×
  • News - North Central - FCT
  • Updated: May 21, 2021

Reps To FG: Stop Planned Increment Of Electricity Tariff

Reps To FG: Stop Planned Increment Of Electricity Tariff

File image of NERC

The House of Representatives has urged the Federal Government to stop the proposed increase of the electricity tariff for June.

This was part of the resolutions reached by the lawmakers during Thursday’s plenary in the lower chamber of the National Assembly in Abuja, the Nigeria capital.

They stressed that it was important to direct the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) to rescind its decision on the proposed increment in view of the hard times Nigerians were going through.

Also, the House mandated the House committees on Power, Poverty Alleviation, as well as Labour, Employment, and Productivity to ensure compliance with the directive.

A lawmaker in the Green Chamber, Aniekan Umanah, had raised that motion seeking that Nigeria’s electricity regulator should suspend the proposed increase in electricity tariff.

He wondered why there would be an increase in electricity tariff at a time when Nigerians were going through hard times and governments all over the world were providing means to cushion the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic for their people.

According to the motion, the Electricity Power Sector Act of 2005 established the NERC with a mandate to license Distribution Companies (DISCOs), determine operating codes and standards, establish customer rights and obligations as well as set cost-reflective industry tariff.

The lawmaker maintained that the Act prescribed its funding from 15 percent of electricity charges paid by consumers to distribution companies.

He described the NERC, working with the distribution companies, had increased the tariff five times since 2015, the latest being on January 1, 2021.

Despite the increases, Umanah lamented that Nigerians have not enjoyed significant improvement in power generation but grapple with daily epileptic services from the DISCOs.

He also accused the distribution companies of exploitation in the name of estimated billing arising from non-metering of over 50 percent of consumers across the country.

The lawmaker informed his colleagues that poor services by the DISCOs have impacted negatively on the socio-economic growth of the country, saying the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Report of 2020 on Nigeria indicated that the manufacturing sector lost over $200 billion to inadequate power supply while $21 billion was said to have been spent by Nigerians on generators within the period under review.

He noted that Nigerians have gone through many hardships in recent times arising from acts of terrorism, banditry, and kidnappings.

Umanah said he was concerned that at a time governments all over the world were adopting measures to cushion the effects of the COVID–19 pandemic by providing a wide range of palliatives to losses of loved ones, jobs, businesses and general distortion in the social life, NERC was considering a further increase in electricity tariff in a country where two-thirds of its 200 million population were grappling with the effects of the pandemic.

He stressed that the current economic recession made worse by inflation has resulted in disturbing prices of foodstuffs, and increased prices of petroleum products have triggered the further increase in transport costs and rents.

The lawmaker added that the spending power of an average Nigerian has drastically reduced, warning that any further hike in electricity tariff would amount to overkill, lack of empathy, and height of insensitivity on the part of the government.

Related Topics

Join our Telegram platform to get news update Join Now

0 Comment(s)

See this post in...

Notice

We have selected third parties to use cookies for technical purposes as specified in the Cookie Policy. Use the “Accept All” button to consent or “Customize” button to set your cookie tracking settings