NLC Bemoans Failure In Power Sector

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Nigeria’s power system has been dubbed a failure by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), which emphasized that both the Federal Government and operators had fallen short of what energy users nationwide had expected.

The Federal Government, however, disagreed with the viewpoint of labour, claiming that despite the difficulties the industry was currently facing, the power sector was presently healthy.

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The amount of power produced in the sector has not increased since it was privatized in November 2013, according to Joe Ajaero, the National Union of Electricity Employees’ General Secretary and Deputy President of the NLC.

He revealed in a statement on Friday that the stagnancy in power generation had continued despite the persistent rise in the demand for electricity by consumers.

Regarding the sector’s performance in 2022, Ajaero said;

If you’re looking at the power sector, since you asked me to use a word to qualify it, the power sector is a failing sector. It is a failing sector, and this means that it is going down, down, down.

This is because the megawatts produced in that sector have remained constant, while the demand for it is increasing by the day. If Nigeria had any conscious master plan, it would have ensured that power production grows to meet up with demand.

For instance, if the demand for power is growing at 10 per cent, we should be able to track it, by maybe increasing our generation capacity by 10 per cent through the construction of a power plant that could give us, say 500MW, to check the rise in demand.

The NLC official also noted that Nigeria was a country battling with electricity poverty, adding that “if it (Nigeria) is battling with power poverty and is not making efforts to check the generating, transmission and distribution capacities, then the situation continues to go down.”

He added;

If you have 4,000MW that 12 million consumers are connected to, and you still have the same 4,000MW that 20 million people are making use of, you can see that the sector is sliding. And you still didn’t increase it until 40 million people are now using it. So you can see that it is continuously failing.

Any country that takes the power sector seriously will make sure that it has short, medium and long term projects, and that at any year, certain power stations, or generating capacities will join the grid.

As we end 2022, I’m not aware of any power plant that added capacity to the grid, and it takes about three to four years to complete a power plant. I’ve not been informed of any power plant in Nigeria that will be inaugurated next year to add another 1,000MW to the grid.

Same for two and three years’ time; so, it is not magic, and you can’t say let there be power and there will be power if you don’t work on it consciously.

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