The famous phone conversation between Presidents Trump and Buhari has begun to yield instant effects on the economy of Nigeria.
Just a day after U.S President, Donald Trump had a phone conversation with Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari, Power Africa, an initiative by the US government to light up Africa, on Tuesday said it was planning to invest about one billion dollars on the power sector in Nigeria.
The programme’s coordinator, Mr Andrew Herscowitz said. Herscowitz announced this in Abuja at a news conference on strengthening the power sector in Nigeria, according to the Vanguard.
He said U.S. was committed to strengthening the power sector in Nigeria and that America has already committed billions of dollars in funding the nation’s energy projects. He said `Power Africa’, launched by President Barack Obama in 2013 to increase electricity access, is aimed at adding more than 30,000 megawatts of cleaner, more efficient energy development in sub-Saharan Africa. Herscowitz said the project also targets unlocking the substantial wind, solar, hydro power, natural gas, biomass, and geothermal resources on the continent.
“Since Power Africa was launched, U.S. Trade Development Agency
has committed approximately 6.5 million dollars in funding for 10
activities supporting Nigeria’s energy sector, which could leverage up
to 2.7 billion dollars in investment.
“It has advanced 50 million dollars in financing from the
Oversea Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) to Lumos, a Nigeria-based
solar energy company, to scale up it’s off grid solar power service to
about 200,000 Nigerian homes and businesses.
“Power Africa has supported power companies in the country to
the tune of 100 million dollars capital expenditure credit enhancement
facility with a corresponding 6.5 million dollars in technical
assistance.
“And (supported) another 1.5 million dollars for limited commodity to turn around the DISCOS,” he
said. He said that functional power distribution companies were
critical to the development of the country. According to him, well
functioning DISCOs are critical to the delivery of electricity in
Nigeria.
"If the DISCOs do not work, the energy sector as a whole does not work.”
He said Nigeria, like any country, needed to see capital flowing through the entire energy value chain.
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