By Farooq A. Kperogi Twitter: @farooqkperogi This week, Nigeria’s power grid collapsed twice in the space of 48 hours. Similar experienc...
By Farooq A. Kperogi
Twitter: @farooqkperogi
This week, Nigeria’s power grid collapsed twice in the space
of 48 hours. Similar experiences were reported in February, May, July, and
August of 2021, according to TheCable, which also disclosed that Nigeria has
had “206 collapses between 2010 and 2019.”
I’m not sure there’s any modern country on earth where
electricity is as precarious, as insufficient, and as unreliable as it is in
Nigeria.
I came to terms with this when, in July 2009, I visited my mother’s maternal relatives in the city of Parakou, the capital of Borgou State
(or Department), in Benin Republic during my summer break. Throughout the one
week I stayed in Parakou, Benin Republic’s third largest city with a little
over a quarter of a million people, electricity didn’t blink for even a split
second.
Except for the distinctive sights, sounds, and smells of the
city, it felt like I was still in the United States. Even my then 5-year-old
daughter, who is now almost 18, couldn’t help but notice the dramatic
difference between the electricity situations in Nigeria and Benin Republic.
“Daddy, there hasn’t been any blackout since we’ve been here,” she said.
Her observation wasn't surprising in retrospect because
Nigeria’s notoriously unstable and unpredictable electricity has always been a
sticky point for her even at that age. In 2010, for instance, when former Union
Bank Corporate Affairs Manager Alhaji Kabir Dangogo visited me in Atlanta, we
took a road trip to an Atlanta suburb, which caused my daughter to wonder aloud
where we were going.
Alhaji Kabiru joked that we were going to Nigeria. He
didn’t prepare for the tumult he triggered. My 6-year-old daughter’s impressionable
mind believed the joke and wailed uncontrollably at the top of her voice. Her
screaming agony stopped only after I assured her that Alhaji Kabiru was just
kidding.
When she calmed down, Alhaji Kabiru asked her why she didn’t
want to go back to Nigeria. “Because there’re always blackouts there!” We
exchanged gloomy, knowing looks, and lamented that Nigeria’s power problem was
so overwhelming that it was the only thing that endured in a 6-year-old girl’s
memories of the country, which continued to torment her up until that time.
Anyway, back to Parakou. To be sure that the impressively
continuous electricity we enjoyed wasn’t a fluke, I asked my mother’s first
cousin (that would be my “first cousin once removed” in Standard English and my
“uncle” in Nigerian English) in whose house we stayed to tell me the last time
they lost power in the city or in the neighborhood.
He started to jog his memory and even enlisted the help of
his wife because he thought I needed to know the exact day for record purposes.
My mother had told him that I was a journalist. I told him not to bother, but I
learned from him that although power outages occur, often for maintenance, they
are infrequent, relatively brief, and often announced ahead of time in the
broadcast media.
This is particularly interesting because Benin Republic buys
most of its electricity from Nigeria, although my cousin said that wasn’t true
of Parakou.
Almost every Nigerian I’ve known who has traveled outside
Nigeria shares the same experience as mine. A former colleague of mine at the
Presidential Villa in Abuja who traveled to a “Third World” country in Asia for
weeks returned and said he didn’t witness power outage for a second throughout
his stay in the country, which caused him to insist that if that country was a
“Third World” country, Nigeria must be a “10th World” country.
And that leads me to the question: why has it been
impossible to power Nigeria? Why does every other country on earth seem to be
doing better than Nigeria in electricity generation? I think it’s because we
have never had anyone with a clue to manage Nigeria’s power sector. Let’s look
at the ministers of power we’ve had since 1999.
In 1999, the late Chief Bola Ige, who became the minister of
power, promised to “turn stone to bread.” He was deploying a biblical metaphor
to imply that he would make the seemingly impossible possible. Well, he didn’t
have a stone to start with, so there was no bread. His legacy was darkness.
On November 28, 2012, the then Minister of State for Power,
Hajiya Zainab Kuchi, told South African investors that “evil spirits” were to blame
for Nigeria’s interminable electricity troubles. “We must resolve to jointly
exorcise the evil spirit behind this darkness and allow this nation take its
pride of peace [sic] in the comity of nations [sic],” she said.
About two months later, her metaphysical explanation for
Nigeria’s electricity difficulties got a professorial endorsement when, on January 23, 2013, Chinedu Nebo, a professor of engineering and former
university Vice Chancellor, told the Nigerian senate that power outages were
caused by “witches and demons” and that “If the President deploys me in the
power sector, I believe that given my performance at the University of Nigeria,
Nsukka, where I drove out the witches and demons, God will also give me the
power to drive out the demons in the power sector.”
He got the job. But neither he nor Kuchi were able to
exorcise the “evil spirits,” “demons,” and “witches” that they believed sucked
the megawatts out of Nigeria’s power plants. Their legacy was more darkness.
Then on July 11, 2014, Babatunde Fashola said Nigeria’s
electricity problems were political, even electoral. “The only way you and I will have electricity in this
country,” he said, “is to vote out the PDP.”
Again, at the 7th Annual Bola Tinubu Colloquium on March 25,
2015, Fashola blamed “amateurs” for Nigeria’s power generation problems.
He infamously said, “Power generation is not rocket science; it is just a
generator. So just remember and imagine that your
‘I-better-pass-my-neighbour’ in one million times—its capacity but in one
place. So, if you can make that size of one kilowatt, you can make a power
turbine of one thousand megawatts…
“So, with all the billions of dollars that have been spent,
the story is that we still live in darkness. Our government lies about it, but
it is not because power is impossible. But to tell you very confidently that we
do not have power because power is difficult to generate; we have darkness
because we have incompetent people managing our economy. As one of my friends
fondly calls them, our economy is being managed by amateurs.”
He was appointed the minister in charge of power a few
months after this overconfident political diagnosis of Nigeria’s unending
electricity woes. Within a few months of being in power, disappointed Nigerians
nicknamed him the “minister of darkness,” and Buhari didn’t reappoint him to
the ministry for a second term.
So, from 1999, we went from treating our electricity problem
as one that could be resolved through Ige’s poetic and theological flourishes
to thinking that Nebo’s and Kuchi’s metaphysical delusions provided the keys to
unlocking it, to imagining that Fashola’s two-bit, evidence-free, exaggeratedly
partisan outbursts were any good.
Now, no one even pretends that the current minister of power
isn’t out of his depths. In fact, I don’t know who the minister of power is.
Nor do I know anyone who does. I doubt that whoever he is, he even knows he is
the minister of power. That’s how hopeless the situation is now.
This is especially tragic because everyone knows that
electricity is the driving force of technology and innovation, not to mention
basic creative comforts. Any country that can’t fix its electricity can’t
participate in the increasingly digital economy of the 21st century
and will be stuck in perpetual developmental babyhood.
Yet, in spite of the drag that poor electricity exerts on creativity and innovation, Nigeria’s youth have been some of the world's most high-flying digital creators and drivers. Imagine what Nigeria would be if it had a leadership that cared and knew how to fix its electricity crisis.
Prof, the difference between Nigeria and other African countries on the issue of electricity and other critical services is that those countries (including Benin) have always retained foreign expertise and investment while we in Nigeria we have fully Nigerianised ours. If you look closely at several African countries, you will find foreign (Western) involvement in their electricity, water, railway and seaport sectors while in Nigeria, they are fully locally-run. Why can't Africans run these services efficiently? I will keep the answer to myself so as not to cause offence but the reality is obvious. We can't run things like these without external guidance. The reason why Cotonou seaport is better than that of Lagos and why the trains in Cameroun are better than ours is that they are run by European companies. Find out for yourself. Even in Nigeria, the sectors run by foreign multinationals hardly fail while those run by Nigerians are in constant failure. Our upstream oil sector and LNG company are in the hands of foreign oil majors and they hardly fail. They have ensured steady oil revenue for Nigeria for decades. Compare that with the NNPC-run downstream sector and you will see what I mean. Certain things should not be left entirely in the hands of black Africans (I'm sorry for any offence but I've grown tired of denying the reality). Our fellow African countries know this and as a result, they enjoy better services than us. Even our own government knows this-that is why they have always retained Julius Berger to maintain the Aso Villa. They just don't have the courage to extend the policy to other critical sectors. Too much independence may not be the best thing in sub-Saharan Africa.
ReplyDeleteIts the culture. We have never had a visionary leader to set change in motion. The idea that blacks are inferior has been comprehensively debunked. Your hunch is incorrect.
DeleteThere's just too much brain-dead occupying important positions in our country.
ReplyDeleteEver wondered why each successive Government is like the Super eagle team? And it isn’t merely because they too keep failing most of the time. It is because just like our footballers, failing never seems to bother them. Actually, you get the feeling, they do not even seem to feel they have failed. Just as our footballers continue to be stars, endorsing Pepsi and BetKings even after the whitewashes and blackwashes they suffer around the world, the Politicians continue to walk around, preening after every electoral blunders as if that was the most glorious moment in their history. Its pathetic.