Tag: BAND A

  • ‘Our Band A burden’

    ‘Our Band A burden’

    With the introduction of the band system by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) sometime last year, consumers who fall under the Band A category have been lamenting hard. They lament how payment system is hitting them hard and adversely affecting their business and quality of lives. Gboyega Alaka reports.

    It’S not the best of times for John Osayi, a public school teacher with a monthly after-tax take-home of N150,000. Well, that may actually qualify as an understatement, as Osayi himself considers it “ultra-hard,” no thanks, he said, to the cut-throat electricity tariff band system that has put his Liasu Road, Alimosho Local Government community in Band A area, causing him to spend one-third of his salary on electricity. This leaves him with N100,000, which he considers miserly, as it can hardly take him for a week, with his family of five – himself, wife and three children. As a result, he is constantly struggling, especially because his wife, a petty trader, is hardly able to muster any significant support. Because of this pressure, Osayi has undertaken other income-generating endeavours, such as private teaching, even tutorials at evening classes; but he barely makes anything significant, and hence has found himself constantly struggling to survive.

    “I can’t understand why I have to pay so much for electricity while others pay far less. What is special about this area? Are we rich men? Is this Ikoyi or VI that I should be paying so much?” a frustrated Osayi asked.

    Even before the ‘crazy’ band system, Osayi said life had become nearly unbearable, especially with the subsidy removal and the floating of the naira, which made it lose its value tremendously and caused prices to go up.

    The story is the same with Shakiru Ayinde, a journalist with one of the frontline newspapers in the country. “Since my community in Egbe near Ikotun was placed under the Band A tariff system, I have put my Air conditioner on permanent suspension. I live in a two-bedroom flat and I have an AC, freezer and fridge, alongside five fans – three in the living room and one each in the rooms; and of course, bulbs, a plasma TV and decoder; but since this tariff band system, even my fridge has been suspended permanently. My electric cooker has also been embargoed, to the extent that I’m beginning to fear that they may even develop faults and pack up.”

    All this, according to Ayinde, is because the cost of recharging his electricity meter has gone up astronomically.

    “Before the band system, I used to pay 30,000 every month, and that’s with using all my appliances. I admit, we fall under the 33KVA line and we had generous supply of electricity, but suddenly, it jumped to N60,000 and going almost N70,000 if I must maintain the lifestyle of using both my freezer and fridge, my AC, though never regularly and my electric cooker. So I reorganised myself, such that it is only the freezer we now use both for cooling water, drinks and storing food. Yet, I still spend over N50,000 per month on a regular basis. That’s not cheap by the common man’s standard. And it becomes more painful when a friend who lives in another area, purportedly on a less favoured tariff band, tells you he bought a tariff of N10,000 and has been using it for three months. And yet he tells you his supply is not really bad. You then ask, why are you suffering such fate? What makes you different?”

    Ayinde said it becomes more interesting and pitiful, when the same guy tells him, “Honestly, Ayinde, I pity your predicament o”, and finishes off with “Sorry huh!”

    The annoying part, according to Ayinde, is the fact that the Power Holden Company of Nigeria (PHCN) or DisCos are no longer keeping to the 20-24-hour supply they pledged to the Federal Government before getting approval to go on with the band system.

    “Now, they sometimes seize power for the whole of daytime, bringing it back only at night. Sometimes, it’s the other way round. How’s that up to even 20 hours, let alone 24 hours. So if you ask me, the whole thing is a scam. Let NERC bring it down, and let everybody pay the same rate. After all, everybody now pays the same rate for fuel and telephone. Why should that of electricity be different?”

    No to Band A, it’s killing our business, MSME owners speak up

    Across the Ikotun, Egbe Idimu and Alimosho area of Lagos,  where they largely fall under Band A category, the stories have been literally the same – lamentation upon lamentation, with many stating outright that the whole banding thing was not well thought out or is being wrongly implemented.

    According to Ogochukwu Michael, who runs a boutique shop, the tariff banding system is a problem. Her words, “It is affecting us seriously.”

    And then she spread her arms, as if to show something: “You can see how stuffy everywhere is. We are even lucky the weather is cold now. If it were to be around January, you would have started perspiring seriously. By the nature of boutique stores, it is usually closed, relying mainly on ACs; however, we have been forced to abandon our ACs and settle for fans, which are not good enough. Even with just the fans, we still pay through our noses for power.

    “Before the band system, we used to pay about N3,000 for two weeks; and that’s with AC and everything. That amounted to about N6,000 in a month. But with this crazy Band A stuff, a recharge of N10,000 runs out in three days; and that’s without using AC or maybe using it very marginally. So customers come in here and they’re not comfortable. And for the kind of products we sell – clothes and shoes, that’s not too good, because they might need to sample stuff. If I put on my AC, that N10,000 would run out in two days. That is killing. How much are we making that I will be spending N20,000 on electricity in a week? In a month, that amounts to N80,000. This is without AC and with most of the bulbs off. It is only the outside bulbs that we leave on overnight, for security reasons.”

    This, Michael said, is a sharp contrast with the rate in her residential area, which does not fall under Band A. Although she couldn’t actually tell under which band Ijegun falls in, she just knew that they spend far less on power.

    Read Also: Lagos ‘Band A’ residents plead Ikeja Electric over prolonged blackout, faulty transformer

    “We live in a duplex and we spend between N5,000 and N7,000 in a month, using our ACs and other appliances. Even though we don’t spend so much time at home, the fact is that the rate there is far cheaper. The question, therefore is – why the disparity? Does it mean the people in Egbe Area are richer than the people in Ijegun? These are relatively the same area with the same class of people. Can I sell an item for four times the price simply because my shop is located here in Egbe? People would just go over to Ijegun to buy the same product. So the government should please help us look into it. Cancel the system; whatever good it is doing is far less than the harm. The way I see it, we in Band A are the ones paying subsidy for other bands. It doesn’t make sense.”

    For Oge Onyebuchi, who runs three different shops and businesses on the same block of shops by Ile-Iwe bus Stop in Egbe, Lagos, it is double Band A palaver, as his residence nearby falls under the same payment system.

    “I run three shops in this building – this one that we’re in – a boutique, a phone accessory shop and an electronic shop, using one meter. Before they put us in Band A, we used to recharge the meter with N2,000 and it lasted one whole week. That of course translated to around N8,000 a month, depending on how we used the air-conditioner. At a time, it started increasing, and graduated to N5,000 a week. Currently, that N5,000 only takes us three days, without AC. And I don’t use any other appliance that draws much power. We use just bulbs. The highest appliance we use here are fans. My AC has been faulty for a while but I’m not even keen on fixing it, because using it means more expenses. The only time N5,000 takes me beyond three days is if there is a long power outage.

    While admitting that his area enjoys regular supply of power – sometimes up to the promised 20 hours, Onyebuchi says he suffers the same predicament in his 3-bedroom residence.

    “I spend almost the same amount on power at home, which means I spend about N100,000 on power every month. But that’s because I am hardly at home, otherwise it would have been more. I have also been able to keep it at that N5,000 per three days because I learnt to manage my consumption at home. In the past, I only put on my fridge at night to enable whatever I have inside to freeze, but when I noticed that the bill was still high, I put a total stop to using it or even the AC. So now, I don’t keep food in the house anymore. I had to reorganise myself because business is not moving as expected and expenses are skyrocketing. Like they say, drastic situations demand drastic measures/solutions.”

    Government knows what to do

    A visibly angry proprietor of DNS Drinks store also in the Ile-Iwe area of Egbe would suffer no fool gladly, which was why her first response when her views were sought on the issue was, “What’s there to talk about? Government knows what to do. Government knows that we are suffering; businesses are suffering. It is very clear that nobody is enjoying it. Go to every other business or resident living in Band A area; you will hear the same story. From what I learnt, this Bad A thing was supposed to be for highbrow areas; how they managed to smuggle it to common men areas like ours is what I don’t know. We live in Egbe, Ikotun, not Ikeja, VI, Lekki, or even Ikoyi; where do they expect us to get the money from? The cost of recharging is cut-throat and it is affecting the cost of maintaining business. It has got so bad that there is power and people deliberately refuse to recharge for lack of money or to save money. N10,000 recharge runs out in less than three days; imagine spending over N100,000 a month on electricity alone. How much do we even pay for the shop itself?”

    Asked to make an appeal to the government, she said: “That request is silly. They know what to do, don’t they? They know that the masses are suffering; they know that we are in pain; we need them to ease out pain, not add to it. They should give us normal bill. Why are some people paying so much more and some paying far, far less? The excuse that they give us power for long hours does not hold water. If I consume more, let me pay for more, but not at a higher price.”

    Mrs. Olawaye, who runs a phone accessories store, has the same story. As a matter of fact, she confessed that the huge bills at one point resulted in squabbles among other shops, with whom she shares a meter, until they devised a way of using a meter reader to calculate each shop’s consumption.

    “We began fighting one another. People were pointing accusing fingers at each other, regarding who was consuming more. But we never have that kind of issue before. It was when they introduced this Band A thing and people started feeling the pinch. Back then, we (four shops) were contributing N500 each to charge our prepaid meter- 28 units at N1000 naira; we would buy N2,000 worth of power and use it for about a week. Now, N1,000 only buys 4.4 units. It is alarming! Meanwhile we can’t just add the rate to our products, because there is an economic meltdown already; people would just go to other places where the prices are down.”

    At this point, Gbenga Emmanuel, who had come to patronise Olawaye’s shop chipped in – “If you guys are complaining, what about we factory owners? We produce nylon (polythene) and we pay over N7milion for power in a month. We have a factory, Skylight, on Opeloyeru Street, Egbe here. Before banding, we were spending around N1.5/N2m in a month. If we operate at full production, we now spend around N7 to N8milion, otherwise we still spend over N6m. As a result, we hardly break even. We just work to pay staff and maintain the machines, with the owner of the business hardly taking anything home. Meanwhile, the normal thing is that if you own a business, the whole idea is to be able to take home good returns.”

    He appealed to the government to look into the situation, as it is killing business and affecting lives negatively.

    ‘We now run more on diesel generator’

    Not surprisingly, D-One Lodge, a hotel facility close to the globally-renowned Synagogue Church of All Nations in Ikotun now runs more on diesel.

    When asked why, the manager, who said he only just assumed office recently, said the bill was becoming unbearable.

    At a point, the bill rose up to like N2million, so the management had to devise a way out. The Band A system has made running business very difficult.”

    The manager wouldn’t say much; however, someone close to the management whispered to this reporter: “Imagine running all those air-conditioned rooms on AC? Or are you going to tell your guests not to switch on their ACs?”

    Isolo got out of jail

    Hassan Adamu, a tyre distributor who lives in Isolo said the experience was the same for him until the PHCN took them off Band A.

    “Imagine people in Isolo, a very low-brow area paying N1,000 for 4 units? How did they expect them to cope? Minus the Aswani market and maybe the Ire Akari area, this is a largely common-man settlement. They should be made to understand that it is these kinds of policies that encourage cheating and other sorts of illegal connections. The truth is that 80 percent of people living here cannot pay that rate.

    “Recently, they took us off that crazy band and I’m so relieved,” Adamu said with a deep laugh.

    Asked how they went about it and if they protested, adamu’s response was, “I don’t know. I am not aware of any protest. But it is possible that some residents went to lay a complaint.”

  • How to save electricity costs, consumption as a ‘Band A’ user

    How to save electricity costs, consumption as a ‘Band A’ user

    There are five bands according to the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC). They include Band A, B, C, D and E. 

    Under Band A, customers are entitled to a minimum of 20 hours per day. 

    For Band B, these are customers with a minimum of 16 hours of light per day. 

    Band C are customers who have access to a minimum of 12 hours per day.

    In category D, customers are given a minimum of 8 hours of electricity per day.

    Lastly, the Band E customers have access to a minimum of 4 hours per day.

    Months ago, the Federal Government approved an increase in electricity tariff for customers under the Band A classification.

    A major part of one’s electricity is spent on the use of energy consuming appliances such as refrigerators, freezers, air conditioners, electric water heaters etc.

    Businesses, both small and large, in band A areas are not immune to the impact of the tariff hike. Higher electricity costs directly affect operational expenses.

    Recently, some residents of Akinola and Aboru communities in Alimosho LGA of Lagos State protested their “forceful migration” to the Band A category by Ikeja Electric Distribution Company.

    The residents took to the streets carrying placards with inscriptions like ‘re-migrate our communities away from Band A’, ‘scrap all bands’, ‘affordable tariff reduces cost of living’, among others. During the protest, some residents said they can no longer afford to pay N227 per kilowatt-hour (kwh) for electricity.

    For Band A users, there is a need for an adjustment in behaviour and lifestyle which will ensure conservation of more electricity, lessen use of fuels, and reduce utility bills payment. Here are the tips below:

    1. Energy-saving electronics – Take note that the use of energy-saving equipment for household items like bulbs, inverters, fridges, and others are great ways to manage your power costs. 

    2. Don’t leave appliances on standby –The Nigerian Electricity System Operator has emphasised that unplugging electronic devices when not in use is a cost-effective way to manage electricity whether you are metered or not. It is important to watch out for appliances that use up to 50% power even when they are on standby.

    3. Exploring other alternatives – Those who can afford installation of solar panels or inverters can explore this alternative. These days there are also appliances such as air conditioners, fridges, washing machines etc that operate on Low Voltage System (LVS). These appliances help you save on electricity. Also check the stand-by consumption when buying appliances or ask for energy efficient devices.

    4. Minimise usage of air conditioners, electric water heater – Band A users can ventilate during the night or early in the morning to store the coolness for the day. When windows and doors are open, they allow warm air from outside to enter your space. This creates a constant exchange of air and puts less strain on your AC unit. Also, use water heaters only when necessary. Lower the temperature of your water heater to conserve energy used for heating water.

    Read Also: Band A electricity consumers tariff now N209.50/kWh

    5. Turn off lights when not in use – Turning off the lights when not in use is especially important for those who make use of tungsten filament (regular) bulbs as opposed to LED lights. It will take 16 hours for a regular bulb to consume 1 kilowatt of electricity, meanwhile, it will take 66 hours for an LED light to consume 1 kilowatt of electricity.  So, it is important to switch off the lights when not in use, especially in daylight.

  • Community seeks migration from IE’s Band A, bills’ review

    Community seeks migration from IE’s Band A, bills’ review

    The Ijeododo community in Iba Local Council Development Area (LCDA), Lagos State has petitioned the Ikeja Electric, requesting tariff migration from Band A and review of “outrageous electricity bills”, among others.

     In the petition entitled: “Request for review of billing to reflect actual consumption in Ijeododo community”,  it said the bills were based on estimates rather than actual meter readings and that this had resulted in inflated bills, strain, and opaqueness.

     In the petition signed by the community’s Central Working Committee (CWC) Chairman, Pastor Babatunde Olusegun and Secretary, Aminu Jubrin, who represent 10 community development areas (CDAs), lamented that their bills are inconsistent with usage, thereby placing financial burden on families and small businesses.

    Read Also: Actress Joke Silva celebrates legendary husband at 82

    “The lack of transparency in the billing has eroded trust between Ikeja Electric and residents of Ijeododo. Customers feel they are being unfairly charged without an understanding of how their bills are calculated, leading to frustration and dissatisfaction.

      “Accurate billing based on actual consumption would encourage residents to be more energy-conscious and adopt measures to reduce their electricity usage. Estimated billing, on the other hand, provides no incentive for such responsible behaviour,’’ they said.

      The community urged IE to transition from estimated billing to actual meter readings for fairness and accuracy and expedite action on the supply of prepaid meters to enable the residents to monitor their electricity usage.

  • The mistake called ‘Band A’

    The mistake called ‘Band A’

    SIR: The principle ‘you only sell what you have’ is a cornerstone of all businesses, resonating throughout different industries and emphasising the importance of aligning offerings with available resources and expertise.

    It is crucial to provide goods or services that are accessible and within one’s capabilities. However, Nigerian power distribution companies (Discos) are selling services they cannot deliver to their customers. For example, the promised 20–24-hour electricity supply under the new tariffs, such as Band A, appears to be unsuccessful.

    The Discos are simply selling 20–24 hours of electricity and darkness, causing disappointment, eroding trust, and damaging the reputation of both the Discos and the Minister of Power.

    Among economic and political observers, there is a widely held belief that credibility is paramount in retail, manufacturing or service-oriented businesses. Customers expect transparency and reliability, and any deviation from this expectation can have detrimental effects on long-term success.

    The Discos want to emulate other countries, but in those with privatized electricity, tariffs are usually categorized into residential, commercial, and industrial sectors. However, in Nigeria, consumers are simply grouped into ‘Bands.’ For instance, in countries with reliable electricity, like those in the European Union, consumers have the freedom to choose an electricity supplier from the full range available in their area, as well as the type of tariffs they prefer. In Nigeria, Discos hold a monopoly. If your service provider is Ibadan Electric, Kaduna Electric, Yola Electric, etc., you have no alternative; you must remain with that specific Disco and the tariff band they have assigned to you.

    We must acknowledge that every business, including Discos, operates within constraints – whether financial, logistical, or technical. While acknowledging these constraints is logical, the new tariff appears to be nothing more than an attempt to expedite Nigeria’s electricity sector development without addressing underlying challenges. How can Nigeria implement tariffs similar to those in countries with well-developed electricity sectors, characterised by massive infrastructure, reliable electricity, flexible tariff structures, and numerous options for consumers in choosing service providers?

    The ‘Band A’ tariff is nothing but overpromising and underdelivering. Businesses that embrace this principle prioritise maximising profits at the expense of their customers’ needs and freedom of choice.

    In fact, the majority of Nigerian electricity consumers, regardless of whether they are in Bands A, B, C, D or E, are angered by two entities: Discos and the Minister of Power. Discos are perceived as collecting money for services not rendered, while the minister is seen as defending the indefensible.

    Read Also: Korra Obidi’s ex-husband accuses dancer of infidelity

    In serious countries, electricity supplies and tariffs are considered a security and economic imperative. Thus, electricity tariffs can vary widely depending on factors such as economic conditions, infrastructure, government policies, and production methods. Presently, Nigeria’s economic conditions cannot support or sustain these new tariffs; we lack the infrastructure and economic strength for businesses to bear such high tariffs. Consequently, this would lead to high commodity prices as production costs increase, ultimately resulting in higher prices of goods and services.

    In countries with efficient electricity systems, tariffs often reflect the costs of generation, distribution and maintenance, resulting in lower rates for consumers. For instance, countries like Norway, Sweden and Switzerland utilise a mix of hydroelectric, nuclear and renewable energy sources, which helps keep tariffs relatively low compared to gas-powered alternatives.

    The Minister of Power and Discos must revisit the drawing board as the new tariff has failed upon arrival. For instance, according to an investigative report by the Daily Trust on April 12, 2024, Discos issued 37 apologies to Band A customers within one week. They are struggling to sustain a 20–24-hour power supply to Band A customers.

    It is crucial to remind Discos of the provision by the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC): “When the Disco fails to meet the committed service level to a Band A feeder for seven consecutive days, the feeder shall be automatically downgraded to the recorded level of supply in accordance with the applicable framework.”

    • Zayyad I. Muhammad writes from zaymohd@yahoo.com
  • No ID CARD now; BAND A??

    No ID CARD now; BAND A??

    The tragic news of the expected birth of the next in a long line of very monstrously expensive, very individually time- consuming and very poor value-for-budget ID cards is again raising its ugly head on the immediate agenda of the current government , pregnant with so many good, bad and ugly ideas. All 160m+ Nigerians [can we really be ‘over 200m’ when they seem unavailable or disappear at voting and school time] fervently pray that this government sticks to the good inexpensive masses-upliftment ideas that it has which can make Nigerians ‘happy people’ again quickly after years of pillage, budgetary rape, robbery  and devaluation of our formerly precious currency, the naira.

    If the multibillion naira planned to be spent on a card supposed to improve our financial security, is spent instead on our massive physical security problems, more electricity, more security, more good roads, many more Nigerians, likely to be murdered in their villages, farms and on roads this year, would probably live. Nigerians are reeling under multiple creative taxation including for generator, for ‘open space use’, for LGA something? Why would this government, doing amazingly well on the naira value recovery front, plunge citizens into another ‘chaotic card’  situation. Good or bad idea, it is 2-3 years too early and wrong timing!

    Nigerians are among the most patient and most frequent IDed and prayerful citizens  world. But we are paradoxically also among the top corrupted countries. Remember that the best IDed countries also groan under  corruption, bank fraud and identity theft in spite of their CCC ‘Cards, Cameras and Computers’.

    Let the Auditor General report to Nigeria how much ‘Contracts for ID cards’ have cost Nigeria so far. Nigeria’s cards are too short term, requiring too frequent renewal, another ploy to extort from citizens. Drivers Licence, Voters Card[x?6], BVN, NIN, TIN, Passports et cetera  Government wastes a huge amount of the citizen’s time having to renew official ID documents and periodically comes up with a new one for to dance to all over again. Yet Nigeria still does not have the most basic Course 1-0-1 FINGERPRINT AND FACE-MUG-SHOTS IN ALL OUR POLICE STATIONS AND A NATIONAL CRIMINAL DATABASE over 100 years after use in England. Nigeria’s Crime Laboratories are among the least equipped worldwide. This condemns police to use measures other than evidence.

    Read Also; Nigeria’s security architecture stretched beyond elastic limits, says Tinubu

    Government would be more appreciated if it was announcing a National Crime Data Base for fingerprints, facial  recognition and body and limb scarification and tattoos photo-records to better professionalise policing.

    Government would have been applauded if it announced that all existing databases were now available to police and financial crime investigators for cross-referencing. Government needs to tell us that our databases are valuable, available and well-protected from hackers, perhaps by using local language proverbs of the small, lesser-known ethnic groups as passwords in firewalls.  

    Government could not stop the NASS embarrassing itself publicly by buying N160m jeeps for its 360 politicians at a time of 70-80% nationwide poverty. But Government can stop its enthusiastic officials from embarking on yet another multibillion expensive adventure just to ‘give’ us a new ID Card, which, hehehe, we will all have to pay double for. Surely a levy of N5-10,000 will be demanded even though all government money is our money, making us pay twice!

    In conclusion, this Multipurpose ID/cum Mastercard Scheme may be good but it is ill-advised when all the schools lack water, books, laboratories, toilets, sports equipment and security; and life is so insecure. Let us postpone it until certain goals are reached. Until all the farms are accessed in safety for farmers, families and property; when all the bandits and terrorists have been neutralised; when Nigerians are made naira-proud; when we have $50b in Foreign Reserves and a less than N400:$1. Let us put food on Nigerians’ tables, smiles on faces, books in children’s hands; terrorists and bandits neutralised; jobs for  youth and fingerprinting and mugshots in police stations. Reorder Nigeria’s priorities please with our limited funding.    

    Nigeria will never be great again if it keeps recycling the same old failed ID Projects, same old policies, same old roads and bridges, same old bookless schools and healthcare-less hospitals and clinics. That ID card multibillion naira could be used in far better ways to help Nigeria achieve  the SDGs.  Yes, ID and financial inclusion and fiscal security are problems but they do not kill like violence, crime, and hunger do. In Nigeria today a multibillion-naira new ID Card Scheme is not a life-saving priority. Let us abandon the scheme for now lest it’s almost guaranteed poor implementation and escalating cost will be seen as a scam hung around the government’s neck.

    Band A IS THE NEW SONG IN TOWN. CAN ANYONE EXPLAIN THE BUSINESS LOGIC OF PAYING MORE PER UNIT PRICE FOR INCREASED SUPPLY? Buying more makes you a better valued customer and should bring a discount for turnover volume, abi no be sooo? The more you buy the cheaper it becomes. Common business sense, teach the power holding companies. Some favoured groups of citizens never pay for services and these fees are passed on to those who actually pay their exorbitant fees. It was so for NITEL, NEPA and IDD, International Direct Dial phones. Has anyone you know ever had 20 hours/day power. Power companies should CHANGE THEIR CUSTOMER UNFRIENDLY BUSINESS MODEL AND GET A NEW ‘BAND AID’ TO PLAY A DIFFERENT MORE HONEST ELECTRICITY TUNE.