Transcorp Power MD seeks cheaper costs of servicing turbines abroad
*Transcorp Power Limited
(Nigeria) Managing Director/Chief Executive
Officer of Transcorp Power Limited, Christopher Ezeafulukwe, has frowned on the
heavy costs associated with servicing equipment such as turbines outside the
country, adding that these has significantly increased the operating costs of
affected power companies.
According to him, the fact that these
companies in Nigeria have to resort to incurring additional costs while
servicing their turbines remains a huge downside to the business amounting to
millions lost in foreign currencies, which the country could have saved if
these services could be sourced locally.
Ezeafulukwe was addressing members of the
press following a guarded tour of the facilities in Transcorp’s Plant in
Ughelli, Delta State, by a delegation from the Army War College of Nigeria as
part of their environmental study tour; where he pointed out that Nigeria's
overdependence on technical services from abroad, was also bound to
increasingly expose gas plants in the country to huge logistics challenges,
which translates to loss in millions of naira.
He said, “For instance, to carry
out routine inspection of the turbines, you need to fly them out which is a
huge foreign expenditure which exposes us to logistic challenges.
“The fact is that we queue to wait for some clearance before being
allowed to do our jobs, which to a large extent affects our turnaround,
because, if you have a turbine that should have come back in six months, it
ends up taking about eight to 10 months. This in turn will deny us the ability
to generate power that could have been added to the National Grid to support
the nation's economy,” Ezeafulukwe explained.
He advocated the need for deliberate and
significant improvement in generation, transmission and distribution of
electricity, as he pointed out that this is invaluable towards finding lasting
solution to the headache of inadequate power supply in the country, just as
bemoaned the fact that Nigeria is currently struggling with 5,000 MW generated
electricity.
“There is the urgent need for everyone
involved to decisively tackle the current epileptic power supply in the
country, because it is rather distressing for a country of over 200 million
people to still be grappling with driving its economic and social activities
with a meagre 5,000 MW of electricity,” Ezeafulukwe noted.
According to him, Nigeria requires at least
20,000 Megawatts of electricity to drive its industrial, economic and social
activities round the clock and end epileptic power supply, and it is therefore
important that there is conscious and disciplined investment by the incoming
administration to address the challenges in the power sector in the country.
The Transcorp Power boss also urged the
Federal Government to work on incentives for investors in the power sector by
identifying gas fields for accelerated development, just as he scored the
company high on provision of various corporate social responsibility programmes
spanning quality education and vocational training and empowerment to provision
of health and other social facilities particularly for several host communities
in Ughelli North and Ughelli South local government areas.
In his remarks, the Deputy
Commandant/Director of Studies at the War College, Brigadier-General U.M.
Alkali, who led the delegation from the Army War College, explained that the
theme of the tour of the facility is "Protection of Critical National
Assets and Infrastructure for National Defence", and noted that it was of
strategic importance towards identifiying and understanding ways and means of
safeguarding various critical infrastructure in the country important to
national economic growth.
He assured that the outcome of the detailed
study tour will help in fashioning policies and programmes that would translate
into ensuring seamless operational activities of critical assets like Transcorp
Power.
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