good returns from low-carbon energy projects, including renewable electricity, green hydrogen, and biofuels.
The U.S. supermajors, ExxonMobil and Chevron, are pumping record oil volumes in the top shale region, the Permian, while betting on international project expansions in Guyana and Kazakhstan, for example. The U.S. giants both reported in the second quarter record-high production in the Permian and worldwide, following Exxon’s acquisition of Pioneer Natural Resources and Chevron’s buying of Hess.
France’s TotalEnergies expects higher oil and gas production to have boosted earnings for the third quarter, despite a $10 per barrel decline in oil prices since last year.
Production at the other European supermajors, Shell and BP, is also rising as the European giants shifted focus back to their core oil and gas business. The pivot took place after the energy crisis made energy security and affordability more important than sustainability, while high interest rates and supply chain issues further reduced already meager returns from clean energy projects and made many new energy ventures uncompetitive.
The supermajors are confident they can withstand the current weaker prices and the surplus on the market, to which they have contributed, alongside the national oil companies of the OPEC+ producers, which have been reversing the production cuts this year.
Big Oil is looking beyond the short-term fundamentals and glut noise, having decided to invest more in oil and gas to meet solid demand until at least the mid-2030s.
Unlike the International Energy Agency (IEA), which earlier this year doubled down on its forecast of peak oil demand by the end of this decade, Big Oil companies don’t see any peak by 2030.
BP, which said last year that global oil demand would peak as early as this year, ditched this view in its new annual Energy Outlook last month, in which it now expects oil demand to rise through 2030 amid weaker-than-expected efficiency gains.
Most majors have put the peak at some point in the 2030s, but none expect a rapid decline afterwards, and all say that oil and gas will remain essential for global economic growth and development in 2050.
“Oil and natural gas are essential. There’s no other viable way to meet the world’s energy needs,” ExxonMobil said in its 2025 Global Outlook.
“Our Global Outlook projects that oil and natural gas will make up more than half of the world’s energy supply in 2050. We project that oil demand will stabilize after 2030, remaining above 100 million barrels per day through 2050,” the U.S. supermajor reckons.
“All major credible scenarios include oil and natural gas as a dominant energy source in 2050.”
All three scenarios analyzed in Shell’s 2025 Energy Security Scenarios found that upstream investment of around $600 billion a year “will be required for decades to come as the rate of depletion of oil and gas fields is two to three times the potential future annual declines in demand.”
Exxon and now the European majors are playing the long game—invest in new oil and gas supply, at the expense of renewables, to offset with new production the accelerating natural decline of producing oil and gas fields.
Even the IEA admitted last month that the world needs to develop new oil and gas resources just to keep output flat amid faster declining rates at existing fields, in a major shift in its narrative from 2021 that ‘no new investment’ is needed in a net-zero by 2050 scenario.
Exploration is also back at the top of the agenda for Big Oil, as the companies appear confident their product will be in demand for decades to come.
The expected massive overhang later this year and early next year is not putting off the supermajors’ plans to increase production. They are slashing costs via cutting thousands of workforce numbers to protect shareholder payouts at $60 per barrel oil. Companies have pledged billions of U.S. dollars in cost savings and slimmer corporate structures. That’s to eliminate inefficiencies and excessive costs while keeping payouts to shareholders at much lower prices compared to the 2022 highs.
This year, higher oil and gas production is partly offsetting the weaker prices.
Increased output also positions the world’s biggest companies for rising profits when the glut clears within a year or so, analysts say.
“All the supply coming to the market is shrinking OPEC’s spare capacity — so there’s a light at end of the tunnel,” Barclays analyst Betty Jiang told Bloomberg this week.
“Whether that’s second half of 2026 or 2027, the balance is going to tighten. It’s just a matter of when.”
By Tsvetana Paraskova
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Stakeholders Lament Poor Crude Oil Supply To Indigenous Companies …..Urges President To Pressure NNPCL To Prioritise Local Refineries

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Stakeholders in the Downstream oil sector in collaboration with Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) have called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to create an enabling environment for all oil refining companies to thrive without fear or pressure of any kind.
They also want the President to mandate the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited to prioritize crude oil supply to local refineries over foreign partners.
The groups made the call during the Mega Rally against economic sabotage in the Nigerian Petroleum sector with the theme ‘National Unity Against sabotage: Reclaiming of Petroleum Sector for the People’, held in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital.
Addressing journalists during the rally, the Convener of Partners for National Economic Progress, Olamide Odumosu, insisted that it was unacceptable that government agencies hide under the “willing supplier, willing buyer” clause to frustrate the supply of crude to local refineries.
Odumosu called on president Tinubu to ensure that crude oil supply to the dangote refinery is not debatable.
Odumosu described the recent expansion of the Dangote refinery from 650,000m bpd to 1.4m bpd as not just a national glory but a continental and global one expressing regrets however, that the Dangote refinery now rely on the international scene for crude .
In his words “As an oil producing country, the matter of supply of crude to local refineries (in this case, the Dangote Refinery) is not only a matter of Law as stated in the Petroleum Industry Act, but a manner of patriotic duty, national consciousness and economic prosperity drive. It is very sad, unfortunate and embarrassing that Dangote Refinery imports crude from other countries due to his inability to source it at home.
“It is for this reason that the PIA encourages regulatory agencies to formulate policies that will ensure the supply of crude to local refineries, including imposing sanctions where necessary”.
On his path, the convener of Niger Delta Youth council, comrade Danielson Prince, condemned the practice of importing crude oil from outside the shores of the country.
Prince noted that such was detrimental to Nigeria’s economy while calling on the President to pressure NNPC to sell crude oil to Nigerian companies within Nigeria.
“However, this is both a journey and a struggle. And we will not rest, will we get to the desired destination and victory achieved. There are still very important issues to address”, he stated.
Prince described the situation as sad stating that it was unfortunate and embarrassing that Dangote Refinery imports crude from other countries due to his inability to source it at home.
Odumosu also emphasized that it is unacceptable for government agencies in the country to hide under the willing supplier clause to frustrate the supply of crude oil to local refining companies in the country.
TheTide learnt that similar rallies were recently organized in Abuja, Kaduna and Asana respectively.
By: King Onunwor
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Investors Raise $500m For Solar Manufacturing – Adelabu

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The Federal Government, in partnership with state governors and private investors, has secured nearly $500m to establish solar manufacturing plants across Nigeria.
Minister of Power, Adebayo Adelabu, disclosed this at the just concluded Nigeria Energy Conference, in Lagos.
Recall that the minister had announced that Nigeria had begun exporting locally manufactured solar panels to Ghana, marking a milestone in the country’s renewable energy drive.
According to him, following the recently concluded Nigerian Renewable Energy Innovation Forum organised by the Rural Electrification Agency, the government secured agreements worth nearly $500m with state governors and private investors.
The initiative, he said, would add close to 4 gigawatts of solar manufacturing capacity per annum, almost 80 per cent of Nigeria’s current total power generation capacity.
“At the recently concluded Nigerian Renewable Energy Innovation Forum, we successfully activated agreements totalling almost $500m with state governors and investors. What will this do? It will bring on stream nearly 4 gigawatts per annum of solar manufacturing capacity, equivalent to almost 80 per cent of our current national generation capacity,” he stated.
He explained that the deals would support local production of solar panels, batteries, and meters, reducing dependence on imports and positioning Nigeria as a key player in the regional energy market.
“Companies that will manufacture solar panels here and that will manufacture batteries and meters here, we can give them deposits. With this scale of renewable energy production coming online, Nigeria is not only positioned to achieve its domestic renewable energy transition targets but also to serve as the regional power market,” Adelabu said.
He said this would strengthen the export of renewables, a feat he said was achieved recently with Ghana.
“Nigeria will serve as the regional power market in terms of the hub, which we recently started doing with the export of Nigerian-based solar panels to Ghana just last month. Yes, we exported solar panels manufactured in Nigeria to Ghana, and we will not stop. We will be the hub for this, not just for West Africa, but for the entire African market,” he stated.
The minister noted that the move would have far-reaching benefits for the economy, including job creation, foreign exchange earnings, and faster deployment of solar energy infrastructure.
He added that training and empowering Nigerian youths in renewable energy technologies would be key to sustaining the progress.
Adelabu assured investors that the government was creating an enabling environment for private sector participation across the power value chain, particularly in transmission.
“Nigeria’s power sector remains open and ready for business more than ever before. The government is ready to provide the right and conducive atmosphere to make this environment investor-friendly.
“As rational investors, recovery of your principal and margin on principal are very important, and the way the power sector is configured, you will never lose your investment; you will be proud to be an investor in Nigeria,” he added.
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