“FG Has Stopped Paying ₦600bn Subsidy On Electricity” – NERC

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The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) revealed on Wednesday that the Federal Government (FG) has stopped paying subsidies on power totalling ₦600 billion.

NERC also revealed that electricity tariffs were raised in February 2022 and that the tariff payable by some customers in the franchise area of one of the distribution companies was reduced.

The Chairman of NERC, Sanusi Garba while speaking at a press briefing in Abuja on the challenges in the power sector and other issues, said that subsidy on electricity was a policy issue of the Federal Government that had to be halted.

This statement came as power generation companies condemned the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading (NBET) company, stating that the NBET was failing in its obligations in terms of payment for power generated by the Gencos.

He said, “The role of the commission is to make a determination of the rates that consumers should pay. So we strike a balance between consumers and investors.

“Now subsidy is a policy issue determined by the government. The government will decide that the rates calculated or agreed by the regulator may at this time not be passed on to consumers. It has happened many times.

“In the past four, five years the level of subsidy has gradually been reduced, because you cannot run the electricity market on life support and say that investors cannot get their return on investment until government steps in to provide the required funding.”

Garba added, “So that policy decision (stopping electricity subsidy) is as announced by the Minister of Finance. The subsidies have been, at one time as high as ₦600 billion a year, and gradually coming down to about ₦30 billion or so this year.”

Electricity Tariffs

On concerns about the rise in electricity tariffs, the NERC boss stated that the adjustment was made in February this year following some economic fundamentals considered by the commission.

“What happened on February 1, 2022, is a minor review of tariff. It is very clear on our website that every six months we will adjust rates to take care of the foreign exchange component of cost and also inflation,” he stated.

Garba described the tariff adjustment as absolutely straightforward, stressing that the distribution companies were meant to inform their customers of the changes.

Power outage

The NERC chairman said the rupturing of gas pipelines by vandals and routine maintenance works on some power plants contributed to the instability of the country’s power system.

This was further buttressed by the Federal Ministry of Power in a statement issued in Abuja the media aide to the power minister, Sanusi Isa, where it stated that the national grid suffered double system collapse within two days due to so many factors

“The current energy crisis confronting some key sectors of the economy also contributed to the problems we are facing now in the power sector,” the statement read in part.

It added, “We are where we are today also because of the increasing vandalism of pipelines that also supply gas to the power plants.

“This too is being resolved in collaboration with the relevant agencies. The NNPC and other gas suppliers are working relentlessly to restore gas supply for optimum power supply.”

The ministry of power said the FG was doing everything possible through the relevant security agencies to stop the vandalism of pipelines.

“Routine maintenance of power generating plants had also contributed to the current power outages we are experiencing,” it stated.

The power ministry added, “These challenges do not in any way indicate that the ongoing rehabilitation of the national grid by the government is not yielding results.”

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