NEWS
Don’t pay for electricity
after 2 weeks of outage – NERC announces new regulations (See details)
The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission, NERC, has asked Nigerians
not to pay for meter service charge and the electricity bill if there is outage
for more than two weeks.
NERC said that the Meter Asset Provider (MAP) regulation has stopped the
electricity Distribution Companies from collecting energy and service charges
after two weeks of power outage.
Its chairman, Prof. James Momoh, broke the news at the Abuja Electricity
Distribution Company (AEDC) launch of the MAP in Abuja on Friday.
The General Manager, Finance and Management Services, Abudukadir Shetima,
who represented the Chairman, said that with the MAP regulation, the meters
must be installed not later than 10 days after payment.
According to him, should the DisCo refuse to replace a malfunctioning
meter after two days, the customer is not expected to make any payment.
He said that NERC, DisCos and the customers have their deadline to
provide the meters to the customers at the required time.
He said the regulation was designed in a manner that regards the consumer
as the king in the Nigeria Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) value chain.
The customer, he said, is expected to have the best services.
He added, “Deadlines were provided in the regulation for the DisCos, even
the commission so that we don’t delay so that the customers get the service at
the time that it is required.
“For instance, if a meter is about to be installed, it must be installed
within 10 days of making payment. There will be sanctions if that deadline is
not met.
“Number two, to ensure there will be sanction, the MAP has been asked to
provide a bank performance guarantee that will be called upon. So they will
lose money if they delay in providing the meters even by one day.
“Number two, if the meters get bad, they will be replaced by the MAP
without any payment for the entire ten years period.
“If the meters don’t work they must be replaced within two days, if they
are not replaced within two days, the customer will not make the monthly
customers service charge payment. That payment will be seized.
“Another part of the regulation is that if there is a prolonged outage
and they are out of electricity for months, in addition to other measure that
the commission is taking to address those kind of scenarios, the customer will
not pay for the meter service charge and will not even pay for the electricity
if there is outage for more than two weeks.”
Listing the objective of the regulation, Momoh said the first important
objective is the removal of estimated billing in order to remove the
controversies around it.
He added: “The customers are happy to make the payment. The second issue
is revenue assurance, happy customers will be willing to pay.
“Nigerians are willing to pay for the services they can get so that there
will be revenue assurance and that will impact on the industry as a whole.
Currently, the revenues in the industry are nit sufficient to enable
investments and better services. So, it is like a vicious circle and this this
metering is intended to correct that problem.”
Speaking, the AEDC Managing Director, Engr. Ernest Mupwaya, revealed that
altogether the company has planned to meter the customers in its franchise
areas with 900,000 meters.
He said that bearing in mind that the customers would increase, the meter
vendors would also cater for their metering.
He said: “In all, 900,000 customs have been scheduled for metering in
AEDC franchise area in the first instance. Being a moving target, we are aware
that the number may increase and as it does, the vendors will take them along.”
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