Nigeria’s House of Reps summons Fashola over N22bn monthly expenditure

Uncategorized

Image result for Babatunde Raji FasholaThe House of Representatives Committee on Power has summoned the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN), over his alleged violation of the 2017 Appropriation Act.

The lawmakers also queried the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Company (NBETC) over the N22 billion it spent monthly on gas without commensurate power generation.

Expressing anger over the huge expenditure, the committee directed the minister to appear before it along with the Permanent Secretary, Louis Edozien and Managing Director of Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) to furnish the lawmakers with relevant details.

The committee led by Hon. Daniel Asuquo (Cross River-PDP) issued the summons fol-lowing the absence of the minister at the hearing convened by the panel on Wednesday.

In a reaction to the submissions of the minister’s representatives, Hon. Toby Okechukwu (Enugu-PDP) frowned at the indiscriminate injection of funds into the power distribution companies by the Federal Government.

He said: “I don’t know whether the acquisition of the distribution companies is worth more than N701 billion. The total capital of these companies may not be up to N701 billion.

“Yet we are borrowing money to support them,” he lamented.

Hon. Mark Gbillah (Benue-APC), who decried the solvency of NBETC and TCN, feared that the power sector may collapse in the next six to seven years if drastic measures were not taken.

“We are trying to pay for the business of certain individuals and that of gas utilisation and power generation. We need to do a forensic study of these gas companies.

“What are they (GEN­COS) actually generating? What are we always required to pay them? The generating companies always tell us a humongous figures of what they are generating, and how there’s no transmission capacity, the losses that they experience. We need to start from the bottom up as well as from the gas angle,” he said. (The AUTHORITY)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.