Tag: Sam Amadi

  • Imo APGA: 14 guber aspirants opt for consensus candidate

    Mr Frank Nneji, the Chief Executive Officer, ABC transport and 13 other governorship aspirants in Imo on the platform of the All Progressive Grand Alliance ( APGA) , have agreed to adopt a consensus candidate.

    Other aspirants are: Dr Ikedi Ohakim, a former governor of the state and Mr Uche Onyeagocha, former member, House of Representatives, Ike Ibe, Humphrey Anumudu and Steve Nwoga, Sam Amadi.

    Charley Onyeagbako, Chike Nsofor, Ziggy Azike, Philip Ibekwe, Nick Opara-Ndudu, Bright Nwanne and Obi Njoku.

    The aspirants made the agreement in a statement they issued in Owerri on Monday.

    They, however, expressed concern that the party leadership in the state could not to meet the Oct. 7 deadline of INEC for submission of names of the candidates of the party for all elective positions.

    Read Also: FG set to announce new Minimum Wage – Labour

    They also condemned the failure of the party leadership to conduct a credible primary election.

    The aspirants assured supporters of their unflinching determination to continue to resist imposition of a candidate on the party.

    “The failure of the leadership of the party to guarantee credible primaries for Imo APGA is a terrible disappointment.The plot to impose a candidate on Imo APGA will continue to be resisted.

    “We have resolved to present a consensus candidate from amongst the aspirants after due process and consultation between all APGA governorship aspirants and party leaders,” they read.

  • NERC approves new electricity tariff, abolishes fixed charges

    NERC approves new electricity tariff, abolishes fixed charges

    The new electricity tariff regime approved by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has removed fixed charges for all classes of electricity consumers.

    This is contained in a statement on the company’s website, signed by its Head, Public Affairs Department, Dr Usman Abba Arabi.

    It said from the next billing period, distribution companies would no longer charge their customers monthly fixed charges.

    Fixed charge is that component of the tariff that commits electricity consumers to paying an approved amount of money not minding whether electricity is consumed during the billing period.

    Under the new tariff regime, electricity consumers will now only pay for what they consume from month to month.

    According to the Chairman of NERC, Dr Sam Amadi: “This is good news for electricity consumers who have long asked for a more just and fair pricing of electricity.

    “The regulatory commission had promised to address all the complaints against fixed charges through a regulatory process that promotes investments in the electricity industry without unfairly burdening electricity consumers.

    “This is in line with NERC’s mandate to be fair in all its regulatory interventions.”

    Although, the new tariff regime comes with an increase in energy charges, all electricity consumers (residential and commercial) will no longer pay fixed charges.

    “Their total bills will depend on the electricity they actually consume and may be reduced when they conserve electricity.”

    The statement said that consumers would no longer spend money every month to pay for fixed charges even when they did not receive electricity in their homes and business.

    “The objective of the new tariff is to enable prudent consumers to save money on electricity bill as they can now control their consumption and not pay monthly fixed charges.”

    For instance, residential customer classification (R2) in Abuja Electricity Distribution Company will no longer pay N702 fixed charge every month.

    Their energy charge will increase by N9.60kwh.

    Also, residential customers (R2 customers) in Eko and Ikeja electricity distribution areas will no longer pay N750 fixed charges.

    They will be getting N10/kwh and N8kwh increase respectively in their energy charges.

    Similarly, the burden of N800 and N750 fixed charges would be lifted off the shoulders of Kaduna and Benin electricity consumers.

    These consumers will see an increase of N11.05/kwh and N9.26/kwh respectively in their energy charges.

    The new tariff is also good news for commercial consumers.

    For example, commercial customers’ classification C2 in Ibadan and Enugu will no longer pays fixed charges of N17, 010. and N22, 141.

    Their energy charge will increase by N12.08kwh and N13.35kwh respectively.

  • NERC chair accuses judges of frustrating reforms  in electricity sector

    NERC chair accuses judges of frustrating reforms in electricity sector

    • They grant ‘seeming reckless, inconsiderate injunctions’

    The Chairman of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Sam Amadi has accused judges of working to frustrate Federal Government’s objective of ensuring an efficient and competitive private sector driven electricity industry.

    Amadi, who noted that the judges lacked knowledge of the sector’s intricacies, accused them of abusing their powers of “judicial review” by handing out not well thought out injunctions, capable of defeating government’s objective and discouraging investment in the nation’s electricity sector.

    The NERC chair said these in a letter to the Chief Judge of the Federal High Court, Justice Ibrahim Auta, dated August 7, this year. The Vice President and Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Power were copied the letter, which The Nation obtained at the weekend.

    Amadi, who argued that NERC, by its establishing statute, enjoys some level of independence in its operations, urged the judges to always exercise restraint and defer to his commission in the exercise of its quasi legislative and judicial powers, particularly as it relates to the fixing of tariffs.

    “MY Lord, permit me to bring to your notice a subtle threat that can undermine the success of the power sector reforms. This threat is in the form of an increasing spate of seemingly reckless and inconsiderate interim injunctions that have been issued against the commission and electricity distribution companies at the instance of consumers, who have not made out clear case meriting such intervention by the court.

    “Without challenging the powers and competence of the court to issue these injunctive reliefs, it would appear that the issuance of such injunctions against legitimate business operations of licensed electricity companies is not well considered.

    “They do not seem to have fully considered many principles that have been laid down by the courts on how to manage such delicate situations. For one, far-reaching injunction should not be granted against a party who has not been notified of the application pending the determination of the suit.

    “When the court feels compelled to grant such orders, it should endeavour to make the return date early enough to allow the respondent be heard on time so as to avoid damaging its legitimate business. This is more so in a regulated business where every aspect of the operation of the business is regulated by law,” he said.

    Amadi cited an instance where a court recently granted an order of interim injunction against NERC and 11 distributing companies from disconnecting electricity supply to them and from charging them higher tariff as contained in the Multi-Year tariff Order 2012  (MYTO-2) and adjourned to September 2015.

    He said his decision to write Justice Auta was to seek the establishment of “a possible judicial policy of restraint” which protects the right of electricity consumers to justice without undermining the viability of the nascent electricity market.

  • NERC seeks autonomy for market operators

    NERC seeks autonomy for market operators

    • Govt to unbundle TCN during transition market

    The Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) is canvassing for the removal of the Market Operator (MO) and System Operator (SO) as units in the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN).

    According to NERC, the market operators deserve autonomy to function properly.

    NERC’s General Manager, Marketing and Rates, Abdulkadir  Shetima who made a presentation on the Transition Electricity Market (TEM) in a capacity building workshop for energy correspondents at the weekend in Abuja, argued that the operators require independence from the TCN.

    He said: “There is no independence of MO and SO. They seek approvals from the TCN. We have issued licenses to TCN to unbundle them and that will be done during TEM.”

    Under the present Electricity Power Sector Reform Act 2005, the TCN is run through a management contract by the Minitoba Hydro International of Canada.

    According to him, besides inadequate generation capacity, there is currently lack of clarity in electricity contracting framework.

    He lamented that inadequate tariff contributes to distribution companies (DISCOs) inability to meet their obligations.

    Shetima said shadow trading has become necessary in order to identify any errors and gaps to enable resolution ahead of TEM “in the next couple of months.”

    He submitted that before the TEM, there must be a cost reflective tariff for the industry and adequate securitisation arrangements must also be put in place.

    The General Manager argued that there should be effective monitoring of licenses particularly TCN and DISCOs to ensure minimisation of losses and improvement in customer service delivery.

    But Shetima, who presented the analysis of shadow trading of the TEM since September 1, said “all trading arrangement during TEM will be consummated through contracts. The MO shall develop a market procedure for the management of inadequate supply and shortage conditions. The commission will constitute the initial market surveillance panel.”

    According to him, all the conditions precedent to the declaration of TEM have been attained in the Nigeria Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) except the formalisation of the trading arrangements (vesting contracts) between participating companies, which is now in process.

    Shettima said  the development, implementation and testing by the SO of the systems and procedures required to implement the grid codes is also still in process.

    The General Manager explained that at the moment, NESI has attained 100 per cent metering at the wholesale point.

    Shettima also said the law on the privatisation of the electricity DISCOs  and electricity generation companies (GENCOs) stipulates that no company shall hold more than one DISCO or GENCO.

    The law, he said, states that no particular company shall hold more than 30 to 40 per cent of the shares in the electricity market in order to avoid monopoly.

  • CBN plans 10-year bailout for GENCOs, DISCOs

    CBN plans 10-year bailout for GENCOs, DISCOs

    The Central Bank of Nigeria is planning a 10-year bailout for the electricity distribution and generation companies otherwise known as GENCOs and DISCOs.

    The Chairman of the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Dr. Sam Amadi, told Energy correspondents at a capacity building workshop in Abuja, Friday, that the commission will work out the amount of the facility later on Friday.

    He explained that the idea is to create a fund in place of the present revenue shortfall in the companies’ operations without inconveniencing the consumers.

    The NERC chairman said, “The CBN fund gives opportunity for DISCOs and GENCOs to have this money on time right now and then repay it over 10 years. They are giving us 10 years instead of five which reduces the amount that the consumers will pay. They have given us a 10 -year facility so to say.”

    His words: “But the key issue is the revenue shortfall in the market. We are arranging with the Central Bank of Nigeria to create a fund to cover the shortfalls without necessarily inconveniencing the consumers. It will be spread over 10 years. It gives the operators the opportunity to make quick investments and quick returns in terms of services.”

     

  • NERC to FG: Pay N50b electricity subsidy arrears

    NERC to FG: Pay N50b electricity subsidy arrears

    •‘Why DISCOs delay provision of metres’

    CHAIRMAN of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Dr Sam Amadi, yesterday advised the federal government to fulfill its commitment to the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry by paying the subsidy  arrear of N50billion.

    He told The Nation that although consumers have met their part of the obligation, government remains the reneging partner.

    The arrear, if paid, he said “will reduce the great impact of the review going forward” ahead of the announcement of the outcome on the Multi-Year Tariff Order review in December.

    He also added that the subsidy “can help to take away some of the shortfalls and improve the financial viability of this electricity market.”

    According to him, the electricity subsidy fund was supposed to run-off by June but government reneged on its commitment resulting in a backlog debt now up to the tune of N50b arrear.

    “So government ought to pay for what it is committed to so that it can help to take away some of the shortfalls and improve the financial viability of this electricity market,” Amadi submitted.

    He, however, revealed that the NERC is not relying solely on the subsidy arrear, stating there are alternative plans to keep the electricity market solvent.

    “We are also putting out contingent plans assuming government does not pay the arrears so that we must keep the electricity market solvent and strong with or without the subsidy,” he stated.

    On why the Electricity Distribution Companies (DISCOs) have been reluctant to make metres available to customers, Amadi said that some of the companies have since November recorded significant metering while others are yet to act.

    According to him, the companies may not have done much in terms of metering since they are waiting for the declaration of Transition Electricity Market (TEM) and tariff review.

    The chairman said that the commission recorded significant improvement in the remittances which the DISCOs made to Market Operators from May to June.

    He revealed that NERC has decided that Eko Electricity Distribution Company that has achieved 98% remittance should have a new benchmark.

     

  • Electricity tariff to go up from June 1

    Electricity tariff to go up from June 1

    There is bad news for electricity consumers. Tariff is set to go up from June 1, followingthe review of the Multi Year Tariff Order (MYTO) for 2014.

    Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) Chairman Dr. Sam Amadi told reporters in Abuja that “the review has reduced fixed price charge component of the tariff”.

    Explaining the implication of the review, he said Abuja Electricity Distribution Company’s R2 customers, for instance, who have been paying N13.75 per unit will pay N14.90. The fixed charge remains unchanged, he added.

    This is an indication of N1.15k for customers in the R2 category. The NERC however, said that the full details of the review will be made public on the Commission’s website.

    According to him, some positive variables culminated in the significant changes in the tariff review. He said: “Whilst MYTO in 2012 had projected a 13 per cent inflation rate, it was by March 30, at 7.8 per cent, less than 5.2per cent of the projection; exchange rate of $1 to N178 from CBN data was also less as at March 30 to N157.30 per $1, 11.6per cent less than projected.”

    Amadi said the review result however, indicated a reduction of the wholesale tariff payable to generation companies (Gencos) from June 1 adding that with increased generation capacity and favourable economic indices, tariff cost will drastically reduce.

    Amadi added: “Many customers by 1st June should be paying a fixed charge (FC) of about N1,500 but the adjustment has resulted in a decrease in that the fixed charge will not change but will remain at N750.”

    On the energy charge for the 2014 MYTO, Amadi, said: “What we will see is that most of the consumers did not have any increase in their EC apart from Residential Two (R2) customers that have N1 increase in some places.

    So instead of having a much more bigger Energy Charge (EC) increase that was published for 2014 MYTO since 2012, we now have the same fixed charge of N750 from the supposed N1500 which means a huge reduction and then a slight increase of about N1 or so for only R2 customers,” he said.

    He noted that R2 customers in Ikeja Distribution Company (Disco) are more in a cluster so the cost is cheaper, “and when they calculated the average with the cost of price, their energy charge came down lower.”

    Amadi stated that although wholesale generation cost reduced, transmission and distribution component of the tariff is high resulting in the slight increase in the Energy Cost for most R2 customers.

    He maintained that NERC’s review principle follows a rule-based approach that gives confidence to the investors and also protect consumers against arbitrary charges.

    The power investors and financial institutions that advanced credits to them before the privatization of the assets, have been calling for upward review of electricity tariff to match cost of output and also help them  (investors) recoup their investment on record time.

    According them, revenue collections from the consumers are far much lower than they (investors) expected pre-asset handover. The poor collection, the investors added, is also worsened by the technical and commercial losses, which are greater than the assumptions given them by the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) before the assets were handed over.

    The MYTO (Multi-Year Tariff Order) provides a 15 year tariff path for the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry. The MYTO methodology sets out the basis and pricing principles by which the tariff of different categories of consumers are fixed or determined. It also determines load allocation to different electricity distribution companies, the closest value chain to consumers. The MYTO usually have major review every five years but June of every year, a minor review is carried out by NERC. The review is determined market fundamentals.

    The residential customers’ tariff especially R1 and R2 under MYTO are subsidized by about 50 per cent by the government because they are categorized as customers with very low incomes. Their consumption, however, is subsidized with charges from other classes of customers, according to MYTO provision.

    The tariff review began as a result of agitation from market participants (licensees in generation, transmission and distribution) and prospective investors who felt that some of the technical and financial considerations in the tariff calculations needed to be re-examined.

    The first set of tariffs under MYTO 1 was introduced in July 2008, while current MYTO2 begun on June1, 2012, and by 2016 MYTO 3 will begin. Depending on the state of the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI), a major review will take place in 2016 to reflect on the market  and afterwards, minor reviews would continue year through the next five years.

    The Tariff Review began as a result of agitation from Market Participants (licensees in generation, transmission and distribution) and prospective investors who felt that some of the technical and financial considerations in the tariff calculations needed to be re-examined.

    “The MYTO II is developed on basis of predictable energy receipts and onward sales. In the current situation of low generation, power can be dispatched in an open and transparent manner.

    Disco’s maximum loading (distribution) capacity is a militating factor, even when there is adequate supply, some Disco’s may not be able to distribute beyond certain threshold. This also necessitated abandoning uniform percentage value for initial allocation,” NERC said.

  • Tributes for ex-student leader Segun Okeowo

    Tributes for ex-student leader Segun Okeowo

    It was a day of tributes on Monday night, as serving and ex-students’ union leaders converged on the Reiz Continental Hotel, Abuja, to eulogise a former students’ union leader, Mr. Segun Okeowo, who died last month.

    Okeowo was famous for leading the “Ali Must Go” students’ protest in 1978.

    The Night of Tributes was organised by the Office of the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Youths and Students Affairs, Jude Imagwe.

    Imagwe said Okeowo impacted positively on many lives and should be immortalised.

    He said it was sad that no group gathered to celebrate him since his demise last month, adding that this prompted the organisation of the Night of Tributes.

    Imagwe said: “I will do everything possible to ensure that this foremost ex-students’ leader did not die in vain. His legacies must forever be remembered. He will be immortalised.”

    Urging students’ union leaders to shun partisan politics and avoid being bought over by politicians, he said: “Students’ leaders should act responsibly. The students’ union body should return to what it used to be in the past, which was the voice of millions of students.”

    Chairman of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) Sam Amadi, who is also an ex-students’ union leader, called for better interaction among youths on critical issues.

    He cautioned youths against unwarranted criticisms, urging them to engage in productive ventures.

    The deceased’s son, Kolade, said his father “will forever be his hero.”

    Representatives of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) were present at the event.