2022 Budget: 26,976MW Of Electricity Stranded, Unutilised

2022 Budget: 26,976MW Of Electricity Stranded, Unutilised

Nigerians in the year 2021 had access to 4,118.98MW through out the 12 month period in the year despite the electricity generation companies generating around 6,336.52MW.

The development was disclosed following the decision of the Federal Government to allocate forty billion Naira in the 2022 budget to settle the electricity debts of its ministries, departments and agencies.

The generation capacity loss data in 2021 revealed that the power sector in the country recorded stranded electricity in all the 12 months of 2021.

According to the data released, the stranded electricity showed that about 1,915.13MW was lost in January, 1,634.87MW in February, 1,799.18MW in March and 1,921.5MW in April 2021. In May 1,944.59MW was stranded, while 2,396.7MW, 2,421.38MW and 2,909.55MW were recorded in, June, July and August 2021 respectively.

For September, October, November and December, the quantum of stranded power in each of these months stood at 3,291.15MW, 2,570.58MW, 1,996.44MW and 2,180.95MW respectively. All these totalled 26,976MW during the year.

Electricity generation companies in the country have often complained about the poor utilisation of what they are capable of delivering on the grid.

The Executive Secretary, Association of Power Generation Companies, Joy Ogaji, had recently argued that GenCos were not dispatching at full capacity due to the poor utilisation of what they produce.

Ogaji said, “There may be many reasons for the ‘seemingly perceived poor or lack of generation. I want to state for the records that no single generation company is allowed, by the system, to send out its available capacity. I stand to be corrected with facts, not political claims. I repeat! All Gencos are sub-optimally dispatched, with many units idle.”

She further stated that capacity utilisation in any market was often used as a measure of productive efficiency and stressed that the average production costs tend to fall as output rises.

“So higher utilisation can reduce unit costs, bringing about a more competitive market, which makes plants financially viable,” Ogaji said.

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This article was originally published on Naija News

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