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Government seals deal with 14 firms to generate 1125mw

By Emeka Anuforo Abuja
22 July 2016   |   4:38 am
The Federal Government yesterday sealed a Power Purchase Agreement with 14 firms to generate 1125 megawatts of electricity from solar before the end of next year.
Mr Babatunde Fashola, Minister of Power, Works and Housing.

Mr Babatunde Fashola, Minister of Power, Works and Housing.

Fashola backs NERC’s plan to appeal tariff reversal judgment
The Federal Government yesterday sealed a Power Purchase Agreement with 14 firms to generate 1125 megawatts of electricity from solar before the end of next year.

This followed the initial approval by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and evacuation approval from the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN).

This came as the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Raji Babatunde Fashola, threw his weight behind NERC’s plan to appeal the recent judgment by a Federal High Court in Lagos reversing the February 1 tariff increase.

Officials said yesterday’s signing ceremony was the culmination of almost three years of hard work on the part of all the stakeholders.Fashola, who supervised the PPA signing ceremony between the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Plc (NBET) and the 14 investors in Abuja, said in the face of the challenges facing the country in the Niger Delta and its impact on national power supply, government was rethinking the entire energy mix.

The signing of the solar PPAs would allow the solar developers show their equity partners and their lenders that they have the commitment of the Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) through the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Plc (NBET).Fashola used the opportunity to speak on the reversal of tariff by the court.

He said, “Let me say that the judiciary is blameless. It has the constitutional responsibility to hear matters brought before it and to determine them in the way the arguments have been canvassed and the way that it understands.”

“But in all these, I must commend NERC for the position it has taken regarding the judgment. The Commission has shown that even though it disagrees with the judgment, it feels bound by it and it is challenging it as the law allows it to do. This is the meaning of the rule of law,” Fashola maintained.

Acting Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of NBET, Mr. Waziri Bintube, explained that the recent destructions to oil and gas installations in Nigeria with its attendant negative consequences on power generation had created enormous pressure on stakeholders to proffer credible alternatives to diversifying the country’s energy mix.

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