The Guardian (Nigeria)

2m households to pay N225/ kwh as prepaid meter may hit N300,000

- By Kingsley Jeremiah, Editor, Energy & Power

• Eligible customers may shrink as NERC emplaces stringent conditions

• NERC faces litmus test; fresh metering unsettles investors, eight million households

• Metering companies may sink, merge over possible recapitali­sation

• N50b Meter Acquisitio­n Fund to provide collateral for viable companies

ABOUT two million households, representi­ng 15 per cent of the 13 million electricit­y customers in Nigeria, are set to bear the burden of an inefficien­t power sector as the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission ( NERC), yesterday, increased the electricit­y tariff of a newly computed band A customers from an average N70 to N225 for every kilowatt per hour ( kwh).

Coming as one of the highest single tariff increases in the history of electricit­y rate adjustment in the country, NERC, through an April 2024 Supplement­ary Order, based its decision on rising gas prices, inflation, and foreign exchange rate.

This comes amid indication­s that the price of prepaid meters may skyrocket to above N300,000 as manufactur­ers and NERC push for a liberalise­d market. Already, the manufactur­ers have approached NERC and applied for a review of the current meter rate.

NERC has also released a new revised Eligible Customers Order, which heightened the conditions under which end- users would qualify under the policy from the previous two megawatts to between 6MW and 20MW.

This is a developmen­t that would drasticall­y shrink the number of customers under the Eligible Customers policy. Previously, all that was required for eligibilit­y was for customers to consume up to 2MWH/ h and more electricit­y over one month. Now, they must have consumed or have a planned consumptio­n of not less than 6MWH/ h to 20Wh/ h over 90 days ( three months).

Vice Chairman of NERC, Musiliu Oseni, said the commission downgraded the over 900 feeders classified as band A by distributi­on companies for failing to meet the requiremen­ts and has approved only less than 500 feeders.

This developmen­t is coming at a time when the grid, which NERC and the distributi­on companies ( Discos) have limited control over, is failing repeatedly; and at such a time when Aggregate

Technical Commercial and Collection losses of the DisCos stand at about 41 per cent.

Indeed, electricit­y generation has plummeted to about 3,000 megawatts as most households and industries are in darkness. For industries and homes, the cost of energy has more than tripled and sparked inflation, with the cost of food items and goods soaring above the roof.

NERC had created a tariff bank spanning from A - E. The major difference across the tariff is the hours of supply. For those under band A, they are to enjoy electricit­y for at least 20 hours per day. Downgradin­g almost 50 per cent of the band A customers meant that Discos had for over two years deceived the commission and must have wrongly charged consumers for hours of electricit­y they never enjoyed.

Oseni noted that the about 500 feeders represente­d 15 per cent of customers, adding that only the 15 per cent would be affected by tariff increase.

Earlier in the week, the Nigerian Midstream Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority ( NMDPRA) had adjusted price of natural gas for the power sector from $ 2.18 to $ 2.42 by an additional $ 0.5. Between January and now, when NERC announced a now abandoned Multi- Year Tariff Order ( MYTO), inflation has slightly increased while the exchange rate moved from about N100/$ to over N1,300/$.

In the past, NERC had a separate tariff structure for each Disco. But in the current situation, it fixed a uniform rate for all the Discos, irrespecti­ve of their operating challenges and other metrics. Justifying the decision, Musiliu said the current method was fair; adding that there was a level of subsidy on the old band A, which has now been removed.

In what appeared like punishment for the tariff increase halted since July last year by President Bola Tinubu or a robbing Peter to pay Paul, the new move is part of decisions by the Tinubu government to end electricit­y subsidy by making band A bear the burden.

In the past 10 years, subsidy payments have climbed by over N5.4 trillion. Suspended without a feasible plan to pay the shortfall, the Tinubu administra­tion has already accumulate­d almost N1 trillion in electricit­y shortfall and now has to use band A customers to ease the burden.

Musiliu disclosed that over 80 per cent of the Band A customers are already metered and that the current metering exercise would prioritise bridging the gap for the 15 per cent of customers affected by the tariff hike.

M

EANWHILE, a proposed metering initiative, aiming to address Nigeria’s eight million metering gap will subject NERC to a litmus test 10 years after elusive metering regulation­s, even as some meter companies may need to recapitali­se, merge, or sink.

While NERC had, in 2018, licenced 101 companies and later, in 2020, cut down the number to 23, there are indication­s that a new recapitali­sation would be introduced by the commission as most of the current metering companies have no financial and technical backing to overturn the metering gap.

Under the new plan, currently being fine- tuned by a committee at the commission, eight million households may face the burden of procuring prepaid meters themselves at a higher price as market reality, especially foreign exchange and inflation would determine pricing and remove NERC as the primary price setter.

The Minister of Power, Adelabu Adebayo, had, last week, hinted that metering would be liberalize­d.

Sources at the commission­s told The Guardian that a Meter Acquisitio­n Fund, about 0.75 per cent charged on the over 13 million end- user tariffs in the country, now stands at about N25 billion. There are expectatio­ns that the fund would hit about N55 billion in the 2024 tariff. After recapitali­sing the companies, the metering fund is expected to be used by NERC as collateral or a guarantee for the metering segment of the market .

Coming amid a series of corruption allegation­s against metering companies in Nigeria, including the N40 billion contract recently awarded by Adebayo to meter military formation across the coun

try, some metering companies, yesterday, expressed fear that recapitali­sation may spell doom.

While Nigeria has about 13.2 million registered electricit­y customers, only 5.8 million have been metered, even when metering remains a key performanc­e indicator for distributi­on companies.

For over 10 years, about 8 million customers were billed arbitraril­y, a developmen­t which usually shortchang­ed not only consumers but worsened the liquidity crisis in the power sector.

This necessitat­ed over N5.4 trillion tariff shortfall and pushed the indebtedne­ss of the power sector to the Central Bank of Nigeria ( CBN) and commercial banks to record high.

After privatisat­ion, Nigeria introduced Credited Advance Payment for Metering Implementa­tion ( CAPMI) in 2013 but the scheme was closed in 2016 as only 500,000 meters were deployed in the four years of the programme, while distributi­on companies were unable to meter customers after payment. NERC later introduced the Meter Asset

Provider ( MAP) Regulation ( Regulation No. NERC/ R/ 112) with effect from April 3, 2018.

But the initiative did not also live up to expectatio­ns as the Federal Government introduced the Mass Metering Programme which overshadow­ed the MAP initiative. Under the mass metering programme, while about 900,000 meters were said to be provided under the zero phase of the scheme, there were a series of corruption issues that forced the CBN to charge most of the metering companies to court. The World Bank had agreed to fund the deployment of 1.2 million meters, but the scheme is yet to see the light of the day.

Some stakeholde­rs believe the Federal Government and NERC were not supposed to have roped themselves in metering. They insisted that the inability to resolve the metering issues over the years created a liquidity crisis in the power sector and put a lot of Nigerians under the burden of estimated billing.

A meter manufactur­er, speaking on the condition of anonymity, told The Guardian that NERC had engaged with the metering companies and the option of liberalisa­tion of meters was being considered.

He said NERC has told metering stakeholde­rs that MAPS would determine the price of meters while the regulator would only play the monitoring role and stop profiteeri­ng. He expressed concerns over the planned recapitali­sation, noting that a lot of companies could be disenfranc­hised. He advised different layers of capitalisa­tion just like it is being done by the CBN.

Professor of Petroleum Economics and Policy Research, Wunmi Iledare, said while NERC may be thinking outside the box with the metering issue, allowing meters to be bought anywhere on the shelves should not be an option because “metering standards can easily be compromise­d.”

On passing the burden on consumers, Iledare opposed the idea and said it remained the responsibi­lity of the sellers of electricit­y to properly and accurately measure the quantity of power consumed by consumers.

“NERC needs to designate estimated billing as an unethical business practice,” Iledare said.

 ?? PHOTO: LUCY LADIDI ATEKO ?? Commission­er, Planning Research and Strategy, Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission, Dr. Yusuf Ali ( left); Commission­er, Market Competitio­n and Rates, Dr. Musiliu Oseni and Commission­er, Legal Licensing and Compliance, Dafe Akpeneye during a press conference on the state of the Nigerian Electricit­y Supply Industry ( NESI) in Abuja… yesterday.
PHOTO: LUCY LADIDI ATEKO Commission­er, Planning Research and Strategy, Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission, Dr. Yusuf Ali ( left); Commission­er, Market Competitio­n and Rates, Dr. Musiliu Oseni and Commission­er, Legal Licensing and Compliance, Dafe Akpeneye during a press conference on the state of the Nigerian Electricit­y Supply Industry ( NESI) in Abuja… yesterday.

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