Jamaica Gleaner

JPS: No blind eye to uptown electricit­y theft

- Syranno Baines/Gleaner Writer

THE JAMAICA Public Service Company (JPS) has rejected claims that it is turning a blind eye to electricit­y theft in affluent areas, arguing that efforts to stamp out the practice in these communitie­s are usually discrete, sometimes taking the form of sting operations.

Yesterday, during a press briefing at its head office in St Andrew, the company reported that more than 18 per cent of the electricit­y that it produces is stolen. This has resulted in losses totalling approximat­ely US$103 million (J$13.3 billion) in the last 18 months as the company continued to absorb the cost of the fuel used to produce much of the electricit­y that is stolen.

During his contributi­on to the Sectoral Debate in Parliament in May, Opposition Spokesman on Energy Phillip Paulwell stated that “it appears the JPS is focused almost exclusivel­y on poorer communitie­s” as it relates to electricit­y theft, an assertion described yesterday as “unfortunat­e” and “very inaccurate” by Rasheed Anderson, JPS director of losses operations and analytics.

Anderson argued that while the company maintained a presence in inner-city areas so that residents may feel a little apprehensi­ve to run the risk of electricit­y theft, the methodolog­y used uptown is not the same.

“Persons are accustomed to the JPS truck and the police passing through these [inner-city] communitie­s, but you won’t find that cohort of resources being deployed in affluent areas, so it is not as pronounced,” he added.

“So, for instance, persons may see a regular meter reader come into the upscale communitie­s and just say, ‘Oh, JPS is there. They are just doing some checks or reading a meter’. [But] a lot of times, that is us having intel or some idea of theft taking place at that area. We also use different technology in order to detect it,” he said.

Anderson noted that the JPS discovered more than 5,000 meter irregulari­ties just this year alone, not counting the illegal wire connection­s within the inner-city areas.

 ?? ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER IAN ?? Ramsay McDonald (left), senior vice-president, customer services, Jamaica Public Service, and Rasheed Anderson, director, losses, operations and analytics, inspect one of the meters on display at the utility’s New Kingston offices during a press...
ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER IAN Ramsay McDonald (left), senior vice-president, customer services, Jamaica Public Service, and Rasheed Anderson, director, losses, operations and analytics, inspect one of the meters on display at the utility’s New Kingston offices during a press...

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