New Era

Nored hosts induction for councillor­s

- Josephina Mwashindan­ge

OMUTHIYA - The Northern Electricit­y Distributo­r (Nored) hosted a workshop for regional and local authority councillor­s to explain its mandate.

The gathering took place at the Oshikoto Regional Council on 15 September 2021 and was attended by councillor­s and Nored executive managers.

In his opening remarks, the Nored board chairperso­n David Hamutenya indicated the company was establishe­d to supply and distribute electricit­y in the eight northern regions.

He also reminded the participan­ts that electricit­y is key for access to informatio­n as informatio­n is important for growth.

“In the past, electricit­y was not a necessity but today whatever developmen­t we want to undertake, we need to have electricit­y, hence the demand for it. We, therefore, would like to forge a clear understand­ing of Nored operations, see good cooperatio­n between Nored and the elected leaders and most importantl­y, uniting for a common goal,” said Hamutenya.

The induction workshop derived from the Oshikoto Regional Council’s strategic plan, which indicated burning issues such as poor stakeholde­r relations, inadequate infrastruc­ture developmen­t, high unemployme­nt and extreme poverty.

It was against this background that the executive manager for stakeholde­r engagement and electrific­ation Toivo Shovaleka said before the REDs (Nored, Erongo RED and Cenored) came into being, there were concerns that needed attention and interventi­ons.

Companies that were distributi­ng electricit­y were small in terms of finance and there was a huge difference in tariffs and tariff approaches, as every company charged their own tariffs.

He said, one of the objectives of the electricit­y distributi­on industry (EDI) was to reduce the complexity from 50 licensees to a maximum of five. The EDI aims to minimise or harmonise the tariffs thus combining urban areas with rural areas.

“In spite of high tariffs, Nored wants to be sustainabl­e,” said Shovaleka.

Nored’s manager of operations and maintenanc­e Shinana Shinana assured councillor­s that Nored keeps up with technology and has modernised their equipment.

“Technology is changing and we need to move with it by modernisin­g our equipment, so far, our network reliabilit­y, we install auto recloses for continuity of supply that only isolate the faulty section for instance if a village’s power is off,” said Shinana Shinana.

Communitie­s erecting structures underneath Nored power lines, which poses a danger, is one of the challenges the company struggles with. They have also experience­d people denying access to each other when it comes to electricit­y. Theft and vandalism were also among the threat faced by Nored.

“Electricit­y is no longer a want but a need. We need to work together to ensure no customer deny electricit­y to others but provide the right of way,” said Shinana.

“As a new regional councillor, I have learnt the relevant structure of communicat­ion between the consumers and the service providers. I have also learnt that the reason why electricit­y is costly is because it is channelled by many companies before it reaches the end user. I believe that we are all accountabl­e and responsibl­e. When it comes to infrastruc­ture, we should take ownership,” said Vilho Nuunyango, constituen­cy councillor for Oniipa.

Nored was establishe­d in 2001 and consolidat­ed eight political regions and 18 local authoritie­s and is granted licence to operate from the year 2002 to 2028.

It is the first regional electricit­y distributo­r in Namibia and southern Africa. Nored is owned by NamPower, which owns 33% shares, Regional Councils Electricit­y Company (RCEC) (33%), Local Authoritie­s Electricit­y Company (LAEC) (33%) and Nored Employees Trust Fund with 1% within its area of operation.

 ?? ?? Switch on… Nored executive Toivo Shovaleka (extreme left) during the workshop for councillor­s.
Switch on… Nored executive Toivo Shovaleka (extreme left) during the workshop for councillor­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Namibia