Babatunde Fashola |
The Nigeria Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr.
Babatunde Fashola has charged the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission
(NERC) to balance the concern of all stakeholders and consumers and come up
with a tariff that is fair.
Speaking at the fourth monthly meeting of
the Minister with power sector participants at the Calabar Power Station in
Odukpani local government area, he said the issue of tariff has become very
contentious, but it is the purview of the regulator.
Represented by the Permanent Secretary,
Power, of the Ministry, Mr. Louis Edozien, he said, “It is the statutory and
legal responsibility of NERC to balance all the concerns and come up with a
tariff that is balanced. They attempted to do that in December. They listened
to power stations like this. You can see what is here. The owners of this
station need to earn money to pay for all these. It is the tariff that pays for
it."
“They are required by law to look at the
complaint and balance it once more against the lines and power stations and
explain how they arrived at what they arrived. If the complainant has a point,
they are authorized by the law that set them up to amend the tariff if it is
believed they did not balance it properly.”
A communiqué at the meeting acknowledged
the need to improve on the responsiveness and awareness of the Distribution
Companies’ (DisCos’) Customer Complaints Units (CCU), to ensure that all
complaints from paying customers are acknowledged and resolved swiftly.
Resolutions were made to publicize
dedicated customer complaints lines in four national newspapers by each DisCo
in order to support this objective in the next two weeks.
The meeting reiterated the need for more
aggressive rollout of metering for all customers. In this regard, Eko, Kano,
Kaduna and Jos DisCos confirmed plans to aggressively deploy recently procured
metering starting in May 2016. Abuja DisCo assured the meeting that it plans to
meter 100,000 households by the end of the year, and Port Harcourt DisCo
intends to install 110,000 by the end of the year.
It read in part, “The meeting resolved
that Port Harcourt DisCo and Calabar and Ibom Power Plants can proceed with
their bilaterally negotiated agreement to supply currently stranded power,
starting with 150MW to 250 MW. Port Harcourt DisCo will invest in
infrastructure in Akwa Ibom and Cross River to receive the power and deliver it
to customers at the approved tariff.
“The meeting acknowledged the shortage of
gas, limiting power output from power stations connected to the ELPS pipeline,
and supported ongoing discussions between the Minister of Power Works and
Housing, and Ministry of Petroleum Resources to facilitate additions in gas
supply and the repair of the Forcados Oil Export Line to ameliorate the gas
shortage.”
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