Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness - Politics - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Politics › Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness (10194 Views)
| Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by iwaeda(op): 9:23am On Mar 28 |
When the federal government announced a sudden increase in electricity tariffs for Band A customers in April 2024, it was a conviction that raising their tariffs would ensure a minimum of 20 hours of electricity, jettisoning alternative power sources like generators and preventing the collapse of the electricity sector, which was wallowing in huge debt.https://dailytrust.com/band-a-customers-pay-more-for-darkness/
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| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by iwaeda(op): 9:23am On Mar 28 |
Ethically, once the customer is not getting the required hours from that feeder, the feeder has to be downgraded and the tariff adjusted accordingly as you cannot be billing the customer for what they are not consuming. Also, Uket Obonga, a prominent Nigerian consumer rights advocate serving as the national secretary of the Nigeria Electricity Consumers Advocacy Network (NECAN), said there were regulations in which consumers could be compensated, but the DisCos are not engaging in consumer education. “According to NERC’s order, the DisCo shall notify consumers that are supposed to be downgraded or compensated through emails where available or SMS and publish it in their various services, but it is not being done. That is the provisions of the regulations or the orders in the system. So, if they are not applying what is supposed to be done, the DisCos are to compensate customers because you can’t pay what you are not consuming. But the country is in a situation where last year, you had a low generation but the DisCos are raking in billions of naira by just selling darkness to Nigerians,” he said. He lamented that most customers were not aware of their right in seeking compensation from the distribution companies; reason they continue to export them. “Are the customers even aware of this compensation? As I am talking to you, most people don’t know that there is a provision for compensation to be paid when they don’t get the required electricity? In all the places I went to here in Abuja, they were not aware. Are you aware that if you are in Band B or Band C or whatever, you are entitled to compensation? Have you been compensated? This is the situation we find ourselves in. Consumers are not aware,” he noted. Electricity supply will improve within two weeks – FG Meanwhile, the chief technical adviser to the Minister of Power, Adebayo Olowoniyi, said Nigerians should begin to see gradual improvement in electricity supply as maintenance work on a major gas pipeline nears completion, with full restoration expected within two weeks. Olowoniyi said this on Thursday on Arise TV, days after the minister, Adebayo Adelabu issued a public apology over the persistent power outages that have deepened hardship across homes, businesses, schools and industries in recent weeks. Defending the minister’s apology, Olowoniyi said it reflected strong leadership rather than an admission of personal culpability. “I would like to start with the apology from the minister, which we believe is all about taking leadership in the sector. The challenges we have is not necessarily his fault, but as the minister of power he just took it. It was the right leadership step to say, ‘I take ownership of this issue, and I am going to prefer a solution that would ensure that power supply comes back in the shortest available time,’” Olowoniyi said. He explained that the current crisis was largely driven by disruptions to a key gas pipeline that supplies fuel to power plants, noting that about 75 per cent of Nigeria’s electricity generation is gas-dependent. “One of the major gas pipelines in Nigeria was undergoing maintenance; and gradually, that process is being completed. We are sure that within the next two weeks, full gas pressure will be back on the gas pipelines and the power plants will be able to get enough gas, at least to go back to the level of generation they had in the last two to three months,” he said. Olowoniyi expressed confidence that the recovery process had already begun, saying improvements would be gradual but steady. “I will say that from yesterday, we would have gradually started to see some improvement as the pressure on the pipeline gradually starts to build up. We will see continuous improvement over the next couple of weeks,” he said. During his public apology on Tuesday in Abuja, Adelabu told Nigerians that the outages were caused by factors beyond government’s immediate control. He, however, gave a two-week timeline for recovery. “I can tell you that with the committee we have set up and commitments from gas suppliers and the timeline for repair of the gas pipelines, two weeks from now, we should start seeing improvements in supply,” the minister had said. He reiterated federal government’s target of ramping up electricity generation to 6,000 megawatts before the end of 2026, describing the current disruption as a temporary setback. |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by dawnomike(m): 9:49am On Mar 28 |
I am on Band A and we still sometimes have up to 18hrs of electricity in a day.... I think my area is part of the lucky few this period because, I can only imagime how much it would have been costing me to run on generator everyday |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by iwaeda(op): 10:18am On Mar 28*. Modified: 5:07pm On Mar 28 |
You are not in Band A, 18 hours meant for Band B. Band A is 20-24 hours and B is 16-20, so being charged for A and getting B is fraudulent. Nigerians dont know their rights, but content with piecemeal. ![]()
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| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by DeLaRue: 12:17pm On Mar 28 |
I am in Band A. For about a year now, I've had light at 23.5 hours a day. Even through the current power crisis, we get over 23hours. There are days when we get 24hrs. I suspect that privatisation has emboldened Discos to pursue pure profit by supplying power to a narrow small group of consumers - primarily those in Band A. That's very wrong. The law should compel Discos to distribute power to all consumers more evenly. I would rather have less supply so that others (non-Band A) can have some power too. |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by iwaeda(op): 2:18pm On Mar 28 |
Nlfpmod ![]() |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by DeltaBachelor(m): 3:40pm On Mar 28 |
lol @ pay more for darkness |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by LeeSmart: 3:40pm On Mar 28 |
Only in Nigeria will people be segregated just to have electricity. How is this even different from the racist whites? |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by AmishaCandra: 3:40pm On Mar 28 |
I think every state should detach from the national grid and help emselves like Abia State is doing. |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by Lorayne(m): 3:42pm On Mar 28 |
It hurts more for us that pay estimated billing. Imagine paying 10k for 30mins or less of light everyday. Band B |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by geoworldedu: 3:42pm On Mar 28 |
DeLaRue:When I first read the beginning of your post, my mind told me that you must be a Tinubu supporter. I checked, lo and behold you are. 23hrs light , haha. Be lying small small na. |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by Gbadugbakun(m): 3:43pm On Mar 28 |
Knowing Nigerian government, I knew right from the onset that they won't be able to keep up with supplying band A customers their allocated hours of electricity. Now is like nobody cares anymore. They just keep looting whether income they get and leave the country in darkness. |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by OredoPikin2: 3:43pm On Mar 28 |
iwaeda:So we that gets less than 2hours per day is under which band? |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by DeclanR(m): 3:43pm On Mar 28 |
We are experiencing the worst power supply since the history of Nigeria |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by GboyegaD(m): 3:43pm On Mar 28 |
The minister is highly inefficient. I still don't understand why he has been retained this long. Why should there be bands and some are only guaranteed 4 - 8 hours of light daily? This isn't improvement, it is failure in its full attire. |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by OredoPikin2: 3:44pm On Mar 28 |
DeLaRue:You can lie sha Nawa oooo |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by Ironfaceman(m): 3:47pm On Mar 28 |
Some will say is propaganda. That there's light 24/7 |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by femi4: 3:47pm On Mar 28 |
It is always easy for them to increase tarrif, but to provide light 24/7 is now a rocket science |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by ARISHEM: 3:48pm On Mar 28 |
I knew that its all a scam. Forcing some percentage of Nigerians into all those bands against their will was total deception to siphon money out of them. |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by chatinent: 3:49pm On Mar 28 |
Spot a chronic liar on this trend and win integrity. |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by Upright750: 3:51pm On Mar 28 |
It's really painful . It's another type of fraud . When they collted money for what they didn't work for . .. |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by biggz82: 3:51pm On Mar 28 |
Be it band A or band Z all Nigerians pay for darkness |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by fineboynl(m): 3:51pm On Mar 28 |
Band A is nothing but a scam. Band A people are waiting for the election. Despite paying higher. The agreement of the deal which was forced on them by the government. The government refused to keep it agreement of the bargain. By now every band a should have been cancelled until the fix themselves and their grid. |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by VeeVeeMyLuv(f): 3:53pm On Mar 28 |
bandits A and Bandits B Laslas una go dey alright Keep clapping for the man |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by Lovit(m): 3:54pm On Mar 28 |
Tell me one reason Lagos state is still on the national grid? if Abia could do it, why is the almighty Lagos still in darkness? |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by Jakarta: 3:55pm On Mar 28 |
OredoPikin2:It happens in certain areas, in my current area we average around 18 - 20 hours daily on band A, except there is a grid collapse. Although we performed the duties of DisCos ourselves. Like buying transformers, electric poles, wires, and post paid meters, we are still responsible for maintenance. But we won't be paying our light bills for a very long time until our expenses are refunded by discos. I use both band A and E and band E haven't witness even 2 hours of power supply for over 7 months now. That aside, I think these Discos, and Gencos are exploiting customers and government officials are aware of it. Corruption has eaten deep into our power industry. |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by dominique(mod): 3:56pm On Mar 28*. Modified: 11:22pm On Mar 28 |
With the way prepaid meters are designed, can you pay for power you did not consume? |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by Kobicove(m): 3:57pm On Mar 28 |
How are they paying more for darkness when most of them already have prepaid meters? ![]() If you don't get any electricity then you don't need to pay anything |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by ChizzyBuna(m): 4:02pm On Mar 28 |
When the federal government announced a sudden increase in electricity tariffs for Band A customers in April 2024, it was a conviction that raising their tariffs would ensure a minimum of 20 |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by Gbadugbakun(m): 4:04pm On Mar 28 |
Kobicove:If you are running a business, you'll spend more on fuel and diesel to keep your business running. And prepaid is for private homes, companies are given bills to pay they don't use prepaid. So they pay more for darkness and still spend millions on diesel to keep their business running |
| Re: Band A Customers Pay More For Darkness by nairalanda1(m): 4:05pm On Mar 28 |
Well, what did you all expect. 1.Your government under GEJ privatises power in 2013, and then takes the power of setting their prices away from them and places it in government hands. 2. Government then promised to pay subsidies to cover the losses that would result, and then forgets to pay most of them 3. Since power companies cannot charge a cost reflective tarrif, as a result, they lose a lot of money, and the subsidy payments that do come cannot cover their losses completely. They are forced to borrow from the banks to survive. 4. Also, the discos engage in ripping off customers from estimated billing to bill inflation When government is setting your prices, the result is scarcity, corruption and inefficency. (As an example, in Poland, from 1945-1990, government set the prices of food below what it cost the farmers to produce it. The result was food scarcity, shortages, long queues at shops for things like bread and eggs and milk!..and so forth. But once the Solidarity government removed the prices set by the Communist party of poland, and allowed farmers set their prices, the result was that while prices shot up, there was an abundance of food in the shops and market. TOday, no queues in poland for food.) 5. Before you say it is all GEJ's fault, Buhari came in, and maintained the price controls. Tinubu too came in and maintained the price controls 6. Add the problems of massive power theft, and bypassing of meters (60% of metered consumers as at 2025), and the result is a power sector that is losing money, struggling to surive and cannot pay for gas 7.The result is for the nth time, the gas companies have totally refused to supply gas to the gencos. They want their money, all over 10 trillion naira worth of it, including 6-8 trillion owed by government in subsidy payments dating from 2014. 8. When the discos and gencos were NEPA, it was the same story. 9. So, since the gencos cannot pay for gas, and they cannot raise enough funds from the discos, the result is that Band A cannot get light because the gencos and discos are so broke that they can't even survive without ripping off consumers. Lack of a cost reflective tarrif caused all this. Saying that it is tinubu or gej is basically saying that tinubu andGEJ have been ruling this country since 1978. I am not here to convince you to support tinubu, I am here to show you why the situation is bad. Please for god's sake vote out tinubu, but don't expect your new leader to bring back light unless Nigerians rich and poor pay a cost reflective tarrif. ALL OF THEM, Not just band A. |
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