NERC, DISCOs Trade Blame over Poor Revenue in Power Sector

Fri, Dec 16, 2016
By publisher
4 MIN READ

BREAKING NEWS, Business

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The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission and Electricity Distribution Companies in the country accuse each other of causing the shortfall in revenue in the electricity market

| By Anayo Ezugwu | Dec 26, 2016 @ 01:00 GMT |

THE Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission, NERC, and the Electricity Distribution Companies in the country are trading blames over the revenue shortfall in the electricity market. While the DISCOs are holding the NERC responsible for the problem, the later says DISCOs are not very efficient in the operations.

Anthony Akah, acting chairman, NERC, described as false and unfair the allegations by the electricity distribution companies, Discos, that its regulatory actions contributed to the current N809.8 billion revenue shortfall of the electricity market.

Akah, in an interview with THISDAY, said more than any other operators in the country’s electricity market, the Discos have contributed to the poor showings of the market. He cited instances of the Discos’ withholding more than they were allowed of the market’s revenue, and at the same time backing it up with a court order.

He said a 22 percent interest was sculptured into the 2015 tariff to allow the Discos borrow funds from financial institutions to finance their capital expenditures, hence the falsehood that they were not given the freedom to borrow funds for their capital expenditures. “ANED is not one of our licensees. It is an association and the electricity distribution companies are licensees of NERC and should speak for themselves.

“Generally speaking, the Discos have not performed to the desired expectations. However, there are some of them that in spite of the constraints are doing far better than the others and therefore it is not logical for an association to be speaking for the whole distribution companies because the level of performance of each of them varies.

“The greatest problem we have today is that there is a high level of collection inefficiency by the Discos. Regrettably, while the report from the Discos show a certain level of collection inefficiency, the same report from the MO and NBET show that the Discos are unfairly withholding close to two-third of the total revenue collected from the electricity market.

“The ideal ratio that the Discos should withhold is in the neighbourhood of 24 percent and by these unfair practices, the value chain which includes the transmission company and generating companies that lay the eggs that we all use in the form of power generation are being constrained of fund.

“The commission in line with its statutory responsibility had proactively based on all understanding by all players that upon the take-off of the MYTO 2015, all contracts and transactions in the market should have been predicated or guaranteed by contract and this means that everyone would be assured of revenue remittances.

“The Discos should have known that if they don’t pay for power given to them, their letters of credit would be called upon, regrettably, some of them went to court and got a restraining order that stops NBET or Gencos to call on their letters of credit and what they have done is that they are now hiding under that window to withhold revenue beyond what they should and thereby starving the whole sector.”

On the debts owed the Discos by government agencies, which the Discos claim was heavily impacting their operations, Akah said: “The significant impact of the MDA debt is more on about three Discos where you have more of government offices and the significance is not so much on the other Discos, yet the government is willing to solve this and has said the onus lies on the Discos to prove the debt owed them for the payments to be made.”

On the other hand, the Discos, through the Association of Nigerian Electricity Distributors, ANED, had claimed that the NERC allegedly contributed to the illiquidity challenges of the market from its regulatory decision flip-flops.

They also alleged that the tariff approved by the commission for them excluded them from undertaking far-reaching capital expenditures in their networks, stating that they were not allowed to spend more than N20 billion in their annual capital expenditures.

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