Succour may have come the way of electricity consum¬ers whose metres
are yet to be delivered months after payments as Nigeria Electricity
Regulatory Commission, NERC, has given Distribution Companies, Discos,
two weeks within which to deliver their metres.
The NERC
chairman, Dr. Sam Amadi, who disclosed this yesterday during a meeting
with the Discos and stakeholders on Aggregate Technical Commercial and
Collection loss studies in Abuja, said the commission will not view with
levity failure to provide the customers with metres.
“By this
week we are sending letters to all the Discos. The commissioner for
consumer affairs is already preparing the letters. We will give Discos
two weeks to make sure they fully metre all those who have paid because
the order of the commission is 45 days. After the two weeks, we will
conduct public hearings to ascertain whether all those who have paid for
CAPMI metres have been metred.
“And the commission will view
very seriously failure to meter these consumers. So I want to assure
those of you writing us with complaints that they paid for CAPMI metres
in the last three, four months, and we will ensure in the coming weeks
that those who have not been metred get theirs. And Discos that have not
metreed consumers who paid for it will be sanctioned,” he stated.
He assured that all written complaints to the commission over metering would be pursued to logical conclusion.
Earlier, NERC explained that it was working hard to ensure that
electricity distribution companies provided metres to their customers,
noting that the metering gap in the country was huge.
Amadi spoke
shortly after an event in Abuja: “Our expectation is that metering will
increase, but let us be very careful. The metering gap in Nigeria is
about 50 per cent and we don’t expect that gap to be closed in a short
while. What we expect to see is significant and consistent effort by the
distribution companies to keep metering their customers.
“Of
course the gap can close quickly if increase in capacity results in
increase in revenue, and the regulator will benchmark that increase in
revenue. But we expect to see continuous and good effort by the Discos
to metre their consumers and quickly close down the gap. But the gap
will still be there for some time because it is a huge gap.”
On
the methodology employed by the Discos in billing non-metred consumers,
Amadi said the commission had educated the power firms on how to go
about it properly.
He said, “We worked them through the
methodology and this is because some of them are new in the sector. By
this methodology, before the Discos estimate your bill, they would have
looked at the energy supply in that cluster.
“They would have
looked at the metered customers in that cluster and be able to have a
much more accurate estimation. What is going on now in some cases is not
estimation, it is just arbitrary way of tariff and we have expressed a
very strong disapproval on that.
Give and take, there will be some margin of error, but it will come close to some level of accuracy.
“A consumer should also be able to benchmark his bill based on what his
metered neighbour is receiving as tariff. So, if for example, an
average customer in your area pays N5,000 or N10,000 and your Disco is
giving you N15,000 bill, that is a smoking gun.”
Source: #NationalMirror_News.
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