Loading...

Nigeria Lays Out Plans To Privatise 10 More Power Plants

Nigeria will privatise 10 more state power plants by mid-2014, advisers to the government said on Monday, as part of plans to overhaul the country's feeble electricity sector.
President Goodluck Jonathan pledged nearly three years ago to privatise the bulk of Nigeria's electricity sector, in an effort to end chronic power shortages that are the biggest brake on growth in Africa's second largest economy.

Although Jonathan's roadmap is more than a year behind schedule, the government accepted deposits in April for 10 generation and five distribution companies that were created by unbundling the defunct state electricity firm.

Private firms will take control of these companies by the end of this year, the government says. The sell-off of the state power firm is expected to raise around $2.5 billion.

Nigeria now plans to sell 10 more power plants, all of them gas fired. Private investors must submit their interest in buying the plants on July 19 and preferred bidders will be announced in January next year, before handing over the power plants, advisers on the transaction CPCS told Reuters.

"We expect all the plants to be commissioned before June next year when private bidders should take over," Arif Mohiuddin, a partner at CPCS said.

The 10 plants will have combined electricity generation output of 5,000 megawatts, Mohiuddin said, which would double Nigeria's current capacity.

These power plants make up the National Integrated Power Project (NIPP), a plan set up in 2004 by then President Olusegun Obasanjo as a 'fast-track' solution to electricity shortages.

The fact that only six of these plants have been completed, nine years after the NIPP was formed, is a sign of how slowly electricity reforms are moving, industry experts say.

Nigeria has so far spent $15-$20 billion on the mismanaged NIPP, industry experts say. It is unlikely the sale of the plants will come close to recouping these funds, which could prompt wrangling between disgruntled politicians.

Mohiuddin declined to give valuations for NIPP plants.

A lack of investment in the transmission network, which remains in public hands, poor gas supply and labour disputes threaten to delay progress in boosting power output further.

Despite being the continent's top oil producer and holding the world's ninth largest gas reserves, Nigeria's power output is a tenth of South Africa's for a population three times the size. Sorting it out could seal Jonathan's legacy.

It would also cut business costs by up to 40 percent, add 3 percent to GDP and ease mass unemployment that fuels unrest seen in rampant oil theft in the south and a bloody Islamist insurgency in the north, economists say.

Though government plans to boost power output tenfold by 2020 will not come close to being met, a significant improvement could be felt in 2-3 years, industry experts say.
Nigeria 7303691157721619805

Post a Comment

emo-but-icon

Home item

Popular Posts

Labels

Current News Nigeria Africa BREAKING NEWS Boko Haram Terrorism Entertainment Goodluck Jonathan South Africa Business Big Brother Africa Mali Egypt AFCON Elections Sudan Abubakar Shekau Zimbabwe Libya Somali FIFA Barack Obama Chelsea Al-Qaeda Syria Mandela Senegal African Union Lagos Manchester United Tunisia Uganda Patience Jonathan Central Africa Jose Mourinho Barcelona Jacob Zuma Stephen Keshi Algeria Dangote Ethiopia Malawi Nigerian Army Oscar Pistorius Zambia Big Brother CHASE Celebrity Saudi Arabia Ansaru Arsenal Mikel Obi Liberia Muslim Brotherhood Olusegun Obasanjo Pope Benedict XVI Okonjo-Iweala Amnesty Argentina Congo North Korea Queen Elizabeth II Robert Mugabe Sierra Leone Angola Buhari Dana Twitter APC Adenuga Alex Ferguson Aljazeera Boston Marathon David Mark EFCC Henry Okah Morsi Sanusi Togo #OccupyNigeria Arik Air Arsene Wenger Basketball Cristiano Ronaldo Current Views Spain UEFA Champions League Uhuru Kenyatta Yobe Babatunde Fashola COZA Drogba Michelle Obama Morgan Tsvangirai Tanzania Wole Soyinka Bakassi Peninsula Mark Zuckerberg Middle East Mozambique Neymar Roman Abrahamovich World Bank World Cup ANC Al Ahly Al Shabaab Aliko Dangote Angelina Jolie Bayelsa Big Brother Star Game Burkina Faso Chevron D'Banj Don Jazzy FELA Farouk Lawan Kim Kardashian Michael Jordan Mike Tyson Peter Odemwingie Sepp Blatter Singapore Social Media Sokoto Super Eagles Swaziland Tiger Woods WhatsApp Yahoo Asari Dokubo BBC British M16 CBN Danbaba Suntai David Beckham Ernest Koroma Fabrice Muamba Femi Falana Hezbollah Julius Malema Kabiru Sokoto Kanu Nwankwo Lesotho Michael Jackson Osama Bin Laden Pope John Paul II Sani Abacha Somaliland South Korea Susan Rice Taraba Yakowa Yemen Yvonne Ndege Zamfara Zaria

Random Posts

Flickr Photo