- Banks Groan Under Energy Firms’ N4.89tn Unpaid Debts
Deposit money banks in the country are said to be bleeding as acquisition loans advanced to power and oil companies have not been paid.
Prior to the fall in crude oil prices from a peak of $115 per barrel in 2014, banks gave loans to local oil and gas companies for the acquisition of assets, mostly being divested by the IOCs such as Royal Dutch Shell, Chevron and Total.
Also, during the privatisation of the nation’s power sector in 2013, many banks provided the financing required by investors to acquire the successor generation and distribution companies carved out of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria.
As of the end of December 2016, loans to the oil and gas sector constituted 30.02 per cent of the gross loan portfolio of the nation’s banking system as credit to that sector grew from N4.51tn to N4.89tn, according to the latest Financial Stability Report from the Central Bank of Nigeria.
The report said loans to the power and energy sector accounted for 4.5 per cent at N726.29bn as of December 2016.
The Chairman, Egbin Power Plc, Mr. Kola Adesina, said those who invested in the power firms took loans, which were premised on the fact that there would be cash flow that would make those loans payable back to the banks.
He said at the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry’s policy dialogue on power sector that the cash flow was expected to come from electricity customers.
He said, “So, if they are not paying promptly, if they are stealing energy, there is a direct impact on the capacity of those companies to pay back those loans.
“The banks in Nigeria currently are bleeding under the weight of acquisition finance to the power sector, and the question is how are we going to resolve that problem? We can only do that if the fundamentals are dealt with in the sector.”
According to Adesina, there is a need for a holistic review of where the power sector is, how it got to where it is and where it is going.
He said, “When the Discos were sold, there was a model given to the investors to plug into; that they were to make a particular level of capital and operational expenditure, with the exchange rate, interest rate, and expected inflation rate stated.
“All these factors were put into consideration when the sale was made. The very day these assets were handed over to the new owners, every side of the bargain from the government was not met, in terms of cost-reflective tariff.”
A banking source told our correspondent that many of the energy companies that borrowed money from banks had started looking for equity to put into their transactions.
He said, “I am aware that they are talking to different equity partners and private companies outside Nigeria that are looking to come and invest. So, you may start to hear some announcements in a couple of months that companies are partnering to bring equity into Nigerian oil and gas industry.”
According to the source, foreign investors are more comfortable to do that now because oil prices are picking up and the militants issue seems to have been resolved.
“Everybody is trying to look for somebody that can buy them out essentially or bring in equity. I have been asked by some foreign investors to help them do due diligence in some of the companies they are looking to invest in,” the source added.