Fashola: Nigeria’s Power Sector Still Attractive to International Investors

Chineme Okafor in Abuja

The Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, has stated that it is wrong to assume that investors of electricity systems are leaving Nigeria, adding that on the contrary, the appetite for investments in the country’s power sector is still high.

Fashola said this in Abuja Thursday during the inauguration of a project for emergency improvement of electricity supply called the power capacitor bank built by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) at the Apo substation of the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN).

According to him, “This morning somebody said all the investors are leaving Nigeria. But please play the speech of the Japanese Ambassador, Sadanobu Kusaoke, to this person that not only have they (JICA) completed these projects, they are undertaking another one in Lagos and they are going to do more.

“If there was one sector in the Nigerian economy that investment appetite is high, it is the power sector and the potentials that it brings. I couldn’t say that more eloquently than the way Ambassador Kusaoke has put it.”

On the 60MVAR power capacitor bank, he noted that the facility will help improve the voltage of electricity supplied to selected locations across the country.

The minister also explained that a second power capacitor bank, which will serve other locations, will be located in Keffi and will be handed over to the federal government by JICA in June this year.

He said: “We are here because we promised incremental power and to make it better. Not only have we improved the quantity of power that is available, we have improved the quanlity of power that is transported, and that is distributed.

“It is one thing to have power and it is another for the quality of the power to be good. And today, we have come to address the quality of power.”

Continuing, he explained: “Some of the examples of improving services will be the roll out of projects that will help bring more people access to power. Our population has grown over the last 20 years without commensurate expansion in the services and that is partly why there is load shedding and low voltage.”

Similarly, the Chief Representative of JICA, Nigeria Office, Katsutoshi Komori, described the projects as “emergency improvement facilities”.

Komori added that improving core infrastructure in the power sector was one of the priority areas of the agency’s programmes in Nigeria.

He said: “It is my pleasure to be here today to celebrate the commissioning and handover of ‘the project for emergency improvement of electricity supply facilities in Abuja’. In Nigeria, the high ratio of reactive power, together with insufficient capacity of facilities, interfere with the quality of electricity supply.

“For instance, areas like the Federal Capital Territory and Nasarawa State have particularly high population growth rate and are some distance away from power generation facilities, as a result suffer from voltage drops and power loss. To address this challenge, JICA provided a grant for the procurement and installation of power capacitor and related equipment at Apo and Keffi substations.”

In his remarks, the Managing Director of TCN, Mr. Usman Mohammed, said the 60MVAR power capacitor bank situated in the Apo transmission substation was necessitated by the ongoing transmission rehabilitaion and reinforcemnet of power infrastructure in Nigeria by the TCN to improve its wheeling capacity at the interface level with electricity distribution companies.

Usman explained that the facility will improve the voltage of the power supply in Abuja, Nasarawa and Benue States.

It was also learnt the grant agreement for the Apo and Keffi power capacitor bank projects was signed between the Federal Ministry of Budget and National Planning and JICA, with the Federal Ministry of Power, Works and Housing as a witness on February 11, 2016, while the contract was awarded to an EPC contractor in July 2016 at the cost of $12.1 million.

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