THISDAY

NERC Must Punish Discos for Load Rejection, Says TCN

- Emmanuel Addeh

in Abuja

The Transmissi­on Company of Nigeria (TCN) yesterday insisted that the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Agency (NERC) must punish Distributi­on Companies (Discos) that decline to accept the load due to them.

Speaking on the sidelines of the Public Hearing on the request for a tariff hike by the TCN, its Managing Director, Mr. Usman Mohammed, who said the transmissi­on company was mostly interested in the provision of a spinning reserve for the TCN to cushion the impact of grid collapses said that when there are sanctions, the practice of load rejection will stop.

He said the outcry over the planned extra-ordinary tariff review on the grounds that many Nigerians are poor was not justifiabl­e, stressing that even those in the villages are already overpaying because no metres have been provided for them.

Mohammed said that with the recent stand by the NERC to surcharge Discos for rejecting power supplied, the matter will soon be a thing of the past.

“NERC is addressing the load rejection issue. NERC has already made an order mandating Discos to pay for capacity. This will address the problem and the load rejection matter will be a thing of the past because load rejection is because the Discos can drop or increase load at will and they are not penalised.

“But now that NERC is putting this structure to ensure that there’s a capacity charged for those who refuse to take load, very soon the load rejection will be over” he said.

He said the so-called excess generation had become an issue because the industry was not working as it should.

He explained: “Where is excess generation coming from? Currently, we still have a problem with gas supply and that is because the market is not working. As Nigerians, we have to take a decision to make the market work. We need to remove the government from the market.

“They need to have an industry without government, otherwise we will continue to pump money into the sector and it will not work. The sector is supposed to be governed by contract so that those who do not perform can be liquidated based on contract”

He argued that Nigeria will not have stable supply until the issue of pricing, power collapse, and metering are addressed.

According to Mohammed, “If we don’t do that, we will continue to waste time. And I have said it many times that there’s no relationsh­ip between poverty and payment for electricit­y.

“What we need to do is to provide electricit­y to our people for 24 hours, give them a means of measuremen­t and let them decide what they do with the electricit­y supplied to them. They should be supplied meters.

“We cannot be giving five hours and all these games. In places like Burkina Faso, they buy electricit­y very expensive. Here, the most expensive generator on the grid is Azura 10.5 megawatts. In Burkina Faso, they buy 17 to 21 cents per kilowatt and yet they have efficient utility.

 ??  ?? L-R: Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi Ojaja II; Ekiti State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi; and the Chairman, Ekiti State Council of Traditiona­l Rulers, Alawe of Ilawe, Oba Adebanji Alabi, during a meeting with the governor and some Ekiti Obas at the Governor’s Office, Ado-Ekiti…yesterday
L-R: Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi Ojaja II; Ekiti State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi; and the Chairman, Ekiti State Council of Traditiona­l Rulers, Alawe of Ilawe, Oba Adebanji Alabi, during a meeting with the governor and some Ekiti Obas at the Governor’s Office, Ado-Ekiti…yesterday

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