Jamaica Gleaner

THIEVES DRIVE UP LIGHT BILLS BY 18%

JPS losses from abstractio­n top J$9 billion

- Nadine Wilson-Harris Staff Reporter nadine.wilson@gleanerjm.com

JAMAICANS WOULD have their electricit­y bills slashed by as much as 18 per cent if the company were to eliminate power theft, president and chief executive officer of the Jamaica Public Service Company (JPS), Emanuel DaRosa, has revealed.

The light and power company suffers about J$9 billion in losses to electricit­y thieves and spent US$27 million, or J$3.5 billion, last year in fighting abstractio­n, including the rollout of 100,000 smart meters.

DaRosa has listed this as one of the priorities under its capital projects for this year.

“In terms of electricit­y theft, just the cost alone to fuel electricit­y that is stolen from our system is US$70 million, and if all customers were to pay for electricit­y consumed it would be about US$120 million incrementa­l revenue, which would decrease the cost of electricit­y to everyone in the system by somewhere between 15 to 18 per cent, so it is substantia­l,” he revealed during a Gleaner Editors’ Forum on Thursday at the newspaper’s North Street head office.

DaRosa, who joined the JPS team 18 months ago, said that he was taken aback by the heights of electricit­y theft in Jamaica when he relocated to the island from Canada.

“It was a little bit shocking because it is much higher levels than it is in Canada. We estimate that electricit­y theft represents about two to three per cent of energy in total, and here we are seeing it at 18 per cent,” he said. DaRosa said he does not expect to eradicate electricit­y theft in Jamaica but acknowledg­ed that the incidence of two to three per cent, common in First-World nations, would be tolerable.

“It is a different country, it is a different place, and so there are different challenges, and this is just a challenge that exists here that we are going to work towards correcting and addressing as best as we can,” he said.

According to data provided by JPS, five parishes – Kingston and St Andrew, St Catherine, Clarendon and St James – contribute to 72 per cent electricit­y theft.

“JPS does not have the capacity to address this issue. This is a bigger issue, this is a social issue,” DaRosa said.

 ?? GLADSTONE TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR ?? Emanuel DaRosa, president and CEO of JPS, explains his company’s strategic vision at a Gleaner Editors’ Forum. Looking on is Winsome Callum, director of communicat­ions and customer experience.
GLADSTONE TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR Emanuel DaRosa, president and CEO of JPS, explains his company’s strategic vision at a Gleaner Editors’ Forum. Looking on is Winsome Callum, director of communicat­ions and customer experience.
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