ICRC, NEMSA partner to revive transformer facility through PPP

The Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission, ICRC and the Nigerian Electricity Management Services Agency, NEMSA, are


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ICRC, NEMSA partner to revive transformer facility through PPP
L-R: Mr. Peter Ewesor, Mr. Emmanuel Onwodi, Director, Transportation and Infrastructure Dept., ICRC & others


 

The Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission, ICRC and the Nigerian Electricity Management Services Agency, NEMSA, are reportedly collaborating to revive transformer repairs and testing workshop located in ijora Olopa area of Lagos State, through Public Private Partnership, PPP, Project.  

 

Our Energy Correspondent, National, reports that Director General of ICRC, Mr. Chidi Izuwah, made the disclosure during a facility tour to transformer repairs and testing workshop at Ijora in Lagos, Tuesday August 27.

 

He called for private partnership drive in addressing Nigeria's physical infrastructure deficits.

 

Izuwah said that the purpose of the visit to the facility was on pre-contract monitoring to see how to ensure all moribund Federal Government facilities were revived through private partnership investments.

 

He reiterated the importance of the workshop facility to Discos as it would afford quick fix of failed and bad transformers in the sector, adding that this would equally generate employment to Nigerians.

 

According to him, we have resolved and made commitment to put back to work, the transformer repairs and testing workshop facility through the PPP in power sector.

 

"The electricity in the country has challenges but we need to intervene in tin the infrastructure chain of the distribution segment.

 

"We are regulating a process by ensuring that all government moribund workshop and facilities are revived to commence operations," he said.

 

The DG said: "this transformer repairs and testing worship is a national asset, so, we are working to ensure effective regulation that will encourage PPP.

 

"ICRC will fast track PPP initiative to revive the country's transformers workshops for the benefit of the nation, which is in line with the next level agenda of President Muhammadu Buhari.

 

Izuwah lauded the managing director of NEMSA for ensuring effective regulations in curbing substandard electrical equipment in the power sector.

 

He said that the key strategic objective for the ICRC was to accelerate investment in national infrastructure through private sector funding by assisting the government of Nigeria and its Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs) to implement and establish effective PPP.

 

In his remarks, the Managing Director of NEMSA, Mr. Peter Ewesor, said that rehabilitation of the transformer workshop will attract more investors and create employment for Nigerians.

 

 

Ewesor said that if the workshop was revived, it would develop indigenous engineers to embark on repair and assembling of transformers locally.

 

 

 

Mr. Chidi Izuwah, DG/CEO of ICRC during an inspection of the transformer repairs & testing workshop located at ijora Olopa, Lagos

 

 

According to him, there are well over 700,000 bad transformers that are littering around the country, because there was no workshop to repair the bad transformers.

 

" NEMSA has ensured that all imported transformers that failed to meet specifications were rejected from coming into the country. In the last few months, we have disallowed about 68 transformers which failed specifications into the country," he said.

 

Ewesor said that the agency was also collaborating with Standards Organization of Nigeria, SON, to check the influx of fake and substandard electrical materials and equipment into the country.

 

He said that the agency had raised a 12-member committee to check importation of substandard electrical equipment into the country.

 

“Contractors who indulge in such practices feel they are cheating the country but they are cheating themselves because once such equipment fails, they will be forced to reinstall it again,” he said.

 

 

He said that the committee comprising five officials from SON and seven from NEMSA was to help trim the flow of substandard equipment and also sensitize the suppliers on the dangers they pose to the use of electricity across households. 

 


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Yunus Yusuf
Energy Correspondent, National
Read other stories by Yunus Yusuf

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