THE Federal Government (FG) has committed the sum of N702billion to the Nigeria Bulk Electricity Trading (NBET) as power payment guarantee support.
This, it said is part of its economic growth and recovery plan.
The Minister of Power Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, made the disclosure in Abuja stating that the money is to tackle the liquidity challenges faced by the GenCos.
Fashola explained that part of the liquidity problems faced by the GenCos is the inability to pay gas suppliers.
He further said that NBET would pay GenCos in areas of electricity generated as a deliberate step to improve their confidence and that of intending investors into the sector.
He pointed out that:”the plan will not immediately solve the problems of the power sector or produce overnight the electricity that has eluded us for decades, but will bring some stability to the production side of the power value chain and also give confidence to investors who want to come in and who are concerned about how to recover their money.”
The minister disclosed that subsequent complimentary interventions will ultimately seek to:” Strengthen financial transparency and to ensure that industry revenue are fairly distributed to all market participants and their suppliers according to contractual commitments, secure adequate capitalisation and liquidity to ensure that all market participants, particularly those upstream of the Discos, are paid according to contracts and are adequately funded to sustain and expand their operations; attain and sustain generation, transmission and distribution above 4, 000 Mwh/h.
“Facilitate new power generation using all available energy sources, recovering lost gas supply, adding new gas supply, completing transmission projects.”
NBET is a100 per cent government owned company, which buys electricity in bulk from electricity generating companies (GenCos), licensed to produce energy to the grid.
As required by the Electric Power Sector Reform Act of 2005, the Commission licensed eleven distribution companies (Discos) to distribute and sell electricity.
The companies are 60 per cent owned by private investors with Government retaining a 40 per cent shareholding.