The Minister of State for power, Mr. Mohammed Wakil, has disclosed that the Federal Government had started installing electronic monitors to check vandalism of gas pipelines as part of measures aimed at ensuring regular power supply.
According to the Minister, the recent privatization of the power sector carried out by the present administration would soon yield visible result, he said South Africa has started emulating the exercise which he said had become a model for many other countries.
Wakil is confident that in due course, Nigerians would soon be taking power supply for granted in the country. "In due course, power supply will become what Nigerians can take for granted. We are expanding investment in transmission sector through involvement of the private sector" he said.
Wakil said “The distribution companies are investing in system upgrade, like South Africa is about to start. “The generation companies are busy with upgrade especially after the administration had addressed the gas-to-power issue. “We are installing electronic monitors to check incessant vandalism of gas pipelines by enemies of the nation.”
Wakil said South Africa was emulating the privatization model for the transformation of its ailing energy sector. This, he argued, is a vindication of the durability of the policies and programmes of the President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration of which power is one of its major components.
He said the crisis rocking the South African power sector had necessitated the country to draft a power sector privatization bill now before its parliament.
Wakil said although the nation has not reached its desired destination in term of uninterrupted power supply, "we are on the road to reaching that goal. We have passed critical stage, we are now in the final lap.”
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