Nigeria Electricity Market Operators Begin Performance Review

Nigeria Electricity Market Operators Begin Performance Review


The NESI is primarily made up of the Generation Companies (GenCos), the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN), the Distribution Companies (DisCos), and the consumers.

The Nigerian electricity market operators will on Monday begin to review the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) performance in the country.

Stephen Ogaji, the chairperson of the NESI market participants and stakeholders roundtable (NMPSR) planning committee, in a statement on Sunday, said ten years after the privatisation of the Nigerian power sector, market participants, government agencies and institutions, as well as other key stakeholders will gather at the PTDF auditorium in Abuja to assess the performance of the sector and its challenges, as a step towards charting a pathway for the progression of the power sector.

The NESI is primarily made up of the Generation Companies (GenCos), the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN), the Distribution Companies (DisCos), and the consumers.

“Although opinions may be divided on the rationale for the roundtable, industry watchers and other key stakeholders are of the view that the examination of the sector along the lines of defined parameters should be a welcomed development as it allows players to clinically determine the issues in the sector and proffer solutions.

“Significantly, this 10-year milestone, post-privatisation, in view of the continued challenges of the power sector, presents the perfect opportunity that is not so much a celebration but a sober reflection/retrospection and an audit of how far we have come, how much further we need to go, and what we require for the journey ahead,” Mr Ogaji said.

He explained that the three-day roundtable event will have eight plenary sessions which will encompass the various segments of the NESI: power generation; gas to power; power distribution, transmission, metering and customer centricity, renewable energy and climate change, access to finance, liquidity and recapitalization.

He added that the conference will also look at the regulatory and policy ecosystem, with a particular emphasis on the Electricity Act, 2023.

“As you are aware, the privatization of the NESI, which took place in 2013 marked a historic turning point in Nigeria’s energy sector, transitioning it from the era of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) to a system of private investor ownership and participation,” he said.

Nigerian govt paid N135 billion for electricity subsidy in Q2 2023 – Report