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    Home » NERC warns Discos against metering fraud

    NERC warns Discos against metering fraud

    January 27, 2020
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    Prof. James Momoh, NERC Chairman

    OpeOluwani Akintayo

    Lagos — The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission, NERC, says it has not directed the decommissioning of meters or changed the payment conditions of the Meters Assets Providers, MAP, scheme.

    The commission said in a statement that some Discos were in the practice of insisting on the payment of all outstanding electricity debts as precondition for the acquisition of electricity meters under MAP.

    It said it is committed to expediting a closure of the metering gap in the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry, NESI, thus eliminating the current unwarranted practice of “estimated billing”.

    In response to customers’ complaints about the issuance of estimated electricity bills and the pending installation of the estimated over 5 million units of meters, the commission said it would soon prescribe a cap, representing the maximum amount that a Disco may charge an unmetered customer.

    “In pursuit of realising the main objective of the Meter Asset Provider Regulations, the Commission hereby requests customers denied the opportunity of acquiring meters under the new regulatory framework on account of outstanding estimated bills should contact the Commission by sending an email to complaints@nerc.gov.ng with full details of the circumstances”.

    NERC also said its attention was drawn to the ongoing practice of some electricity distribution companies, Discos of forcing customers to invest in the replacement of distribution infrastructure such as transformers, cables, etc as a condition for the restoration of electricity supply.

    It had earlier issued a regulation for investment in electricity networks whereby customers desirous of intervening in the restoration of power supply may invest in the provision of materials and installation.

    The regulation provides that such an arrangement must always be on the basis of an executed project agreement between the customers and distribution company in which the costs and the mechanism for recovery of the investment is mutually agreed upon between the parties.

    In this regard, NERC said electricity consumers should report any electricity distribution company that has engaged in the practice of forcing customers to supply materials and/or installation as a precondition for providing or restoring electricity supply.

    The statement read: “The attention of the Commission has also been drawn to the current practice of some electricity distribution companies embarking on the removal of meters from customer premises purportedly on the regulator’s directive that all meters that have been in use for more than 10 years should be phased out”.

    NERC said it did not issue such directive to the licensees and no metered customer should be transferred to “estimated billing” on the premise that meters in use for more than 10 years are dysfunctional.

    “All licensees must henceforth adhere to the Part III, Section 3.5.2 of the metering code which states that “if a metering system fault occurs, the Distributor shall provide urgent metering services to repair or replace the metering system as soon as it is practicable and in any event within two working days of the distributor discovering that the fault exists”, the statement further read.

    The regulator urged customers to report any electricity distribution company that has continued with the decommissioning of meters without immediate replacement.

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