Business a.m.

IBEDC meters 650,000 customers, while completing the first phase of the MAP scheme

-

IBADAN ELECTRIC ITY DISTRIBUTI­ON COMPANY (IBEDC) said it has metered 650,000 customers, as the firm nears completion of the selection and bidding phase of meter asset providers scheme (MAPs). The company said it has sent the results of its bidding process to NERC last month for approval after which the scheme would commence.

Angela Olanrewaju,Head, Branding and Corporate Communicat­ions in a conversati­on with The Guardian saidthat IBEDC was determined to bridge the metering gap within the three years even if it meant taking up additional meter access providers.

The MAP regulation, introduced by NERC is another attempt to meter all electricit­y customers in the country, in order to curb issues of estimated billing, as figures from the regulatory body states that only 3,547,129 have been metered by all the 11 DisCos out of the total of 7,476,856 registered customers.

NERC in its 2018 second quarter report listed only four (Abuja, Benin, Eko, and Port-Harcourt) out of the 11 DisCos to have metered not less than 50 per cent of their registered customers as at the end of the second quarter of 2018.

The regulation, which provides for the supply, installati­on and maintenanc­e of end-user meters by other parties, seeks to fast track the closure of the metering gap as well as promote the developmen­t of independen­t and competitiv­e meter services in the electricit­y industry.

Olanrewaju disclosed that in spite of the huge prevailing challenges in the sector, the company which has the largest franchise in terms of geography and numbers have thus far metered over 650,000 customers and would consistent­ly adhere to plans to meter more.

“Hence grading our metering performanc­e solely on percentage is not a true reflection of our efforts towards metering our customers. As such, the number of our metered customers do not relate to high percentage rating against our large franchise area,” she added.

Similarly, Kola Adesina, the Group Managing Director (GMD) of Sahara Power Group (SPG) has asserted that metering is a component of a big system and untime.” til the full systemic default and defects are addressed, it would be difficult to impossible to isolate it as a sub system.

Metering, he explained, is a cost component for a distributi­on companies and for them to fully meter, it means the entire cost structure must have been properly taken care of to ensure the cost of supply of electricit­y is lower than the price of the commodity. Until then, “it’s almost impossible to meter the way Nigerians desired to be metered.”

Adesina, also lauded the federal government’s move on the issuance of license to 108 companies on meter supply to accelerate the MAP scheme, noted that the initiative on its own is a good one, however stakeholde­rs should speak to the proximate cause of the problem, which is tariff.

He concurred that estimated billing is not a reasonable and responsibl­e way to cost by any distributi­on company anywhere in the world, and it’s in their best interest to meter, but apart from bridging the trust gap between DisCos and customers, meter is just a measuring instrument and can’t solve the problems of the power sector as perceived.

“Metering is the last thing actually in the chain of distributi­on business, because before that you have a substation, feeder, lines, circuit breakers, transforme­rs and if any one of those is not properly functionin­g and rehabilita­ted or upgraded, even if you meter the quantum and unit of energy you deserve in the meter won’t be there and nothing would be in it to calibrate,” he added.

It’s almost impossible to meter the way Nigerians desired to be metered

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria