We Haven’t Approved New Electricity Tariff – NERC

May 7, 2022
World Bank To Invest $750 million In Nigeria’s Rural Electrification Project

The Chairman, Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Mr. Sanusi Garba, has said the agency has not approved tariff rate review in the power sector in recent times.

Garba who made this known in Abuja on Friday said the last tariff review was approved on December 31, 2021, and became effective in February this year.

He said: “I want to, on behalf of the management of NERC, clearly state that as of today (Friday), we have not approved any rate review and there is no indication that any electricity distribution company is increasing its tariff.

Join our WhatsApp Channel

“If you notice that the rate you buy electricity has changed within the last one to three weeks, we want evidence. The information posted on the NERC website was the last tariff rate review in December 2021.

“Our function is to approve applications for tariffs for the distribution companies, and we have not received any.

“We have clearly said that we have an obligation by law to do minor review every six months to take care of inflation, forex and so on.”

On the issue of Eligible Customers Regulations, the Commissioner, Market Competition and Rates, NERC, Mr. Musiliu Oseni, said it was still in place.

The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the eligible customer regulation permits electricity generation companies to sell power directly to customers whose consumption is more than two megawatts/hour over the course of one month.

Oseni said the regulation and the framework were in place, adding that the commission issued a letter to the market operators to stop the recognition of certain potential customers.

He said the customers were stopped because at the time, they had not secured the approval of the commission.

According to him, “As of today, we have a few customers that have been approved as eligible customers pending the review of the necessary documentation of other customers.

“Some of the customers that are yet to secure approval have some challenges, which include the inability of their potential generators to sell additional capacity to them.

“Under that framework, many of the generators had a contract with the Nigeria Bulk Electricity Trading Company, and you cannot contract the same capacity twice.”

+ posts

Latest from Business

Lack of Expertise Behind Failure of 95% of Enterprise AI Projects

A stark reality check awaits contact centre leaders pursuing AI transformation: whilst 95% of enterprise AI initiatives fail to reach production, the underlying cause isn’t technological limitations — it’s the critical shortage of expertise needed to execute successfully. Stuart Dorman, Chief Innovation
Previous Story

EPL: Chelsea, Wolves Share Spoils As Blues Announce Sale Of Club For £4.25bn

IMF
Next Story

IMF Says Rising Crude Oil prices Will Worsen Inflation

Don't Miss

Anthony Joshua out in the 5th round by Dubois

Anthony Joshua’s Promoter Hints Of Rematch Despite Defeat

Anthony Joshua’s promoter Eddie Hearn has given a hint that
Trends for African telcos in  

Trends for African telcos in 2024 

by Louis Avenant, Senior Project Manager at Itemate Solutions  Customer