In Kenya recently there was a blackout across the nation for four hours and people wondered what had happened, but not for long. The  power generating company   KenGen  issued  a statement  that a monkey  had  accidentally  tripped an equipment  in an  hydro  power  plant  which triggered  the nationwide  black out . The  Genco  said  that  the monkey  survived  the ordeal  and that Kenya had  lost   183 MW  during  the  blackout   and  the company  apologized to  consumers and  promised  to secure its facilities from  such future  power  hazards that  can  cause  unexpected  blackouts .

As  a Nigerian  and an African  I  cannot help  admiring the way  that  the  power  company  had  handled the  explanation  of  a  four-hour  blackout  so  quickly  and so  efficiently. Of course  most  Nigerians will argue  that  the  situation  of  power  supply  in  Kenya  is not  comparable with  that  of  Nigeria  because power  supply  in Nigeria is erratic  and we have more blackouts on a regular  basis  than  regular  and continuous  supply  as in  Kenya  where  people  are bothered  by  a 4- hour blackout. I will without wasting time agree  with them on that score .  This  is  because  the Kenyan  power  company  has been allowed  to  do  its public  relations  without  any  pressure and without  any  monkey  tricks  or  interruption  from any  quarters  on the source  of  power  failure  even  though  a monkey  has been  responsible .

In  Nigeria however  the way  blackouts  are  explained is  completely  different. The  regular  culprit  in the  public  mind are  the discos which  are  the distribution companies  that deliver electricity  to  our homes  and companies  and bring in the electricity  bills  for  consumers  to  pay. This has  been reinforced  by the   hostile  attitude  of  the trade unions  in the power  sector in the way  they  mobilized consumers  against  the discos  when  tariffs  for  electricity  approved  for  them  by the regulator of electricity  in Nigeria , the Nigerian  Electricity  Regulatory  Commission  were announced early  this year . The  unions  went  all  the way to instigate even  the Senate  to stop  the tariffs increase and  NERC  went  to  court  to accuse the Senate  of usurping  its  legitimate  function as the regulator  of electricity  in  Nigeria . The  unions  did  not  stop  there they  asked  workers to go on strike on the new    electricity  tariffs as if they  are  the same thing with the fuel   price  increase  to 145   naira   on which  they called out  workers on   strike  abortively   recently.

This  is  despite  the  well-known  fact  to  Nigerians  and the union  leaders  that  discos don’t  generate or  transmit electricity  but  only  deliver  to  consumers as and  when  power is available  and  bill  such  consumers  for  electricity  supplied  and  utilized . Stakeholders in the Nigerian  electricity  industry  include the  Nigerian  Electricity  Bulk  Trading  Company, GENCOS, DISCOS  and transmission  companies.  How   come  then  that  the Nigerian  union  leaders are always  pointing accusing  fingers at  the  discos whenever  there is a power  failure ?  As  the  Kenyan  example  has  shown it was  a GENCO  that explained  what  happened  . It  was  not  a disco .In   Nigeria it  is a well-known  fact that  pipeline vandalisation  nationwide has     drastically   reduced  the generation and  transmission  of electricity  not  to  talk of  distribution of  electricity  which  is the responsibility  of the DISCOS.  But  then  can  the  DISCOS  distribute  what  they  do not  have? Definitely not? Similarly   the  GENCOS  cannot generate  when they do not  have the  basic  ingredients to  generate  power  when  sources  of  such  generation  have  been rendered  unproductive  or inactive  by  vandals.

In  Kenya  the  genco  KenGen  was  lucky  that  it was a  monkey  up  to  its tricks  that  cut  power  for 4 hours  only  . In  Nigeria it  is  an army  of vandals  that  are stalling electricity production  on a daily  and  consistent  basis   and  they have  even  metamorphosed into  a virile  terrorist  group  called  the Avengers  of  the Niger  Delta  who  are  daring   and taxing   the  federal    might  of  the  state  of  Nigeria.  That  really  is the core  of the matter  and  that  is what  the unions should  focus on as the cause  of irregular electricity  supply  and  not  the  discos  which  are  at  the receiving end  of the poor  electricity  supply  chain and  should  not  be blamed  by  the  unions like  the Kenyan  monkey  for what is not their fault. That is a monkey  trick  that  the unions have used  so  far  and that  should  just  stop  immediately   to  enable  Nigerians enjoy  a much  deserved right  to  regular  electricity  generation  and  distribution as  quickly  as  possible .

Ibrahim Aliu

Nigeria's leading finance and market intelligence news report. Also home to expert opinion and commentary on politics, sports, lifestyle, and more

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