Demands list of unmetered customers
WITH a
tacit verdict that many of the distribution companies were violating
the metering regulations, the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission
(NERC) has ordered concerned
electricity distribution companies (DISCOs) to commence metering the
consumers who have paid with immediate effect.
Giving them a 14-day ultimatum to submit a list of all customers who have paid for meters since January 2011,
NERC Chairman, Dr. Sam Amadi, in a letter to the chief executives of
the companies, warned that “any DISCO that does not comply with this new
directive will be barred from collecting the new electricity tariff.
In that letter, dated July 19, the commission expressed utter dismay
that all DISCOs have been in complete violation of the order as it
relates to customers who paid within the given time-frame without being
metered, noting that “NERC views this conduct as totally unresponsive,
and undermining the effort of the reform.”
Earlier in the year,
NERC had issued an order on Credited Advance Payment for Metering
Implementation (CAPMI), which was its response to the lingering issue of
non-issuance of meters by DISCOs. It enables interested customer to
advance money to the electricity distribution company and in return, be
given electricity credit until he or she recovers the cost of the meter.
The CAPMI order, among others, stipulates that all DISCOs forward to
NERC the data of all customers who paid for meters but had not been
supplied. Moreover, information from NERC indicates that in 2011, a N2.9
billion metering intervention fund was made available to the companies
with a view to closing the unacceptable metering gap.
However,
“one year after, no appreciable progress was made by the companies, and
this compelled NERC to demand for performance reports from the DISCOs.
Eight of the 12 DISCOs submitted reports that fell far short of the
requirements of NERC. The rest did not submit any report of how they
spent the money,” NERC noted.
NERC further warned the DISCOs that
failure to comply with the 14-day ultimatum would also compel the
commission to institute enforcement procedures that might lead to the
removal of their chief executives.
Source: Guardian

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