Disturbed by the insistence of the
Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission to enforce the new power
tariffs from February 1, consumers have resolved to petition the National Assembly and the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, on the matter.
Towards the end of December last year,
NERC announced a new tariff regime in which it raised the amounts
payable for units of electricity by different categories of consumers by
over 45 per cent and recently insisted that the new rates would be
enforced from next month.
But consumers, under the aegis of the
Nigerian Electricity Consumer Advocacy Network, has urged the government
and the National Assembly not to allow the electricity distribution
companies to implement the increase in tariffs.
Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babtunde Fashola |
The Chairman, NECAN, Mr. Tomy
Akingbogun, told our correspondent on Monday that the body had met with
the heads of various consumer advocacy groups in states across the
country and the demand of power consumers was unanimous.
He said, “We have our own argument and
we believe that the information given by the Discos as to why tariffs
should be increased is one-sided. NERC did not present our own
investigation and views to the companies, for we made explanations of
our findings to the commission but it never gave us a copy of the
communiqué of the meetings it had with the power firms.
“By so doing, it means that something is
wrong, because we are supposed to have a copy of the communiqué of
every meeting, but they never gave us. The communiqué I’m talking about
is the one issued at the end of the public enlightenment information
meetings and consultations that they are supposed to have before any
increment.”
Akingbogun added, “We objected; but
still at that, they never let us have any official document concerning
the meeting despite the fact that we presented our papers to NERC. So,
right now, we don’t have any official report showing our own inputs as
to why we believe that electricity tariffs
should not be increased. That is why we want to meet the minister so
that we can let him know what is wrong with the review and how it should
be corrected.
“We are also planning to press our
demand at the National Assembly, because we believe it won’t be right to
increase tariffs without hearing from all sides in the power sector.
The power sector is not only made up of the Discos, the consumers are
also stakeholders in the sector and they too must be heard.”
An official at NERC told our
correspondent that the commission would go ahead with the reviewed
tariff regime and that it was consulting with the National Assembly on
the matter.
“In our statement some weeks ago, we
made it clear that we are consulting with the lawmakers on this matter
and I can assure you that we are going ahead as planned, whether there
is an officially appointed chairman for NERC or not,” the official, who
spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorised to speak on the
matter, said.
BY Okechukwu Nnodim
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