Court Cases Slowing Down Progress in Electricity Sector

Fri, Apr 8, 2016
By publisher
2 MIN READ

Energy Briefs

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BABATUNDE Fashola, minister of power, works and housing, said court cases instituted against ongoing electricity projects in the country are slowing down the progress of work on the projects. Fashola stated this at a workshop for judicial officers in Abuja.

These court cases, according to him, had become bottlenecks for the sector which is now largely driven by private investments. According to him, the fundamental issues in these cases were centred on the conflict between private interests and public rights to goods and services.

He disclosed that since coming on board, his office have had to deal with many litigations with grave consequences on manpower lost, youth unemployment and loss of revenue that would have accrued to government and other actors. He thus challenged judicial officials in the country to find legally permissible ways of framing such cases in the courts to ensure that they are dispensed off on time rather than keeping them on for long and encumbering works at power projects’ sites.

“There are outstanding issues on right of way disputes, over claims and counter-claims of ownership. We must find a policy that will protect rights without stalling development. These are cases about national development, national productivity, employment or lack of it, and prosperity.

“Where injunction orders are given to freeze project accounts that would stop supplies and works, as we have seen, the court is not protecting the claimant, but rendering people jobless. There are a lot of disputes on-going, some have dragged for 13 years, the recently resolved crisis by government between Enugu Disco and Geometric Electric has denied the nation the realisation of about 200MW that could have simply solved problem in Aba and Araria axis.”

He stated that out of 120 ongoing transmission projects that had been embarked on by the government across the country, only a fraction of them are free from disputes which are largely on rights of way and compensation for government takeover of lands earmarked as transmission highway.

—  Apr 18, 2016 @ 01:00 GMT

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