Tag: NERC

  • Ekiti hails NERC’s transfer of regulatory oversight of state’s electricity

    Ekiti hails NERC’s transfer of regulatory oversight of state’s electricity

    The Ekiti state government has hailed the official transfer of the regulatory oversight by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission to the Ekiti Electricity Regulatory Bureau.

    The commissioner of information, Taiwo Olatunbosun, in a statement on Wednesday, April 24, described the development as a remarkable milestone that would reduce bureaucratic bottlenecks in the efforts to ensure seamless supply and distribution of electricity in the state.

    Olatunbosun noted that Ekiti state is one of the first two states in the country to officially take regulatory oversight of the electricity markets in their respective states made the feat more astounding.

    He explained that the development complied with the 1999 Constitution (amended) and the Electricity Act 2023 (Amended) as well as the directive of the regulatory body, the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC).

    Olatunbosun reiterated the commitment of Governor Biodun Oyebanji-led administration to developing the state and improving the lots of the people, adding that the government was particularly passionate about the provision of stable electricity to boost socio-economic activities in the state.

    Read Also: Ekiti excited over NERC’s nod to generate power

    He explained that the state government had requested for the transfer of regulatory oversight of the intrastate electricity market in the state, adding that the request was in fulfillment of the NERC’s mandate to interested states to make formal requests to transfer the regulatory authority over electricity operations to the state.

    He stressed that the Ekiti State Electricity Regulatory Bureau (ESERB) would henceforth be responsible for enforcing the provisions of the law including issuing licenses and permits for the generation, transmission, and distribution of electricity across the state; enforcing the yearly energy efficiency compliance certification for vendors and marketers of energy products as well as the certification of energy professionals, contractors and companies and all other functions previously performed in the State by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC).

    Olatunbosun added that the Bureau would also be in charge of carrying out electrical inspection, monitoring, and certification of new and existing electricity networks as well as enforcing statutory technical electrical standards and regulations for safety and security across the state and other functions previously performed by National Electricity Management Services Agency (NEMSA).

    The Commissioner for Infrastructure and Public Utilities, Professor Bolaji Aluko commended the governor for his support towards achieving the feat.

    “We welcomed the “definitive statement by NERC, and look forward to working closely with it, NEMSA, the Federal Ministry of Power, BEDC, and IBEDC during this transition period for the full realization of the lofty goals of ECA2023 and EA2023. 

    “More legal frameworks and a solid financial structuring still need to be done, but we are confident that these will in time be properly put in place”, he added.

  • Ekiti excited over NERC’s nod to generate power

    Ekiti excited over NERC’s nod to generate power

    There was excitement in the Oke Bareke Ekiti State Government House in Ado-Ekiti yesterday following the nod given to the state’s Electricity Regulatory Board (EERB) by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) to oversight local electricity market.

    Top government officials were seen, especially in the Office of the Governor openly discussing the development.

    Some who declined to give their names, said a new chapter in electricity generation, distribution and reliability in the state had been opened.

    “It’s a welcome development. With it, we can determine electricity tariff. We can be sure of regular power supply and we can be sure that our local companies and artisans produce optimally,” one of them said last night.

    Another official gave kudos to Governor Biodun Oyebanji for making the state’s request to have a say in power generation and distribution in the state a reality.

    Read Also: The APC governorship primary in Ondo

    He said: “It is the resilience of the governor that has led to this good news. We have suffered a lot due to power outages. Now, we will be in charge and can determine how the DisCos operate.”

    NERC had on Monday announced the state as the second in the country to be granted the mandate to oversee the operation of their electricity market. The first was Enugu.

    Under  power distribution decentralisation policy,  electricity tariff  that will be payable in Ekiti State  shall be subject to ratification by EERB and all relating protective policy for customers shall be the responsibility of the board.

     In a statement   by its  Chairman, Sanusi Garba and Commissioner in charge of Legal, Licencing and Compliance, Dafe Akpeneye, NERC asked the  Oyebanji administration to  request Ibadan and Benin electricity distribution companies to set up two subsidiary companies to  assume responsibilities for intrastate supply and distribution of electricity in the state.

     The incorporation of the  firms  which will    be known  IBEDC SubCo  and BEDC SubCo  must  be completed  within 60 days from 22 April 2024.

     According to the statement, the  subsidiary  firms  shall, among others,  apply for and obtain licenses for the intrastate supply and distribution of electricity from the Ekiti State Electricity Regulatory Bureau (EERB).

     IBEDC supplies power to some  parts of the state while BEDC does to others.

    NERC added  that all issues relating to the transfer order must  be completed by 22 October 2024. 

    The  Electricity Act 2023, empowers states to generate, transmit and distribute power in order to liberalise the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) and also relieve the national grid for safe and optimum supply.

    Like it did in the case of Enugu, NERC explained that the nod given Ekiti   was in  line with the 2023 Electricity Act(EA) and  part of the legal requirement to decentralise the  operations of  Generation companies (Gencos) and  DisCos.

    NERC  added  that  in spite of the transfer order,    it remains  the  central regulator with regulatory oversight on the inter-state/international generation, transmission, supply, trading and system operations.

    The EA   mandates any state that intends to establish and regulate intrastate electricity markets to deliver a formal notification of its processes and requests NERC to transfer regulatory authority over electricity operations in the state to the state regulator.

    Based on the provisions of the Act,  the  Ekiti  State  Government notified NERC and requested   the transfer of regulatory oversight of its  intrastate electricity market.

    “In compliance with the amended Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (CFRN) and the Electricity Act 2023 (Amended), the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC or the Commission) has issued an order to transfer regulatory oversight of the electricity market in Ekiti State from the commission to the Ekiti State Electricity Regulatory Bureau (EERB),” NERC  said in the  statement. 

    As of yesterday, the number of states that have so far sought  to oversight  their   electricity markets could not be ascertained by The Nation after several efforts to reach NERC spokesman, Usman Arabi.

  • NERC cedes regulatory power to Ekiti Bureau

    NERC cedes regulatory power to Ekiti Bureau

    To guarantee effective power supply  in Ekiti, the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), has ceded its regulatory oversight of the electricity market to the Ekiti State Electricity Regulatory Bureau (EERB). 

    NERC said that while it exercises regulatory oversight of the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) as the major regulatory agent in accordance with powers conferred by the Electricity Act 2023, its current ceding was part of the legal requirement to decentralise the  operations of Gencos and  DisCos in Nigeria, as well as even the single Transco.

    The new arrangement has been announced so far for Ekiti and Enugu and Ondo  States, which have existing Electricity regulatory Bureau established through laws enacted by their respective Houses of Assembly and who have met other constitutional provisions.

    Under this lofty power distribution decentralisation policy, the electricity tariffs that will be payable in Ekiti shall be subject to ratification by EERB and all relating protective policy for customers shall be the responsibility of the Ekiti State Government.

    The NERC explained that the  decentralisation policy was achieved when presidential assent was granted to the amendment of relevant portions of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (CFRN) on 17 March, 2023.

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    With this power concessioning move, which shall be effective from May 1, 2024, the EERB will now regulate electricity market in the state, while also working in synergy with NERC being the statutory national body to oversee power distribution across the nation.

    The directive, contained in a statement dated April 22,2024 by the NERC Chairman, Sanusi Garba and Commissioner in charge of Legal, Licencing and Compliance, Dafe Akpeneye, said all transfers between the Benin Electricity Distribution Companies(BEDC) , Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company (IBEDC) and EERB envisaged by this order shall be completed by October 22, 2024.

    To ensure that the new innovation succeeds as envisaged, the Commission directed  BEDC  and IBEDC to immediately incorporate  subsidiary Companies along state lines  under the Companies and Allied Matters Act for the assumption of responsibilities for intrastate supply and distribution of electricity in the State.

    The Commission added further that each Disco  “shall complete the incorporation of the Company  within 60 days from the effective date of this order and,  shall apply for and obtain a licence for the intrastate supply and distribution of electricity from EERB.

    “BEDC shall identify the actual geographic boundaries of Ekiti State and carve out its network in Ekiti State as a standalone network with the installation of boundary meters at all border points where the network crosses from Ekiti State into another state.

    “Shall create an Asset Register of all its power infrastructure located within Ekiti State; evaluate and apportion contractual obligations and liabilities, attributable to BEDC’s operations of its subsidiary in Ekiti State; identify all the applicable trading points for energy offtake for the operations of BEDC SubCo in Ekiti State

    “Shall confirm the number of employees that are required to provide service to Ekiti State as a standalone public utility; and transfer the identified assets for operations in Ekiti State, contractual obligations, liabilities and employees to BEDC SubCo”.

    The Commission clarified that all cross-border transactions involving the national grid shall be subject to the approval of the NERC in accordance with the CFRN and EA.

  • NERC transfers regulatory oversight to Ekiti Electricity Regulatory Board

    NERC transfers regulatory oversight to Ekiti Electricity Regulatory Board

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) on Tuesday, April 23, revealed that it has transferred regulatory oversight of the electricity market in Ekiti state from the commission to the Ekiti State Electricity Regulatory Bureau (EERB).

    According to the commission, the action is in line with the 2023 Electricity Act.

    NERC said in a statement: “In compliance with the amended Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (CFRN) and the Electricity Act 2023 (Amended), the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC or the Commission) has issued an order to transfer regulatory oversight of the electricity market in Ekiti State from the Commission to the Ekiti State Electricity Regulatory Bureau (EERB).”

    The statement recalled that with the EA 2023, the Commission retains the role as a central regulator with regulatory oversight on the inter-state/international generation, transmission, supply, trading and system operations.

    The EA said NERC, also mandates any state that intends to establish and regulate intrastate electricity markets to deliver a formal notification of its processes and requests NERC to transfer regulatory authority over electricity operations in the state to the State Regulator.

    The commission noted that based on this, the Government of Ekiti State complied with the conditions precedent in the laws, duly notified NERC and requested for the transfer of regulatory oversight of the intrastate electricity market in Ekiti State.

    Read Also: Without a tariff increase, Nigeria will need N3.2 trillion to subsidise electricity in 2024, says NERC

    The transfer Order by NERC has the following provisions: – Direct Benin Electricity Distribution Company (BEDC) and Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company PLC (IBEDC) to incorporate a subsidiary (BEDC SubCo and IBEDC SubCo) to assume responsibilities for intrastate supply and distribution of electricity in Ekiti State from BEDC and IBEDC.

    According to NERC, BEDC and IBEDC shall complete the incorporation of BEDC SubCo and IBEDC SubCo within 60 days from 22 April 2024 and the sub-companies shall apply for and obtain licences for the intrastate supply and distribution of electricity from EERB, among other directives.

    All transfers envisaged by this order shall be completed by 22 October 2024, said NERC.

  • Tariff hike saves Nigeria N3.2tr subsidy

    Tariff hike saves Nigeria N3.2tr subsidy

    Chairman of the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Sanusi Garba, yesterday said government would have had to pay N3.2 trillion as subsidy on electricity this year if the recent increase in tariff is to be reversed.

    Speaking at a stakeholders meeting called by the House of Representatives Committee on Power, Garba said that current investments in the sector was not enough to guarantee steady power supply. He said if nothing concrete is done to address issues in the sector including foreign exchange fluctuation and none payment for gas, the sector will be heading for doom.

    According to Garba, prior to the recent review in tariff, electricity Distribution Companies (DisCos) were only obligated to pay 10 per cent of their energy invoice, adding that the lack of cash backing for subsidy is creating a liquidity challenge in the sector. Garba blamed the none payment of subsidy on the continued dip in gas supply and power generation, adding that the continuous decline of generation and system collapse are largely linked to liquidity challenge.

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    He further explained that between January 2020 and January 2023, tariff increased from 55 percent of cost to 94 percent cost recovery, adding that “the unification of FX and current inflationary pressures are pushing cost reflective tariff to N184/kwh

    “If sitting back and doing nothing is the way to go, it would mean that the National Assembly and the Executive would have to provide about N3.2 trillion to pay for subsidy in 2024,” Garba said, adding that only N185 billion of the N645 billion subsidy in 2023 has been cash backed, leaving a funding gap of N459. 5 billion.

    Vice Chairman of NERC, Musiliu Oseni, also justified the recent increase in tariff, maintaining that the increment was needed to save the sector from total shutdown.

    Chairman of the House Committee on Power, Victor Nwokolo (PDP, Delta) said the essence of the meeting was to address the recent increase in tariff and the issue of Band A and others.

    Nwokolo said the officials of NERC and the DisCos have given the committee useful information.

    “We have not concluded with them because the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) were not here and the Generation Companies (GenCos) too.

    “We will hold further consultations with them by next week. But from what they have said, which is true, is that without the change in tariff, which was due since 2022, the industry lack the capital to bring the needed change.

    “Of course, with the population explosion in Nigeria, the areas being covered is beyond what they have estimated in the past and because they need to expand their own network, they also needed more money.

    “Every day, there are changes to the exchange rate and there are also threats to power installations because of security, thereby increasing the overhead.

    “The committee has not fully agreed with them because we are not saying either yes or no because we want to get more input and also find out the possibility of gas being sold to them in naira. More of this is dependent on generation and without the gas, you cannot have power.

    “The committee cannot take any decision to stop the increase in tarrif. That decision can only be taken by the entire House and not at committee level. There must be a House resolution to stop it.

    “That is why we happy that the House is not seating next week as that will afford us an opportunity for wider consultation so that we know what to present to the entire House. We are interested in the time line for improvement in service delivery because what Nigerians want is service delivery because light will take care of our security challenges and many other things”

  • Without a tariff increase, Nigeria will need N3.2 trillion to subsidise electricity in 2024, says NERC

    Without a tariff increase, Nigeria will need N3.2 trillion to subsidise electricity in 2024, says NERC

    The chairman of the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Sanusi Garba, said on Thursday, April 18, that the Nigerian government would have to cough out a whopping N3.2 trillion as subsidy for the electricity sector in 2024 if the recent increase in the tariff is to be reversed.

    Speaking at a stakeholders meeting called by the House of Representatives committee on Power, Garba said that current investments in the sector were not enough to guarantee a steady power supply.

    He said if nothing concrete is done to address issues in the sector including foreign exchange Flutuarion and non-payment for gas, the sector will be heading for doom.

    He explained that before the recent review in tariff, DISCOS were only obligated to pay 10 percent of their energy invoice, adding that the lack of cash backing for subsidy is creating a liquidity challenge in the sector.

    He said further that as a result of the non-payment of subsidy, gas supply, and power generation have continued to dip, adding that the continuous decline of generation and system collapse are largely linked to liquidity challenges.

    He raised an alarm of what he called a looking risk not a total shutdown by the Generation and distribution companies, achieving cost-effective tariffs is key to the sustainability of the sector.

    He further explained that between January 2020 and January 2023, the tariff increased from 55 percent of the cost to 94 percent of cost recovery, adding that “the unification of FX and current inflationary pressures are pushing cost reflective tariff to N184/kWh.

    He said: “If sitting back and doing nothing is the way to go, it would mean that the National Assembly and the Executive would have to provide about N3.2 trillion to pay for subsidy in 2024.”

    Garba also said that only N185 billion of the N645 billion subsidy in 2023 has been cash-backed, leaving a funding gap of N459. 5 billion.

    Vice chairman of NERC, Musiliu Oseni who also justified the recent increase in tarrif said the increment was needed to save the sector from total shutdown.

    Chairman of the House Committee on Power, Victor Nwokolo (PDP, Delta) said the essence of the meeting was to address the recent increase in tariff and the issue of band A and others.

    Nwokolo said the officials of NERC and DISCOS  have given the committee useful Information, adding “We have not concluded with them because the Transmission Company of Nigeria were not here and the Generation Companies too.

    “We will hold further consultations with them by next week. But from what they have said which is true is that without the change in tariff, which was due in 2022, the industry lacks the capital to bring the needed change.

    “Of course, with the population explosion in Nigeria, the areas being covered are beyond what they have estimated in the past and because they need to expand their own network, they also needed more money.

    “Every day, there are changes to the exchange rate and there are also threats to power installations because of security, thereby increasing the overhead.

    Read Also: NERC to monitor DisCos’ to with April 2024 order

    “The committee has not fully agreed with them because we are not saying either yes or no because we want to get more input and also find out the possibility of gas being sold to them in naira. More of this is dependent on generation and without the gas, you cannot have power.

    “The committee cannot take any decision to stop the increase in tariff. That decision can only be taken by the entire HouseHouse and not at the committee level. There must be a House resolution to stop it.

    “That is why we are happy that the House is not seating next week as that will afford us an opportunity for wider consultation so that we know what yo present to the entire House. We are interested in the timeline for improvement in service delivery because what Nigerians want is service delivery because light will take care of our security challenges and many other things.”

  • NERC deregulates meter prices under MAP

    NERC deregulates meter prices under MAP

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), has announced deregulation of meter prices under the Meter Asset Provider (MAP) Scheme for end-user customers.

    This is according to a statement by the commission in Abuja on Monday signed by Mr Garba Sanusi, the Chairman of NERC and Mr Dafe Akpeneye, the Commissioner Legal, Licensing and Compliance, NERC.

    The statement said: ”Effective from May 1, the new order will introduce a competitive bidding process, allowing customers to choose from a variety of authorised vendors.

    ”This will mark a significant shift from the previously regulated pricing structure.*

    According to the  order, all prices of meters within the MAP scheme will be determined through competitive bidding.

    The commission said that the move was expected to foster transparency and reduce prices as customers would have the freedom to select their preferred meter providers among those authorised under the scheme.

    ”The deregulation lifts previous restrictions allowing all MAP permit holders to provide services across all Electricity Distribution Companies (DisCos) in Nigeria, provided they meet specific requirements.

    ”This broader operational scope is anticipated to increase competition among MAPs, potentially leading to better services and innovations in metering solutions,” it said.

    The order said that DisCos had been mandated to ensure that smart meters provided by MAPs were seamlessly integrated into their head-end systems and meter data management systems.

    ”Furthermore, they must provide a publicly accessible online portal displaying their technical specifications and commercial terms for MAP participation.

    ”This is to ensure a standardised approach to meter installation and function across board,” it said.

    According to the order, thorough testing and confirmation process for new meters have been outlined.

    ” With DisCos required to complete these evaluations within 20 working days from when a MAP meets all specified requirements.

    Read Also: NERC okays N81,975, N143,836 for meters

    ”Meters that fail the confirmation test must be promptly reported to the MAP with details on the failure points,” it said.

    The commission said that the deregulation also introduced flexibility in the types of meters available under the MAP scheme.

    ”DisCos can now offer basic electronic meters, Internet of Things (IoT) meters, DIN rail meters, and current limiters, depending on the customer’s energy consumption profile.

    ”While deregulating meter prices, NERC will oversee the submission of price offers from MAPs to ensure fair competition.

    ”This includes a requirement for MAPs to hold a minimum stock of 2,000 units of meters as an eligibility criterion for participation in the bidding process.

    The commission said that end-use customers now have the sole right to choose their preferred MAP and meter types, which align with their specific energy needs.

    It said that additionally, stringent measures have been placed to ensure timely installation of meters with penalties for MAPs that fail to meet installation deadlines.

    (NAN)

  • NERC’s tariff recklessness

    NERC’s tariff recklessness

    • By Omo S Uwaifo

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission, NERC, produced a tariff for Nigeria, and the federal government approved it for implementation, effective April 4. NERC approved the tariff only for Band A customers. Those customers termed Band A are the select group of users of electricity of statutory characteristics, who, at the time of negotiation, were willing to pay the price at which the Disco was willing to sell one kWh of electric energy to them, for a daily availability of 20 to 24 hours.

    Some will argue as in here, that the financial problem of Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry, NESI has been reduced to the quantum of monthly earnings by Discos. However, without determining why that quantum was as it was, and dealing with whatever the issues were that caused it, increasing electricity rates for anyone or group to partially increase Disco earnings, was overtly discriminatory.

    It is unjust, unfeeling and punitive.

    Ad hoc chats with engineers and public hearings by NERC on behalf of stakeholders, or NASS undertaking public hearings, are not the way to go. This is a most serious engineering problem affecting the whole country. It should have been handled by Rates and Engineering specialists.

    Sadly, this is about the systemic mismanagement of NESI over several decades. Every government has contributed to it. Every one of them would surround themselves with friends, sympathizers including pseudo experts, and begin chasing after shadows that lead nowhere.

    Low quantum of monthly earnings is a symptom of a crippling disease that no electric utility has ever survived. The solution has always been best achieved everywhere, by financial transfusion, subsidy, followed by aggressive commercial engineering.

    Government has to understand that there can be no development in Nigeria unless there is abundant supply of electrical energy. The disastrous pathways dreamed up by NERC for regulatory practices, Performance Based Regulation, PBR, and for pricing electricity, have resulted in shortage of investments in networks and in the ever increasing social anguish the country has been suffering since privatisation.

    No one that understands electric rate-making and rates structuring would choose straight line meter tariff structure as NERC has done without flinching since 2013. It does not incentivize electricity consumption. It is anti-industrialization. Yet NERC and Discos want the people to use more energy without caution. That’s like mounting food high up on an altar and asking the lame public to reach for it.

    Electric utilities serve every customer. The more the better. Yet there are three main customer groups in electric utilities: residential, commercial, and industrial. These groups work together everywhere, including Nigeria of between 1951 and the late 1980s, until problems in NESI countrywide, forced major industries to quit the expensive and erratic public distribution networks.

    Notably, Dunlop and Michelin, both motor tyre manufacturers, left Nigeria. Industries that wanted to remain in the country built their individual power plants, creating parallel utilities from which NESI has never recovered because of the deleterious effects it had on its earnings.

    Elsewhere, especially in the United States, electric utilities prompt or entice industries to their areas of franchise because it’s known that industries are the principal drivers of successful electric utilities. In Nigeria, industries died because they couldn’t compete with others of other countries in the local market. Government intervened, but smugglers had their way.

    The key reason was that industries had passed horrendous production costs due to the huge spending on in-house power. How distressing to look back at anaemic NESI, watching industries as they died. As NESI continues to deteriorate, it has no industries to nourish it back to good health. Its problem was that it could not raise funds to help itself because it was incompetent in commercial engineering matters. And so it remains to this day.

    Nigeria’s late and beloved Engr. Lawrence Abiodun Amu, and Engr. Foluseke Abidemi Somolu, in their book, The Development of the Nigerian Electric Power System (1973 – 1990), described Nigeria’s distribution networks as ‘the untidy “last mile” in the electricity supply chain.’

    The networks are and were medieval in design and had gone decrepit with age and lack of maintenance even in the 1980s. Since then they have been incompetently rehashed across Nigeria. By this 2020s, they are and should be expected to be totally incapable of supporting industrial health and development, 40 years or more after industries quit them. 

    Nigeria should re-engineer and rebuild these networks to solve the sectors financial problems. Indeed, the medieval design networks with its lack of flexibility have been Nigeria’s Achilles heel for decades. Instead of this murderous increase in Band A rate scratching the surface of the problem, it will only exacerbate suffering, and deepen poverty in the land.

    By approving the tariff that NERC made, government shot itself on the foot. It should know that Nigeria has supplied power to residential and commercial customers with hardly any industry since the late 1980s, and that, at colossal cost per kilowatt-hour hoping for growth, while industries continued to serve themselves at crippling costs without hope.

    It’s hard to quarrel with the idea that NESI needs more money from its sales. But it’s easy to understand that making people pay more to cure a symptom, is ridiculous and unworthy of Engineering and rational governance. Why should people suffer while the problems remain? This is why government should subsidize NESI until the problem is solved within five years or less of its decision to act.

    In economies especially developing ones such as Nigeria, the only way to bring electric rates down for residential use is to ensure higher industrial productivity and electricity consumption. As it is now in Nigeria, to solve the problem, government should first re-engineer and rebuild the distribution networks. After that all available industries should be electrically linked with the public networks to form an unbroken chain. That is the solution to the problematic nightmare of NESI. Let’s end the long and self-sustaining decadence.

    The quickest way forward is to start the process of re-engineering and rebuilding the networks now with improved technology. There should be adequate controls provided for operational flexibility. The re-engineering should involve a shift away from distribution at utilization voltage level, to distribution at primary voltage levels. That alone should very drastically reduce voltage and energy losses and ensure much higher economies of scale, which should redound to Nigeria’s ability to serve the public electricity at the lowest possible cost without overt discrimination as overzealously and blatantly rendered by NERC.

    Read Also: APC knocks Adeleke for attending parties, owing workers

    Several stories have been told of where the problems of NESI began. That’s history. What’s important at this point is to solve the problem. It is submitted and affirmed here that the preceding paragraphs of this post are the recommended ways to go. However, TCN and Gencos should look hard at their links in the power supply chain.

    An inchoate problem is to provide adequate 330 kV service to every state capital. A place like Lagos should have a minimum of six injections from different directions to avoid weather disruptions. No state capital should have less than three 330-kV injections. In the rehabilitated and revamped situation envisaged, a good guess of peak load will be higher than 20,000 MW and growing.

    Nigeria should prepare for a massive retraining of engineers in every area. Every engineer must learn planning economics. NAPTIN and technological universities should be equipped with the right manpower to teach the various specialties.

    NERC works with other disciplines, but that it is an engineering organization, can hardly be denied. It’s led by an engineer. Engineering is at the heart of the NESI mess. There’s no doubt that tariff is a crying shame. Everyone and everything has its tariff. Ridiculous! How and who bills these if we weren’t using prepayment meters? Yet some customers can’t use enough energy for monthly amortizing the cost of the prepayment meter.

    Let’s be clear, creating a plethora of cost centres to extort money from hapless customers, is a disservice.

    Has NERC allowed true electric rates fall where they may? What population of cities and places did NERC use for its computation? There’s no reason for Ikeja to pay the same electric rate as Epe. Why should Kaduna pay the same electric rate as Zaria? Has Nigeria appetite for egalitarian tariffs? Has NERC used true unit cost per kilowatt for every town and location? These are fair questions. Engineering intends thorough application because human life depends upon it.

    •Engr. Uwaifo FAEng, a former District Manager of defunct Electricity Corporation of Nigeria (ECN), is a poet, playwright, author and joint winner of the LNG Nigeria Prize for Literature in 2004, as well as Eisenhower Fellow, writes from Lagos.

  • NERC fines AEDC N200m over violation of new tariff

    NERC fines AEDC N200m over violation of new tariff

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) at the weekend fined the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) N200 million for not complying with the the Supplementary Order to the April 2024 Multi-Year Tariff Order 2024 for AEDC (the “Order”).

    A statement by the commission in Abuja noted that AEDC failed to comply with the prescribed 

     customer band in the tariff billing.

    It reads: “The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (“Commission”) has taken enforcement action against the Abuja Electricity Distribution Plc (“AEDC”) for non-compliance with the Supplementary Order to the April 2024 Multi-Year Tariff Order 2024 for AEDC (the “Order”).

    ” AEDC has been fined ₦200,000,000 (Two Hundred Million Naira) for failure to comply with the prescribed customer band classifications for the tariff billing.”

    Read Also: NERC tasks DisCos on migration of customers

    Continuing, the management said the decision follows a detailed review and customer feedback, which revealed that AEDC had applied the new tariff to all customer bands, contrary to the Order, which was designed to ensure fair billing practices.

    NERC insisted that “AEDC is therefore mandated to: a. Reimburse all customers in Bands B, C, D and E respectively that were billed above the allowed customer categories/tariff bands provided in the Order.

    “b. Reimburse through the provision of the balance of customer tokens that the affected customers would be entitled to receive at the applicable rates and all token reimbursements shall be issued to the affected customers by 11 April 2024.

    “c. Pay the sum of ₦200,000,000.00 (Two Hundred Million Naira) as a fine for the flagrant breach of the Commission’s Order.

    “d. File evidence of compliance with the directives in a & c with the Commission by 12 April 2024.

    “The action by the Commission underscores its commitment to protecting consumer rights and ensuring equitable practices within Nigeria’s electricity sector.”

  • NERC tasks DisCos on migration of customers

    NERC tasks DisCos on migration of customers

    • AEDC apologises

    The Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has tasked the electricity Distribution Companies (DisCos) on the improvement of supply that will ensure continuous migration of customers from lower band to higher band.

    This was contained in the Supplementary Order to the Multi -Year Tariff Order (MYTO) 2024 that the commission released in Abuja.

    The order insisted that “The Disco is mandated to continuously ensure upward migration of customers from the lower service Bands to B and A service level in line with the target on improvement in quality of service.”

    Explaining the changes in the on-grid tariff regime in the country, NERC directed that the Disco shall set up a rapid response team to ensure effective service delivery on the committed minimum hours of supply to each service Band commencing with Band A feeders effective from last Wednesday.

    According to the order, the team shall ensure timely response to customers’ complaints, fault clearing and alignment with TCN regional teams for effective load management and optimised dispatch to respective feeders.

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    NERC also insisted that Discos shall publish the contact numbers of the service rapid response team for each customer cluster/business unit on its website and circulate the same to the customers via bulk SMS, commencing with Band A clusters no later than 12 noon today. The commission noted that Discos are obligated to publish daily on its website a rolling seven-day average daily hours of supply on each Band A feeder no later than 09:00 am of the next day.

    Continuing, NERC vowed that “Where the Disco fails to deliver on the committed level of service on a Band A feeder for consecutive two days, the Disco shall on the next day by 10.00 am publish on its website an explanation of the reasons for the failure and update the affected customers on the timeline for restoration of service to the committed service level.

    “Where 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 applicable framework.”

    On the changes made to the life-line, NERC said Band A Non Minimum Demand customers’ tariff was increased by 230 per cent while Minimum Demand 1 customers’ was hiked by 177 percent.

    The order also noted that Minimum Demand 2 customers’ rose by 177 percent and that of Minimum Demand 2 Special customers increased by 236 percent. It was an average of 205 percent rate increase.

    But barely 48 hours after the hike in electricity tariff for consumers on Band A width, consumers outside this band yesterday cried out over the noticeable change in their tariff rate.

    Some of the consumers took to social media handles to express their displeasure at the development, lamented that the Distribution Companies (Discos) have not been truthful in placing consumers on the bands they claim they are on.

    For instance, a former Executive Secretary of NEITI, Waziri Adio, in a post on X, formerly Twitter, stated yesterday: “I woke up to the sound of a beeping meter. I bought N100,000 worth of electricity and received less than a third of the prior value, indicating we are on Band A of N225/kWh. @aedcelectricity, we have never got 18 to 20 hours of service per day where I live; never got up to 10 hours a day.

    “@aedcelectricity and @NERCNG, if the basis of putting customers into bands is the number of hours they receive electricity per day, it is important to objectively verify the number of hours they are served, and to have a transparent mechanism for preventing arbitrariness.”

    Another consumer, Kenneth Ezea, expressed shock at the 41.3 units he received after paying N10, 000 on the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) platform. He is not a Band A consumer.

    Taking to FaceBook, Ezea wrote: “Don’t say I didn’t tell you. I just bought N10,000 worthof electric credit and got 41.3 units down from 162. 162 used to carry me for at least 14 days. But now, what’s next?”

    Still, industrialists and manufacturers also warned that the latest hike in tariff will lead to an increase of production cost, ultimately culminating in increased cost to the final consumer.

    Decrying the 300 per cent hike, the Association of Table Water Producers of Nigeria (ATWAP), Ogun Chapter, Chairman, Babatunde Lawal, underscored the importance of affordable electricity to the development of an economy. He revealed that the commodity accounted for about 30 per cent requirement in the table water production industry and generally in manufacturing sector.

    “The average household will have to pay more for the products while consumers may purchase less as purchasing power reduces,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the AEDC, yesterday apologised to customers over the wrongful billing experienced by some Band A customers who tried to recharge their meters following the new tariff regime.

    AEDC, in a statement signed by the management, said: “This is to inform customers across the AEDC franchise that we are aware of the wrong charges faced by some Band A customers who tried to recharge their meters following the new tariff regime.

    “This is due to a system glitch caused by the reclassification of some Band A customers who have now been downgraded to B due to the number of hours of electricity supply enjoyed over the past few weeks.

    “These erstwhile Band A customers who vended were charged the new tariff of N225 per Kilowatt Hour. Our team is working to identify the customers affected and all excess charges will be refunded,” it said.

    According to AEDC, the situation also saw some Band A customers who are now charged N225 vend at the old rate.

    The company said that once the glitch is resolved, these categories of customers would now recharge their meters at the new rate of N225, which will ensure they enjoy a minimum supply of 20 hours daily.

    “We apologise for any inconvenience caused to our customers during this change. We remain committed to improving the power supply to all categories of customers, and we crave your understanding and support as we do this,” it said.

    The Senate, also on Wednesday, said it will make its position on the 300 per cent increase in electricity tariff for Band A customers known on resumption from its current break.

    The Chairman Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Senator Adeyemi Adaramodu (APC – Ekiti South) said the Red Chamber would not abandon Nigerians at this critical moment.

    Adaramodu said relevant Committees of the Senate are  monitoring the situation closely and would take a position favourable to Nigerians on its resumption.