The Citizen (Gauteng)

Response to billing

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After publicatio­n of an article in The Citizen yesterday about a small Centurion business which spends about R17 000 on electricit­y every month, the City of Tshwane has responded.

The business, Productive Systems, got a nasty shock when it received a R1.2 million bill for under-recovery of power costs since 2015.

In answer to questions, the business said the city “determines the scale factor in line with the measuremen­t/technical standard”.

It said in relation to the issue: “The electricit­y usage/consumptio­n through the monitoring system was identified with lower than normal consumptio­n pattern on the account and went to site to investigat­e.

“On investigat­ion, the revenue protection team became aware that work had taken place on the CT/VTs (current transforme­r and voltage transforme­r) ratios which resulted in the wrong scaling factor.”

These ratios are crucial to converting the reading of electricit­y usage into billing – using an incorrect ratio could result in material billing variances.

The city’s service provider, Total Utilities Management Services, indicated earlier the ratios were provided by the city and merely applied what was provided – and they appeared to have been changed.

The city said: “The same was confirmed by the electricit­y metering section that the CT/VTs had been changed for it was plausible that the ratio had to be adjusted to reflect informatio­n on the CT/VT plate. The conclusion on the adjustment is still pending, the client was informed of the same.”

The city said there “are a number of reasons why CTs and VTs are changed for operationa­l reasons. As well as CTs or VTs failing as part of their operationa­l end-oflife, CTs and VTs can be [and are] tampered with or exposed to external influences such as lightning strikes.

“In such instances, these devices fail and have to be replaced.

“Adjustment­s can only be made once the devices are replaced and the account normalised, in line with the approved electricit­y by-law of 2013. It outlines how and when these adjustment­s are calculated.”

The city said the issue of Onderstepo­ort was still pending and the matter of the debit adjustment to the private individual’s prepaid meter relates to meter tampering. – Citizen reporter

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