The Energy Consumer Rights and Responsibility Initiative (ECRRI) on Friday decried the failure of the National Assembly to criminalise issuance of estimated bills by electricity distribution companies (DisCos) to customers.
ECRRI national president Surai Fadairo said the move would have accelerated bridging of the metering gap in Nigeria.
The House of Representatives had in 2018, sought to prohibit estimated bills to electricity consumers across the country. The bill would mandate DisCos to provide prepaid meters within a specified period.
“This bill would have put an end to what Nigerians are facing today in the hands of the DisCos but unfortunately it did not scale through. We believe that there is a need to revive the bill, especially as we are moving toward another election year with the reconstitution of a new national assembly,” Mr Fadairo explained. “There is a need to stop the exploitation of Nigerians with outrageous bills and the best way to do that is to make it an offence to issue estimated bills to customers.”
He added that the group was ready to work with the legislators to ensure that the estimated billing system was prohibited in Nigeria.
According to him, this has become imperative, especially with the implementation of the Multi-Year Tariff Order (MYTO) for the DisCos as approved by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission.
“The MYTO has been approved for the DisCos until 2025 which will see periodic reviews in tariffs to customers based on certain parameters. We believe the only way customers can be best served is for them to get metered to prevent further exploitation,” he said.
Mr Fadairo noted that though the Meter Asset Provider (MAP) scheme was currently ongoing, the DisCos needed to expedite action to ensure the prompt metering of all customers who had made payments for their prepaid meters.
(NAN)