Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola
Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, has denied making promises of better power supply.
In an interview with Channels TV., Fashola said that
his plans did not consider vandalization of pipelines because he was
always focused on power generation.
“Let us be careful when you claim that I made promises because I
am ever so conscious of the things that I say and I believe that if I
recollect correctly, it was when I was unveiling my ministries, probably
sometime late December last year, and it is unlike me to make promises
on things I don’t control,” he said.
“If you check the words I used, I shared with you our plans if
it worked and where we will be. Those promises don’t factor in
vandalisation. You know when they teach you how to generate power in
school, they don’t teach you how to deal with vandalisation.
“When they teach you how to do banking, they don’t teach you
about round-tripping so those are the assumptions that things would
remain normal. There is no nation in the world that wants electricity
that vandalizes the assets that produce electricity; it doesn’t make any
sense.
“I can control what my team does, I can promise you what my
team efforts will produce but I can’t control behaviour that is
counterproductive. Those pipelines are national assets; they were built
with our common wealth, the people whose territories it passes are
custodians of it.
“Let us assume that the people who are also custodians of
Jebba, Kainji and Shiroro dams go to break them down because they are
angry, then who gets power?”
Speaking further, Fashola said that the short-term objective of the
ministry is to increase production to enable better power supply.
“We want to get incremental power first, short-term objective. Energy anywhere, we can get it because the energy is not enough.
“Five thousand megawatts, which was our peak production in
February this year, is not enough for a country of over 100 million
people. We will get it from everywhere — from gas, solar, hydro from
nuclear and biomass.”
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