Revolutionary
Socialist Movement (RSM)
Nigeria: End unresolved power outage
crisis now!
-Time to
re-nationalise the power sector!
-End
estimated billing!
-No more
bailouts for GenCos and DisCos!
For the
fifth time in 2022, Nigeria's power grid collapsed leaving millions of people
without access to electricity.
According to
reports from verified media outlets, but also the press statement by the
Electricity Generation Companies (GenCos) and the Electricity Distribution
Companies (DisCos), Nigeria experienced a nationwide outage on Sunday, June 12.
It was the day when Nigerians were celebrating the return to civil rule, what
the ruling class prefers to call 'Democracy Day'. The national electricity grid
crashed with light bulbs in different parts of the country fluctuating before
they completely went off.
This is the
fifth time Nigeria experienced a power system
collapse this year, the last crash being on April 8th-9th, 2022.
According to
a top GenCo official, the nationwide outage began around 6pm as the electricity
generation from various power plants dropped.
Failure
The
Revolutionary Socialist Movement (RSM) protests against the continued failure
of the state and the private sector to secure electricity as a basic human
right to all Nigerian citisens. We consider the Nigerian ruling class, which is
thirsty for more and more profits, to blame for this collapse of the power
sector. This is despite the huge amounts of money that are spent by different
administrations to support the private sector in energy production and
distribution.
In fact,
billions of Naira of public funds were used to bail out the different companies
in the power sector. N6 billion released by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)
to the Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company (IBEDC) were mismanaged and the
same happened with other distribution and generation companies.
To us, the
Nigerian power sector has suffered from massive corruption and manipulation by
many appointees and profiteers in the last 61 years. This was possible because
of the lack of accountability and transparency in the system.
The
privatisation of the power sector made it difficult for Nigerians to have
24-hour electricity supply. That is the main reason why 43% of Nigerians don’t
have access to electricity, so they are
forced to rely on solar power, power banks and generators. The country ranks 171 out of 190
nations in terms of access to electricity, according to the World Bank.
As we speak,
Nigeria power plants stations can’t generate up to 5,000 megawatts, when its grid has an installed
capacity of 12,522 megawatts! The organisation of this system has obviously
failed, it only continues to work for the sake of the profits of those
involved!
Time
to demand an end to all of this!
The RSM
stands completely against the
“estimated billing” system and demands that all customers pay according
to their actual consumption. All citizens of Nigeria deserve 24-hour
electricity coverage, at an affordable price considering their incomes.
It’s on this
basis that the RSM is calling on Nigerian workers, small medium enterprise,
farmers, students and youth to demand an end to this hardship. Join us in
demanding the renationalisation of the power sector without compensation to the
energy giants. All the wealth of the power sector should return in the hands of
society that has paid for it. We are also asking for the democratisation of the
power sector, which should be controlled and managed by the elected
representatives of the working people and the local communities. We call on the
leadership of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), the Trade Union Congress of
Nigeria (TUC) and the Nigerian Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE) to declare
a day of actions, in order to begin to send signal to the ruling class and the corrupt
DisCos and GenCos management that it is time that they stop exploiting public
funds and pay back the people of Nigeria what they have already pocketed.
That is the
only way we can begin to resolve the crisis in the power sector.
Salako
Kayode
Publicity
Secretary
RSM
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