Power distribution companies in Nigeria have backtracked on their earlier plan to implement a tariff hike projected to take effect from the 1st of July, 2023, as they pointed out that the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission had yet to approve the hike.
Africa Today News, New York reports that public notices from some of the Discos sighted over the weekend had stated that the electricity tariff would be raised by about 30 to 40 percent for selected categories of consumers on st of July, 2023.
In a public service announcement from the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company, for instance, the Disco had said, ‘Effective July 1, 2023, please be informed that there will be an upward review to the electricity tariff influenced by the fluctuating exchange rate.
‘Under the MYTO (Multi Year Tariff Order) 2022 guidelines, the previously set exchange rate of N441/$1 may now be revised to approximately N750/$1 which will have an impact on the tariffs associated with your electricity consumption’
However, in an appeal by the same AEDC, issued on Tuesday morning, the firm asked its customers to disregard the planned tariff increase as approval for such an increment had not been received.
Read Also: NLC, TUC, CSOs Outraged Over Hike In Electricity Tariff
‘Please disregard the circulating communication, regarding the review of electricity tariffs. Be informed that no approval for such increments has been received. We regret any inconvenience,’ the AEDC stated in its latest announcement.
A senior official in NERC confirmed that the regulator had not given the Discos approval to announce the hike in tariffs.
‘The commission did not give them such approval,’ the official, who pleaded not to be named due to lack of approval, stated.
Reacting to the development, a former spokesperson of the AEDC and seasoned expert in the sector, Olabode Fadipe, said, ‘NERC never publishes any position or makes any official statement. It is the Discos that does that. Once the Discos receive approval from NERC, they effect the adjustment straightaway.
‘Discos perhaps got approval for 1st July and chose to put their customers on notice only to be told that their action was hasty. That end users have been told to ignore the message does not mean that the increase won’t be affected.’
When reached out to, a spokesperson for Ikeja Electric, Ayeni Akinola, who described the initial trending circular as ‘fake’, the circular advised customers with prepaid meters to purchase energy units in bulk before the price increment takes effect from July 1.
‘If you have a prepaid meter, buying bulk energy units for your home or office before the end of the month may help you make some savings before you have to buy at the new rate.
‘For those on post-paid (estimated) billing, a significant increment is imminent in your monthly billing, starting from August,’ it stated.