By Stella Odueme
Minister of Power, Chief Adebayo Adelabu has said that the power sector needs an overhaul, and the present administration has taken the bold step to start the journey.
A statement by Bolaji Tunji
Special Adviser, Strategic Communication and Media Relations to Minister of Power on Sunday in Abuja said the minister pleaded for patience and understanding in addressing the root cause of the problems of the power sector to provide consumers with the desired service.
The minister pointed out that Nigeria is in a subsidy regime where the government covers 67 percent of the cost of power production, transmission, and distribution, which consumes more than 10 percent of the National budget.
He stressed the need for consumer protection and that value for money is critical for consumers, adding that the ministry is determined to keep its promise to Nigerians on issue of electricity.
Speaking on the recent tariff increase, Adelabu said the increase is only for consumers in the Band A category, which is only 15 percent of consumers, while other customers will continue to enjoy the government subsidy.
According to the minister, the ministry intends to provide a cost-reflective tariff and gradually migrate other consumers to the band A grade over three years.
“These consumers will enjoy 20 to 24 hours of electricity per day, and that, realistically, it is cheaper at N225 per kilowatt than diesel and generating sets.
“There is an infrastructure deficit, which includes the availability of gas and the generation, transmission, and distribution of power. These must be addressed for the sector to grow and benefit Nigerians”.
He also mentioned that the current metering gap needs to be bridged and that all the issues stated can only be addressed by the generation of funds.
The Minister said the sector had been decentralized and that consumer protection was vital. “Twenty hours must be achieved as promised, and anything else would attract consequences for the distribution company”, he said.
Adelabu also advised Nigerians to learn energy consumption management while getting value for money spent. “At the same time, the Ministry, on its part, is ramping up generation, such as the renewable energy and the Zungeru projects. The Ministry is also working hard to find creative ways to cut vandalism while installing new lines and injection lines and investing in advocacy to educate consumers”, he said