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Showing posts with label PHCN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PHCN. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Controversies trail payment of PHCN severance package

Afam power station
 
The payment of benefits to former staff of PHCN was expected to culminate in industrial harmony and create a conducive environment for the takeoff of the operations of the privatised GENCOs and DISCOs. CHIDI UGWU reports that the payment is still engulfed in controversies, creating tension and low productivity in the sector.
With the successful completion of the sale of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria, PHCN assets, many observers expected improved industrial relations, capable of leading to increased power generation, transmission and distribution. The reasons were not farfetched. First, the government had made available funds for settlement. Second, there were series of engagements between labour leaders and many government officials.
But this was not to be. The staging protests in recent times show that all is not well with the emerging sector. In other words, the arguments between labour and government over delay in payment of the ex-workers entitlements clearly show that the government and the union leaders have not yet been able to resolve the various issues. They also give impression that the development may lead to yet another labour crisis and a sharp drop in electricity supply.
 

Sunday, January 26, 2014

What purpose is privatization of PHCN meant to serve?

 
Since the handing over of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria, (PHCN), things have become worse for consumers of electricity in this country.
Barely one month after they took over the success companies to the PHCN is already proving they are not competent enough to handle what they have thought to have been easy and money spinning for them.
To my dismay, I read in some dailies that the successor companies are already lamenting meaning we (consumers) are back to square one, darkness in every area of Lagos State, I do not know of other states. Despite the fact there is no electricity supply, the same PHCN staff that has been there are still dispatching bills, (crazy bills) at that, expecting consumers to pay for services not rendered, is this not malady?
Imagine, barely after the handing over of the utility firms to private investors, the situation seems the same. What is their excuse this time around? 
Are we supposed to pay for such? Besides the debt we owed before the privatization has been written off as far as many of us are concerned.
Please Independent Advocate let us know more about this handing over of the PHCN, because things have become worse than when it now privatized. 
 
 

Monday, January 20, 2014

Crazy Billings Characterise New PHCN

 
November 1, 2013, marked a new beginning in the pursuit of improved and steady power generation and distribution in Nigeria. On that day, the new core investors in the power sector successfully took over the physical asset of both generation and distribution companies. The handover according to the new investors ushered in a new dawn in the sector as they outlined modalities in ensuring an effective and efficient power delivery to the last man in the electricity chain.
While many Nigerians hailed the takeover, some others were skeptical about it. For the skeptics, the takeover was not such a good idea as they feared that electricity tariffs would be increased tremendously to help the new investors recoup a large chunk of whatever investment they had made in securing the takeover deal.
Despite promises from the new owners and the government that tariff would not be increased anytime soon, our correspondent has learnt that many Nigerians are now under the heavy load of increased tariff billings from the new power investors.
For some of the consumers who lamented over the new tariff, the increase in tariff was did not come as a surprise to them but the percentage of the increase left them dumb founded.
For some customers who spoke to our correspondent, the increase in tariff came by over a hundred percent which is most alarming.
 

Monday, January 13, 2014

Workers of defunct PHCN protest non-payment of severance ...


PHCN Workers Protest Non-payment Of Compensation

 
Some electricity workers in Nigeria have held a protest in Abuja to demand the payment of the terminal benefits of over 25,000 staff of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) by the Federal Government.
The protest, held on Monday at the former PHCN’s office in Wuse area, followed the expiration of a 14 day ultimatum given by the electricity workers in December 2013. The workers had called on the government to conclude all labour-related issues in the power sector within 14 days.
With placards of various inscriptions, the former electricity workers expressed their grievances.
They say government has not made any genuine effort to implement the agreements reached with the union in the sector.
Issues Of Irregular Staff Identities
Officials of the union say over 25,000 PHCN workers have not been paid their terminal benefits contradicting the claims of the Nigerian government.
The Bureau of Public Enterprise (BPE) said that it had settled the gratuity and pension of 43, 375 former workers of the power holding company of Nigeria.
 

Power Crisis: PHCN workers protest non-payment of entitlements

PHCN protest2
 
BY KUNLE KALEJAYE
Workers of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria, PHCN, today embarked on a nationwide protest against the non-payment of their entitlements by the Federal Government.
The protest was led by the National Union of Electricity Employee, NUEE and other union bodies in the power sector.
At exactly 10 minutes pass 11 am in Lagos, Marina, the aggrieved workers took to the street, chanting solidarity songs and displayed posters with various inscriptions.
During the protest, the workers said their unsettled terminal benefits which include severance payment, retirement gratuity, death benefits, and pension deduction among other entitlements have not been paid by the federal government.
Addressing news men at the protest, the Zonal Organising Secretary 1, Lagos, NUEE, comrade Agyake Anthony said all the collective agreements reached between the union and government in the power sector have been desecrated.
He said presently, the pension deductions of about 48,000 workers from July 2012 till date have not been effected adding that over 5,000 workers who retired statutorily are yet to be paid their gratuity.
Anthony lamented that the death benefits of over 1,000 people who died in active service are yet to be paid to their families.

Friday, January 10, 2014

Crisis With PHCN: Community Calls For Govt Intervention

 
BENIN CITY – Elders and youths of Etete community in Oredo Local Government Area of Edo State have appealed to the Edo State Government to intervene in the crisis between the community and Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN).

Speaking during a peaceful protest match in Benin City yesterday, the Ohontor for Etete community, Sunday Amadi Egharebha stated that, indigenes of Benin City and indeed Edo State, have been unduly marginalized especially in the area of employement by the management of Power Holding Company of Nigeria.

The Enogie said that the recent retrenchment of virtually all Benin indigenes is an unfortunate development that will spell doom if not properly addressed.

Also speaking in an interview, a member of the community who was also a former councilor, Hon. Vincent Asemota also expressed dissatisfaction over the marginalization of Edo indigenes in Power Holding Company of Nigeria by persons who are perceived to be using ethnicity to disorganise operation at the Etete district. 

Friday, December 27, 2013

PHCN assets now owned by NELMCO –Amadi

Dr. Sam Amadi
Following the recent privatisation of major electricity utilities of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN), Chairman of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Dr Sam Amadi, has said ownership of PHCN structural assets has changed hands.
Addressing newsmen recently in Abuja, Amadi noted that major assets of PHCN such as its corporate headquarters in Abuja have been handed over to the Nigerian Electricity Liability Management Company (NELMCO) to help offset the huge debts in the power sector.
Recall that NELMCO had earlier issued a notice dismissing an alleged planned sales of the PHCN headquarters and other assets immediately after the physical handover of the core generation and distribution companies to private investors.
Amadi said, “the PHCN assets are now owned by NELMCO. It is the one who inherited all liabilities and assets of PHCN. The corporate headquarters is one of the non-core assets of government and NELMCO is in charge.”
 

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Group faults PHCN on contract variations


 
A group, Nigerian Contracts Monitoring Coalition, has blamed the delay on execution of projects under the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) on mild penalties. Its Head, Mrs Seember Nyager, told The Nation that the law guiding projects execution has been relaxed, resulting in the abandonment of some contracts. She said the penalty clause was ......
 

Monday, December 23, 2013

Eletricity union issues ultimatum over PHCN staff pay

BY VICTOR AHIUMA-YOUNG ORGANISED Labour in the power sector has handed down a 14-day ultimatum to the Federal Government threatening to shut down the power sector should all the entitlements of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria, PHCN are not paid to them.Under the umbrella of the National Union of Electricity Employees, NUEE, in a petition to the Minister of Power, by President and General Secretary of the Union, M. Musa and Joe Ajaero, lamented months after the hand over of the sector to private individuals, entitlements of most of workers had remained unpaid.According to the petition “We are constrained to write your office on the flagrant abuse of human and Trade Union rights in the Power Sector and the criminal silence by those that should have checked these abuses. -

Power investors should re-consider employing ex-PHCN staff

 
PERMIT me to comment on the recent privatisation of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN), especially in the area of the retention of some former staff. While the discussions lasted, it was agreed that the newly-regularised staff with less than a year’s experience would be re-engaged. However, let me state that as soon as the investors took over, this was not followed. The staff who have less than a year’s experience, who they agreed would be retained, were all disengaged.
While it is painful that these set of people are being overlooked by the investors, it will, however, do
 

Monday, December 16, 2013

PHCN handover, greatest achievement of any Nigerian president - Power minister

Prof. Chinedu Nebo  -  minister of energy
Minister of Power, Professor Chinedu Nebo, has said that the handover of Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) to the private sector has been the greatest achievement of any Nigerian president.

The minister stated this in Abuja when he spoke with journalists in a roundtable.

Professor Nebo stated that previous presidents had tried privatising the sector but could not succeed.

He said the issue of labour alone would have frustrated any president, minister or system.

He said: “By God’s intervention, we have a situation where we were working hand in glove with the unions, occasionally they would go out and say all kinds of things to the press, but eventually they saw that we meant well and at the end of the day, we were able to have a seamless transition from a vertical government-dominated electricity market to a private sector dominated electricity market. I believe this is the right thing to do.”

The minister said President Goodluck Jonathan knew and believed that the privatisation process was what the country needed.
 

How Modular Power Generation Can Solve Electricity Challenge – Expert

 
  As a way to tackle the power supply challenge in the country, the federal government has been advised to pay more attention to modular power generation.
Read more...

GENCOs: Banks eye N678bn investment

 
Local and international banks are now jostling for the funding of N678bn  rehabilitation of power generation companies.
This indication emerged on Friday as virtually all the nation’s banks are showing renewed interests in the power transformation project.
They started by providing the N525bn funds for the acquisition of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria.
The Group Head, Project and Structured Finance, FCMB Capital Markets Limited, a member of the First City Monument Bank Group, Mr. Robert Grant, said, “The estimated $4.28bn rehabilitation expenditure would likely be financed by the Nigerian banks with support from international financial institutions.”
He also confirmed that the banks played a major role in the privatisation of the 15 PCHN successor companies and added that they would continue to take advantage of the opportunities in the privatised power sector.
 

Power investors blame staffing problems for poor performance

A power transmission infrastructure
 
The new owners of the recently privatised power plants are still complaining.
This time, the investors declared that the unresolved staffing issues in the industry remained a major challenge impeding their smooth operations.
The power investors had in the past complained about a number of issues, ranging from poor public awareness of the payment of electricity tariff to inadequate power load allocation, gas constraint, poor communication between the Transmission Company of Nigeria and electricity distribution companies.
The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission, in a statement on Sunday, said the investors recently complained that workers of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria that they inherited had yet to know their fate with the new owners.
According to the power firms, some of the employees have not been served severance letters, officially terminating their contracts with the company.     Read more...
 
 
 
 

IKEDC Sacks Over 6,000 PHCN Staff, Distributes Crazy Bills

Prof. Chinedu Nebo  -  minister of energy
 
 
The successor company of Ikeja Zone of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria (Ikeja Disco), now known as Ikeja Electricity Distribution Company(IKEDC), may have sacked over 6,000 employee of the PHCN, following its acquisition as the new owners.
According to reliable sources, which informed that the sack was made inevitable by the payment of the severance fees of the former employees of PHCN by the federal government, it was also revealed that the total strength of the new Ikeja Electricity Distribution Company may not be more than 900.
While giving a break down of categories of staff sacked and the number retained, it said that for instance, at the Ikeja headquarters of the former PHCN serving Ikeja the capital city of Lagos State, Ogba and environ, about 95 were retained while over 450 were shown the way out, and that Ipaja area where aout 350 were in the employ f the defunct PHCN, about 92 were retained. Whereas at Abule Egba area, where there were about 600 staff, 100 were retained.
The new owners of the Distribution Company it was also gathered had swung into action by issuing estimated and high bills, which was a bone of contention between consumers and the defunct PHCN.
Mr. Ademola Durodola, one of the consumers, who spoke to BusinessWorld, maintained that since the take over of PHCN by the new owners, that power supply had deteriorated
.
 

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Fake PHCN staff storm Plateau – Police

 
 
The police asked the public to report suspicious persons.

The police in Plateau have warned residents of the state to be wary of fraudsters parading themselves as officials of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria.
The Police Public Relations Officer in Plateau, Felicia Anslem, said this in a statement to journalists. She said the impersonators were extorting money from members of the public under the guise of rendering services as staff of PHCN.‬
‪According to the text, the situation was worse in some parts of Jos North and South.
“This is to warn members of the public particularly those residing in Jenta Adamu, Gadabiu, Tudun Wada and Dadinkowa areas of Jos, that there is a faceless group of criminals parading themselves as staff of Power Holding Company of Nigeria whose sole aim is to rob their target properties,” the spokesperson said.

‪”Intelligence has revealed that many unsuspecting citizens of the Plateau have lost valuable to these hoodlums.”
 

PHCN pensioners: FG approves N16.5bn

 
 
The Federal Government Thursday said it has approved N16.5b as deaths and gratuity payments for 3,334 pensioners of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN).
 Managing Director of the Nigeria Electricity Liability Management Company (NELMCO) Limited, Dr. Samuel John Agbogun, who disclosed this, said the development is part of the mandate of NELMCO to take over the management and settlement of PHCN’s Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) debts as prescribed by the National Council On Privatisation
He spoke   while addressing members of the Nigeria Union of Pensioners (NUP), Electricity Sector at the mid-term special central working Committee/National Executive Committee meeting  in Benin, Edo State, saying  NELMCO currently has  over 4,000 pensioners court cases as current liabilities to settle.
 He also said his agency has outstanding liabilities of over N713billion as huge debts that were owed to creditors including the Independent Power Producers (IPPs) , partly foreign loans as well as those owed government agencies, PHCN pensioners and power producers.
 Dr. Agbogun saidf a harmonization committee is currently working on outstanding petitions on the biometric documentation on information needed for the payment of pensions and when the report of the committee comes out, NELMCO would start immediate implementation of the report without delay 
Speaking, President of NUP, Electricity Sector, Comrade Temple Ubani  urged NELMCO to urgently resolve the biometric issues that have  been used as the escape route for the delay in the payment of pension of his members.
 

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Retired Soldier Shoots Son Dead Over PHCN Bill in Akure!

 
Police authorities in Akure, the capital of Ondo State have launched a manhunt for Dasilva Adedipe, a retired soldier who allegedly shot his son, Ayo dead on Sunday night.
Adedipe, popularly called “Old Soldier” allegedly perpetrated the act around Araromi area in the heat of an argument over electricity bill Street Journal gathered that the victim, a commercial motorcyclist better known in the area as “Oosha” was rushed to a nearly hospital almost immediately after the shooting, but he did not receive medical attention on time as health workers there reportedly demanded for a police report to back the bullet wounds on his body mainly because the relatives that took him to the hospital had lied that he had an accident. Findings revealed that when the father sensed that the 24-year-old Oosha was dead, he allegedly dumped his corpse in a house at Shagari village. The corpse was retrieved by friends and relatives on Monday morning after which it was taken to the mortuary. .While confirming the incident, the state PRO of the Ondo State Police Command, Wole Ogodo disclosed that one Olaide Adedipe who claimed
 

Monday, December 2, 2013

Plight of PHCN staff: TUC, MWUN ask Jonathan to intervene

PHCN-PROTESTERS
 
Eluonye Konyegwuaehi
01 December 2013, Sweetcrude, Lagos - The TRADE Union Congress of Nigeria, TUC, has called on President Goodluck Jonathan to personally intervene in the plight of thousands of sacked workers of Power Holding Company of Nigeria, PHCN, who have not been paid their terminal benefits.
Report has it that no fewer than seven thousand workers of the defunct PHCN have not been paid a kobo, while 30,000 of them were paid only part of their severance benefits.
It would be recalled that the Federal Government through the Bureau for Public Enterprises (BPE) on November 1, handed over the assets of PHCN to new owners, while three days later over 30,000 of the workers were issued sack letters dated October 21, 2013.
Contrary to the agreement reached between Labour and Government on October 31, that no worker would be disengaged without full payment of his or her terminal benefit, at least, it has been uncovered that no fewer than 7000 were disengaged without receiving a kobo.
In the same vein, contrary to the extant labour law, few thousands that were re-engaged were employed on six months contract (casuals).