A Nigerian venture plans to raise N480billion ($1.2 billion) over the next three years to buy electricity meters and help power distributors plug revenue gap in the country.
Less than a 10th of Nigeria’s 41 million households have their electricity consumption metered, and half of those are faulty, according PricewaterhouseCoopers.
As a result, distribution companies have to estimate bills, resulting in disputes that delay payments.
Meter Assets Finance and Management Company hopes to end that by raising funds to purchase and supply meters to consumers, Onion Omonforma, the Chief Executive Officer of New Hampshire Capital, said by phone from Lagos.
New Hampshire Capital, FBNQuest and Kairos Investments Africa are helping to package and structure the venture, known as MAPCo, for investors to either buy equity or inject debt into the company.
“The electricity distribution firms will then have the money to go back and buy more meters and the cycle continues, paving the way to close the meter gap,” he said.
MAPCo will collect the cost of the meters from consumers at a premium over the next 10 years. The meters will be handed over to the power-distribution companies once paid off, Bloomberg reports.
MAPCo plans to issue a 100 billion naira bond in the next year, Omonforma said.
Roadshows have been planned for the United States and Europe, and will also include local institutional investors.
“We envisage that a lot of people who are looking for a long-term instrument will key into it,” he said.
– BLOOMBERG