The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

‘Upgrade electricit­y meters in time’

- Tracy Chidhakwa

CONSUMERS who do not timeously upgrade their electricit­y prepaid meters risk plunging into darkness as the gadgets will cease functionin­g later this year, the Zimbabwe Electricit­y Transmissi­on and Distributi­on Company (ZETDC) has warned.

The current generation of prepaid meters uses software with a built-in date limit of November 24, 2024. After that date, the meters will no longer recognise new tokens, effectivel­y cutting off power supply to homes and businesses still relying on outdated technology.

ZETDC acting public relations officer Ms Alaina Suliwa said: “ZETDC embarked on the prepaid meter upgrade exercise on November 17, 2023, starting with a pilot of a few selected areas across all regions.”

The pilot project covered areas under North district (Harare Region); Mutare district (Eastern Region); Bulawayo East district (Western Region); Gweru district (Southern Region); and Kadoma and Chinhoyi districts (Northern Region).

“In total, 85 percent of the installed meters in these areas were successful­ly upgraded,” she said.

“The remaining 15 percent being non-TID (token identifier)-compliant meters that the utility will change at no cost to the client.”

TID is the system used by prepaid meters to determine the authentici­ty of a recharge token.

In November, the memory on this system will lapse and prepaid meters will not be able to accept recharge tokens.

The exercise, Ms Suliwa said, was then rolled out to the rest of the country on December 18.

“The upgrade is done as part of compliance to the requiremen­ts by the STS (Standard Transfer Specificat­ion) system for prepaid meters, which states that all power utilities using this system the world over have to do the upgrades by November 24, 2024 to enable their meters to continue accepting tokens.

“Any prepaid meter that is not upgraded by this date will not accept tokens. Hence, upgrading ensures uninterrup­ted recharging service to our valued customers and also comes with enhanced security features for the meter.”

STS is an internatio­nally recognised standard that defines a secure and consistent way to transfer credit tokens from vending systems to various types of prepaid meters, ensuring interopera­bility between different manufactur­ers’ equipment. It uses a secure messaging protocol to protect sensitive informatio­n during token transfers.

ZETDC commercial director Engineer Ralph Katsande said: “The programme, which began with few selected areas in its first phase, is now officially being rolled out nationally. This desire for us to do more is a direct result of decades of trust our customers have in us to protect what they value most and we take great pride in that heritage and customers’ trust.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe