Daily Trust

Manufactur­ers yet to settle N30bn electricit­y bills –DisCos

- By Simon Echewofun Sunday FLIGHT SCHEDULE

The electricit­y Distributi­on Companies (DisCos) have said that the Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria (MAN) owes the Nigerian electricit­y market about N30 billion in unpaid electricit­y bills after a new tariff was implemente­d in 2015.

The Chief Commercial Officer, Ibadan Electricit­y Distributi­on Company (IBEDC), Mr. Deolu Ijose, who stated this in Abuja at the March edition of the Power Dialogue of Nextier Power, said the debt accumulate­d after MAN obtained a court order to freeze the implementa­tion of the Multi Year Tariff Order (MYTO 2.0) enforced by the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission (NERC) in 2015.

The DisCos also lamented the low tariff in place and the continuous menace of energy theft and meter bypass facing the Nigerian Electricit­y Supply Industry (NESI).

Mr Ijose noted that while there was the need for the DisCos to provide more meters to their customers, about 80 per cent of available meters were being bypassed.

He said: “There are some other things that probably have gone beyond the control of the Discos. It will interest you to know that MAN went to court when the 2015 MYTO 2.0 came in. And right now, MAN is owing the DisCos an average of about N30 billion.”

Another challenge he identified in the liquidity issue of the power sector is that government was silent on clearing MDAs’ debt accumulate­d from 2017

“One month ago, the Federal Government declared part of the 2015 and 2016 debts that were accumulate­d over a period of three to four years. But as we are talking right now, as at 2017 January going forward, nobody is even discussing it.

“Now, these are some of the liquidiiti­es that should have been thrown into the system to cushion all these challenges like metering and others because we need investment­s that to do these things,” the DisCo official noted.

Stakeholde­rs at the dialogue stressed the need to address the growing liquidity crisis in the sector in the next 12 months to save the sector from collapse.

Daily Trust reports that the DisCos remitted only 8 per cent of their monthly bills for December 2017 while some Generation Companies (GenCos) are in court with the Federal Government over what they said was poor payment of their monthly energy invoices.

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