Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan accepted deposits by
bidders for 15 state electricity assets on Monday, a milestone in a
privatisation process meant to end decades of power blackouts.
A
signing ceremony at the presidential residence came a month after the
bidders for 10 generation companies and five distribution companies paid
deposits of 25 percent of the value of their bids.
Power
companies will now negotiate terms to complete the transfer from state
hands before paying the remaining money and taking control of the plants
and distribution firms, a process which is expected to take several
months.
Nigeria's dysfunctional state electricity provider is
being broken up into 15 firms handling generation or distribution in
different parts of the country, with the aim of doing something no
Nigerian president has managed for decades: switching the lights on.
Despite
being Africa's top energy producer with the world's seventh largest gas
reserves, Nigeria produces and distributes only enough power for a few
hours a day in the places that get it at all.
Economists say power
outages cost Africa's second biggest economy billions of dollars on
imported diesel for generators and in lost output. They say current GDP
growth of around 7 percent could be pushed into double figures if
electricity supply could be sorted out.
Power output is currently about 4,000 megawatts for a country of 170 million people.
"Today's
event signals a major step forward in the implementation of our power
sector road map," Jonathan said. "I congratulate the signing parties for
reaching this significant target in our collective efforts to
revitalize this sector, which is so important to our lives and
development."
Previous state sell-offs in Nigeria were blighted by
political infighting and graft, which have caused years of delays.
Regulators say this process was more transparent.
Although it has
appeared to favour established Nigerian oligarchs, some of them with
scant experience of operating power companies, most have teamed up with
capable technical partners like Siemens.
World bank officials also
signed a credit risk guarantee on a loan from Deutsche Bank's U.S.
subsidiary to finance gas supplies to the 1,320 megawatt Egbin Power
Plant, which is based outside Nigeria's commercial-hub Lagos, and of
which Korea's KEPCO was offered a 70 percent stake this month.
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