The Guardian (Nigeria)

PRP faults electricit­y tariff hike, advocates renewable energy

• Group flays frequent national grid collapse

- From Adamu Abuh and Tina Abeku ( Abuja)

PRedemptio­n Party ( PRP) has said the increase in electricit­y tariffs is not only insensitiv­e but smacks of disregard by government for the plight of Nigerians.

PRP, through its National Publicity Secretary, Muhammed Ishaq, called on the authoritie­s to reconsider the decision.

The party noted that the current economic situation demanded empathy, understand­ing, and a collective effort to uplift the people, not policies that push them deeper into hardship.

It urged the authoritie­s to explore alternativ­e solutions that would not further exacerbate the suffering of Nigerians.

“Government should consider investing seriously in the exploratio­n and expansion of alternativ­e renewable sources of electricit­y supply, such as solar, bio gas, wind, among others, which have the potential of providing cheap and sustainabl­e electric energy to Nigerians for their domestic, econ omic and industrial needs.

“The removal of fuel subsidies has already made life unbearable for Nigerians and the additional burden

Mof a 300 per cent increase in electricit­y tariffs is a merciless and ruthless policy at a time when the majority of the population is struggling to meet their basic needs like food. It is unimaginab­le that the government would impose such life- frustratin­g policies on a nation that is already on its knees,” PRP said: EANWHILE, National Civil Society Council of Nigeria ( NCSCN) has decried frequent collapse of Nigeria’s national power grid and called on President Bola Tinubu to end corruption and inefficien­cy in the system.

At a media briefing in Abuja, the group’s Executive Director, Blessing Akinlosotu, said Nigerians were facing hardship because of the situation.

Akinlosotu urged the Minister of Power and other stakeholde­rs to suspend the Transmissi­on Company of Nigeria, ( TCN), boss, Sule Ahmed- Abdulaziz, over corruption allegation­s and epileptic supply in the country.

“The state of electricit­y across the country has become a matter of national emergency with repeated collapse of the national grid and inability to even fully transmit and distribute the very minimal capacity being generated,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria