Skip to main content

Buhari Says No to Current Electricity Tariffs

Buhari Says No to Current Electricity Tariffs
Presiden Muhammadu Buhari
The president stated this in Lagos on Wednesday at the annual general meeting of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) where he was the special guest of honour.
The Senior Special Assistant to the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Mr Laolu Akande, said in a statement on Thursday that his boss represented Buhari at the meeting.
He quoted Osinbajo as saying: "Power is, of course, crucial and as the president said in his inaugural address, to which President Mbeki referred, the question of power is one that's absolutely crucial to manufacturing and practically everything else and we shouldn't be rejoicing at 4000mw of power. But the problems are historical and several of those problems will need tackling head on, on a day-by-day basis. One aspect of the problem that I want to speak about, because this also affects manufacturing, is the whole idea of the tariffs. Of course, the president of MAN just said that we've one of the most expensive electricity in the world. 
"Now, the truth of the matter is that at this point, if we want to have a cost-[reflective] tariff, the only way is to service that core value chain and ensure we're paying and compensating the value chain--from generation down to distribution--a cost effective tariff. You can't have that cost- effective tariff without some pay.  At the moment, how much it costs to produce power, and the amount of power generated, the losses on account of distribution are significant. In some cases, you've up to 40% losses in distribution, and of course, it's the distributing companies that have to take that burden. The generating companies are producing power, but they expect to be paid for all the power they produce. Now, if 40% of this is lost, it means the discos cannot collect 40%, but they've to pay for it somehow. So, government has to come in and play some kind of role in order to ensure that the whole value chain is paid for. 
"But the most important thing is that the cost of power is reflective of costs that have to be borrowed at every stage of the value chain and today the cost of power, if it's going to be reflective in any way is simply what it is. It'll be very difficult indeed except if we're going to introduce yet another subsidy and by the way, a fair amount of that goes on already in the way that government supports the gencos and the discos. But I think we must be ready to accept that for a while.
"Until things stabilise somewhat, tariffs cannot remain at the levels at which they're today, they cannot remain at that level, and that is just simply the truth of the matter. It certainly means that there may be higher costs, but I don't think that a option of not having power is really what we want. The real issue of course is that at the end of the day, some of the cost goes to the consumer; but a cost-reflective tariff is an absolute necessity, otherwise, privatisation and all of that simply doesn't make sense".
Akande also quoted the vice president as stating that a review of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) restrictions on foreign currency is not imminent.
"I want to make it absolutely clear that the position is not that a review of the CBN restrictions on foreign exchange is imminent. It is a short term measure, not a policy, and as things improve, we'll have a discussion about what to do. But certainly not that a review is about to take place."

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

State House of Assembly collected bribes from commissioner nominees

An N2.4 million bribery scam is rocking the Delta State House of Assembly. SaharaReporters learned that the Speaker, Monday Igbuya, and other members of the State House of Assembly allegedly collected N200,000 bribes from the twelve commissioner nominees forwarded by Governor Ifeanyi Okowa for “screening.” Confiding in a SaharaReporters correspondent, a senior management staff person of the State’s House of Assembly who did not want to be named disclosed that one of the commissioner nominees told him in confidence how the twelve nominees’ arms were twisted to pay N200,000 each. The ultimatum was that without the N200,000 none of them would be cleared by the lawmakers. However, the source said, “If you were around during their screening on the floor of the House, you would have noticed that all the nominees were only told to take a bow” and to go. An aide to one of the commissioners who pleaded anonymity confided in SaharaReporters that the money was definitively give...

PIONEER YOUTH MOVEMENT ORGANISED CAREER GUIDANCE & COUNSELLING PROGRAMME MAIDUGURI

A special Career Guidance and counseling programme held at Government Day Secondary Schools Mairi in Jere local government, Borno State, Nigeria in honour of Dr. Umar Alkali an education philanthropist. The programme was organised to encourage him and his likes in the society to scale up and be consistent in extending such gesture at this trying time. They offer scholarship to hundreds of tertiary institutions students. The central aim of the programme is to assist the young men and women make better decision of their future career, which would in long run address the problem of unemployment in the near future. Youth Movement is a youth led organisation that came into existence Two (2) years ago. We therefore decide to study the various problems in the society and weighing them with our capability, we decide to go for education sector which composes of Career Guidance and counselling campaign and also imbibing reading culture among students in the State which is our short-term goa...

BUHARI: TURNING APPOINTMENTS INTO DISAPPOINTMENTS

   By Jaafar Jaafar Ponder over this Hausa proverb: “sawun keke ba’a gane gabanka”, which roughly translates to “a bicycle’s contact patch does not tell where it comes from or where it heads to”, and see how it aptly describes Nigeria’s president, Muhammadu Buhari. Bearing in mind the current realities in our polity, how would you, in your wildest dream, think the Secretary to the Government of the Federation will come from the North? The very North that has a President, a Senate President, a Speaker, a Head of Service, a Chief of Staff, a Chief Justice, and what not? While Mr. President is likened to the proverbial “sawun keke”, the pigmentation of his appointments may be likened to “birgimar hankaka”, literally meaning the wallow of a pied crow. When a pied crow wallows, the Hausa say, you will see both the white patch on its gullet and the black plumage that covers most of the bird’s body. In the appointment of the GMD of NNPC, President Buhari showed Nigeria...