Senate Assures BPE of Cooperation

Fri, Dec 11, 2015
By publisher
3 MIN READ

BREAKING NEWS, Business

– 

THE Nigerian Senate has pledged its support for the reform and privatisation programme of the federal government.

Ben Murray Bruce, Senate committee chairman on privatisation and commercialisation, disclosed this at an interactive session at the National Assembly on Wednesday, December 9, 2015 with the management team of the Bureau of Public Enterprises, BPE, led by Benjamin Ezra Dikki, its director-general. Bruce applauded the BPE for the feats so far achieved and pledged the committee’s support in the discharge of the bureau’s mandate.

“I am fully in favour of the privatisation programme, but let us get the right people and the right investors with the requisite technical expertise to take over government assets. The Committee is willing to work with the BPE,” the senator said.

The committee chairman called for the outright privatisation of the national parks instead of commercialisation as was being canvassed, saying that commercialisation of the parks would not yield the desired results because it has been proven over the years that government could not successfully run any business.

Bruce said the committee had the responsibility to assist the bureau to deliver on its mandate to move the nation forward and pledged the committee’s commitment at ensuring that the value of privatization goes to the Nigerian citizens.

While acknowledging the critical role the Bureau would play in the policy direction of the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration, he said he had no iota of doubt that the bureau would not fail Nigerians given its track record of performance.

The chairman said the mandate of the committee “is to look at the privatized entities, their operations and current state of affairs as it affects their financial and corporate status. We shall look at these companies to see if they are delivering the goods in terms of efficiency, productivity, profitability, poverty reduction and all the supposed benefits that feature prominently in privatization advocacy, including corporate governance”.

To achieve the mandate, he said the committee had drawn up a work-plan which includes interactive sessions with the BPE, the National Council on Privatisation, NCP, and the power and maritime sectors as well as the petrochemicals sector.

He promised that the Committee would give attention to the bills before the National Assembly and ensure their early passage that would impact positively on the citizenry.

Earlier, Dikki informed the committee members of the mandate of the BPE and enumerated the reforms and other activities carried out by the bureau since inception.

Dikki stated that the power sector privatisation was already yielding positive results, adding that generation has moved from 2000 megawatts to over 4500 megawatts consistently and Discos have also increased their capacity to uptake power.

He also noted that Transcorp in Ughelli had moved generation from 150 megawatts at takeover to over 600 megawatts. He recalled the positive developments in the telecommunications sector which he said at the inception of the reforms, the Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) Cards were sold for N50, 000 a piece.” But with investment, competition and increasing number of lines, the cost of SIM Cards have crashed to zero. Nigerians would reap the benefit of power sector reform and privatization as investments are made and quantum of power supply increased. Tariffs will definitely crash. Nigerians should be patient,” he said.

— Dec 11, 2015 @ 23:00 GMT

|

Tags: