The federal government has directed the Ministries of Power, and Finance, Budget and National Planning as well as the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) to speed up the process of finalising the pre-engineering and concessionary financing agreement with Siemens AG, to rev up power supply in Nigeria.
The statement reads; “In an apparent reference to the initial opposition to the deal by Distribution Companies (Discos), which had kicked against the deal with the claim that the federal government could not negotiate on their behalf at the time, the presidency noted that all parties had been carried along before the agreement was sealed.”
It said the agreement under the Presidential Power Initiative (PPI) would see the financiers get up to a three-year moratorium with end-year repayment at concessionary interest rates.
President Muhammadu Buhari, during the signing of the power deal, had directed both teams from the company and their Nigerian counterparts to first focus on fixing the transmission and distribution infrastructure that had threatened Nigeria Electricity Supply Industry.
Speaking, he said the goal was to achieve 7,000 megawatts of reliable power supply by 2021 and 11,000 megawatts by 2023 in phases one and two respectively, noting that after the transmission and distribution system bottlenecks have been fixed, the third and the final phase would be to drive generation capacity, and overall grid capacity to 25,000 megawatts.
As part of the deal, it was learnt that the Ministry of Finance, Budget and National Planning would pay from the Signature Bonus Account about €15.2 million and N1.7 billion as Nigeria’s 15 per cent counterpart funding for the concessionary loan after the federal government convinced the Discos to sign the concessionary loan agreement, despite their initial opposition.
Following the series of tweets from the verified twitter page, the presidency noted that Siemens would singlehandedly pick the Engineering, Procurement and Construction (EPC) partners for the sake of transparency.
“President @MBuhari has directed the Ministries of @PowerMinNigeria and @FinMinNigeria, and the Bureau of Public Enterprise (BPE) to conclude the engagement with Siemens AG to commence the pre-engineering and concessionary financing aspects of the Presidential Power Initiative.
“All items to be purchased were provided by the Discos and Transmission Company of Nigeria @TCN_NIGERIA and they will be vetted by a professional Project Management Office.
“The funding for the PPI will be secured under concessionary terms (up to three-year moratorium and 12-year repayment at concessionary interest rates) through the German Euler Hermes cover, which @NigeriaGov will on-lend as a convertible loan to the other shareholders in the DisCos.
“Under the PPI, @NigeriaGov will on behalf of the other shareholders in the electricity distribution companies invest in infrastructure upgrades in the form of improved payment systems, distribution substations, transformers, protection devices, smart meters, transmission lines,” the presidency tweeted.
According to the government, all Discos have, directly, and through BPE, been diligently carried along over the last 15 months to understand in detail the challenges in the electricity systems, adding that the president has approved the release of funding for the first part of phase 1 of PPI to kick-off the pre-engineering and concession financing work streams.
In addition, while noting, the president said to ensure fairness and transparency of the intervention, he has also directed that the International Finance Corporation (IFC) should be engaged to assist in developing the commercial structure of the intervention, as well as in undertaking an independent company valuation of the Discos.
“The president has also directed that to ensure value for money and preserve the integrity and transparency of the procurement process under the government-to-government framework, Siemens AG shall be solely responsible for nominating its EPC partners to perform all onshore works; no middlemen.
“Our goal is simply to deliver electricity to Nigerian businesses and homes. Our intention is to ensure that our cooperation is structured under a government-to-government framework. No middlemen will be involved so that we can achieve value for money for Nigerians,” Buhari said.
According to the spokesman for the distribution companies, Mr. Sunday Oduntan, was not immediately available for comments, as calls to his mobile phone, were not answered, but a source privy to the negotiations said the Discos had decided to set their differences aside and cooperate with the federal government since the end goal was to provide stable electricity to Nigerians.
“Everything that is being done to rescue the power sector is a fantastic idea. If the Discos are providing a list of things to be purchased, it goes to show that there is now a working relationship without the federal government dictating to the Discos like they were doing before.
“It means that the Discos, working with the federal government, have identified the gaps and have decided on how to close it. So, it means, for example, if 20 transformers are needed in a particular area, it is the Discos that have proposed that. It’s a good thing.
Oduntan concludes; “So, whether there were misgivings initially, it means that they are now cooperating. At the end of the day, the important thing is that electricity is provided for Nigerians.”