Electricity conundrum: An unusual feedback from President Buhari
Ik Muo, PhD. Department of Business Administration, OOU,
Ago-Iwoye.
08033026625, muoigbo@yahoo.com, muo.ik@oouagoiwoye.edu.ng
As I write this, I am in a celebratory mood! Writers are usually
happy to receive feedbacks on their interventions and when such feedback comes
from an ordinarily taciturn person like PMB, it is something to really
celebrate. My last piece( Electricity paralysis: from whence comet our
help, BusinesDay 4/7/19) received a feedback from our president and it
was through a public declaration, not
through his customary body language. Before
releasing the feedback, I need to, as in our character, give some ‘background
to the study’
In its manifesto, which is ‘opendential’( and thus cannot be
denied), the APC rightly noted that ‘The crisis in the power sector is one of the
major causes of the present collapse of the industrial sector and the inability
of small-scale industries to thrive and pledged to vigorously pursue the
expansion of electricity generation and distribution of up to 40,000 megawatts
in four to eight years…’ In 2016, the APC-FGN initiated the Power Sector
Reform Programme to among other things, ‘enhance service delivery, resolve customer
complaints and RESET Nigerian electricity industry for future growth’.
In the last four years, PMB and his officials had insisted that we have had a
wonderful electricity experience, with BRF, on one occasion claiming that power
generation had doubled in the past 3 years, a claim debunked openly by TCN. He
them went ahead to make the sacrilegious and escapist statement that the Federal
Government is not responsible for your electricity woes’! The last,
most notable public intervention on the matter by our president was when he
asked his ‘frenemy’ the Ota farmer,
and who allegedly spent $16bn on electricity: ‘where is the power’? By the way, it was during the same occasion that
he reaffirmed Abacha as the first Saint from Nigeria.
Then, as led by the spirit, I started my
random musings on electricity, and by the influence of the same spirit, PMB
read it ( I am SURE!)and rather than send me a private feedback, he
decided to give the feedback to the whole world. He might also have been
influenced by the royal aura of the Oba of Benin, who had visited him with his
council of traditional rulers and chiefs to lament about the pathetic
electricity situation in his domain. It is a record-breaking confession because
it is not in the character of PMB-APC to admit failure; everything has always
been ‘double-double’. You now see why I am ecstatic: That President Buhari
responded directly to my interventions on the electricity sector by admitting
in the market square that our best is not
good enough!
I have been carried away by the response
from PMB that I nearly forgot the feedback from other weighty sources. Sir
Chudi Illoh, a Lagos based oil and gas expert said that ‘The fundamental problem with our
electricity is regulatory. The Gencos,
TCNm DisCos and the Bulk Buying unit are all operating as disparate units. No
single articulate objective with milestones that the regulator ERC will channel
the different units to key into. No penalty for their collective failures to
invest to improve what they met on ground…those that had access to bank
facilities drew on same to acquire the assets without any proper feasibility
studies. Almost all the banks with these exposures are presently in serious troubles. All the organizations
involved in generating, bulk buying, transmission and distribution are all
owing one another and waiting for government bailouts. The solution is not in
sight; Pitiable! Another salvo: ‘there was a time when 1990 was the projected
year for for stable electricity. Fela even referred to it in one of his songs.
Then it turned to the magical year 2000 and almost 20 years later, the
situation is worse’. This is from Barrister Osinibi of faculty of Law,
OOU, who challenged the various universities of technology and professors of
engineering to generate non-DisCo related electricity, ‘even if for the exclusive use of
the universities’ Bode, my unusual auto-consultant chipped in that ‘Electricity,
after oil, is the tool for syphoning the national treasury and as long as the
consumers of electric facilities are not ready to negotiate( I dare say,
fight!) for fairness, the taskmasters will continue to modernize their whipping
strategies’. The quality of the grammar is not the reason I called him
unusual. In the past 37 years I have been owning and driving cars, Bode is the
only mechanic I have seen who would give you a detailed written account of how
your money was spent and return the balance! Rotimi, one of my former MBA
students blamed the government for privatizing such a strategic sector of the
economy, arguing that the situation was
better when government was in charge and recommended that the government should
take back the sector. Well the government’s hands and legs are still in it electricity-pot.
and that may well be part of the problems. Emeka Onwujiobi was pessimistic,
arguing that to answer my question will take more than 10 years especially
given the blame-trading tendencies of the present government. For those who think 10 years is an eternity,
I will share my views about the grandfather of the DisCos, NEPA, in 2004. That
was 15 years ago!( next week)
Other Matters: Certificatemania, economic empowerment and other
forms of madness
In the ‘good old days’ education
was the surest rout to economic empowerment, via public service
employment. People with First School Leaving Certificate( completed or attempted)
were COTMA’s( Court Messengers), primary school teachers, clerks and all that.
As the number of that class of graduates got saturated, the WASC or its equivalent became the surest
route to employment in both private and public sectors. Teacher Training
Colleges and Colleges of Education also boomed, producing qualified teachers
for the bourgeoning educational sector. By the time people of my generation
came on board, degrees and their equivalents had taken over. Then, there were
jobs to be picked and by the time I finished ‘corpering’ in 1980, our
usual comment was ’I don’t have a job; I am teaching’, indicating that teaching
was not a job! Then suddenly, just suddenly, everything scattered. The economy
started dancing awilo, SAP came
calling and the private sector started shrinking while the public sector became
the exclusive reserve of the PEPs( politically exposed persons) and their
people. Incidentally, people moved from acquiring education, to acquiring
certificates, which in some instances do not certify knowledge. Certificates
thus lost their values as the surest route to employment but many people did
not understand the fundamental shift. They left education, which enables us to
appreciate our environmental realities, create our own networks and make informed decisions, and continued
pursuing certificates. Mr Akorede, a graduate of Ladoke Akintola University had
the certificate-meal ticket mentality; he sought for job for 5 years, got
frustrated and set his certificates ( B.Sc / NYSC)on fire! This is another type
a madness, a temporary one though because I know that by now, he would be
wandering what happened.
There is also a case of John Onerede, who repeatedly breaks into
schools in Delta State to set students’ books on fire and also destroy other
items! At
his recent attempt at Rhema International School, he was nabbed by residents of Iweta Lane in Sapele,
Delta State. I know that by now, he will be blaming the devil, who was
undertaking siesta at the material time he was committing this strange crime.
And then, like-joke, like-joke, Nura Dahiru, an Assistant Superintendent of Customs,
on Monday(8/7/19) promoted himself to the rank of Deputy Comptroller-general of
Customs (DCG), dressed himself
appropriately, went into the office of the
incumbent
CG and asked him to hand over, claiming he was directed by
President Muhammadu Buhari to assume the office of comptroller-general (CG). Of
course, everything is possible in this body-language, RUGAed environment. As you can see, it is different types of
madness for different classes of people!
It's apparently that each successive Nigeria president since 1999 had no clue of what it takes to truly be a leader. In any case, the Nigeria citizens don't really know exactly what they need taken cue from their docility hence, deserved the ilk of leaders they get!
ReplyDeleteOn your other matters concerning certificate and jobs, what's your advice to the current generation?
ReplyDeleteMy family spent their hard earned money to train me on polytechnic.
After my graduation and NYSC, I then found out that HND certificate is a serious frustration to its holders in Nigeria.
I started regretting ever going to polytechnic. And I won't allow anyone from my linage to enroll into any polytechnic in Nigeria.
If it's not a university (Federal) don't waste your money....
Electricity is the key to economic empowerment..
ReplyDeleteI Wish the ministry of power would curb the excesses of the power holding companies.