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5,800MW electricity huge embarrassment to Nigeria — Stakeholders

By Adamu Abuh, Abuja
30 January 2025   |   3:20 pm
Critical stakeholders in the power sector say the generation of power oscillating between 4,000 megawatts and 5,800 megawatts,

Critical stakeholders in the power sector say the generation of power oscillating between 4,000 megawatts and 5,800 megawatts, which is responsible for power cuts, is now a huge embarrassment to the nation.

The coalition comprising the National Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE), the Amalgamated Union of Public Corporations Civil Service Technical and Recreational Services Employees (AUPCTRE), and two civil society organisations – the Renevlyn Development Initiative (RDI) and the Citizens Free Service Forum (CFSF) – decried the precarious electricity situation in the country, urging the Nigerian Senate to urgently convene a Public Hearing on the sector’s performance since 2013.

The groups, in a letter to the Nigerian Senate dated January 27, 2025, said that the electricity sector privatisation has failed Nigeria’s over 230 million people.

The letter, addressed to the Senate President, Dr Godswill Akpabio, was jointly signed by Comrades Adedeye Adebiyi and Dominic Igwebike, NUEE National President and General Secretary, respectively; Comrades Benjamin Anthony and Sikiru Waheed, AUPCTRE National President and General Secretary, respectively; Comrade Sani Baba, Executive Director of CFSF; and Philip Jakpor, Executive Director of RDI.

The position of the groups is coming a month after they organised a one-day symposium on the Socio-Economic and Political Implications of Privatisation of Public Assets and the Way Forward, which was held in Lagos in December 2024, where they x-rayed the report of the Senate Committee on Power, which investigated frequent national grid collapses and related issues and came to the conclusion that the sector was in turmoil.

In the letter, the group’s position, made available by Executive Director of RDI, Mr Philip Jakpor, also stated that the hike in electricity tariffs and the balkanisation of Nigerians into electricity bands, suggesting who should get electricity the most, have equally created an unnecessary class system in society. As a result of these, Nigerians are forced to depend on electric generators at huge financial, environmental, and health costs.

They urged the Senate to immediately convene a Public Hearing and invite Nigerians to relate their experiences in the last 12 years of electricity sector privatisation.

Another key demand is a halt to World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) suggested initiatives on privatising Nigeria’s public assets under the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) or any model that places profits over service delivery and human rights.

They want, instead, the adoption of the Public-Public-Partnership model, which has proven to be successful, as against privatisation, which is inefficient and has become a conduit pipe to fleece the nation, as well as sustained investment in human capital development in the public sector to pave the way for efficiency and transparency in their operations.

They also demanded an end to practices that unfairly target workers in exercises carried out to strengthen government institutions and advocated that workers should be regularly trained and rated based on performance.

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