59.6% electricity consumers on estimated billing — NERC

Tue, Oct 27, 2020
By editor
2 MIN READ

Power

The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC)  on Tuesday said 59.6 percent of electricity consumers in the country were still on estimated billing as of March 2020.

NERC made this known in its First Quarter 2020 Report which was obtained from its website by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos. The regulatory agency said the huge metering gap for end-use customers remained a key challenge in the industry.

This, it said, was despite a slight improvement recorded during the quarter.  The records of the commission indicate that, of the 10,477,856 registered electricity customers as at the end of the first quarter of 2020, only 4,231,940 (40.39 percent) have been metered.

“Thus, 59.61 percent of the registered electricity customers are still on estimated billing which has contributed to customer apathy towards payment of electricity bills, ” the commission said.

It said in comparison to the fourth quarter of 2019, the number of registered and metered customers increased by one percent and eight percent respectively.

NERC said the increase in registered customer population was due to the ongoing customer enumeration exercise by electricity Distribution Companies (DisCos).

The regulator said that through the exercise, unregistered consumers of electricity were brought unto the DisCos’ billing platform.

It also attributed the increase in metered customers to the rollout of meters under the Meter Asset Provider (MAP) scheme.

The regulatory agency said all the DisCos recorded progress in the metering of their electricity customers as of March  2020,  compared with  December 2019.

According to NERC,  the metering status of the DisCos as of March 2020  is Benin DisCo, 54.23 percent;  Abuja,  52.73 percent; Eko,  50.71 percent; Ikeja, 45.47 percent and Enugu , 44.85 percent.

Others are Port Harcourt, 38.52 percent; Ibadan, 37.11 percent;  Jos,  31. 80 percent; Kaduna,  23.60 percent; Kano, 21.11 percent;  and Yola, 20.44 percent.

NERC said it would continue to monitor the DisCos’ implementation of the MAP scheme in order to meet the target of closing the metering gap in the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) by  December 2021.

The commission added that it had, during the quarter under review, approved more preferred MAPs for DisCos that had finalised their MAP’s procurement processes, thereby increasing the number to 29. (NAN)

– Oct. 27 2020 @ 9:49 GMT |

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