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Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC - Politics (3) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsExpect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC (14088 Views)

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Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by lobell: 1:42pm On May 04, 2018

Fashola noted that since the completion of the privatisation of the sector, the size of the ministry has shrunk from the previous staff strength of the 50,000 to less than 1,000.



In other words, you have sacked 49,000 people from their jobs in just one ministry. It shall not be well with all of you that promised one thing and delivered (if you can call it that) something else.
Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by CofOLandOfPeace(m): 1:53pm On May 04, 2018
desmond2pk:
Some people are better as opposition. Apc and its criminal followers like tunde bakare would have been in the street protesting against old government
This is quite making sense. Oppossition role is different from holding the post in reality.
Check my signature in blue here below and contact us by clicking the WhatsApp Chat link.....
Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by HAH: 2:21pm On May 04, 2018
kingthreat:
stop estimated bills shikena
here in kaduna I wish I can be taken back to my estimated billing, they just installed some smart prepaid meters that are rigged to overcharge and burn quickly, imagine a two bedroom consuming about 20k worth of unit in a month, when we were on estimated bill consumption can not br above 10k sometimes even 5k
Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by authority2006(m): 3:15pm On May 04, 2018
ezekielenejeta:
Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) Chairman Prof. James Momoh yesterday vowed to review the prevailing electricity tariff.

Speaking with reporters after the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola inaugurated him in Abuja, he said the commission would look into the computation of the tariff.

He said: “The tariff is not a challenge you cannot solve. It happened, you learnt something about it last week. You don’t have to relearn the same lesson today.

“You should be able to ask question–what are we going to do tomorrow to avoid the problem?. There is what you call data science in the new thinking of the world, where we collect data, you learn from the information and you predict the future. So if we don’t do that, we are wasting our time. Because you know it is going to rain tomorrow so you get your umbrella. You don’t wait until it rains before you go by umbrella.”

Momoh added: “We have no choice; we have to look at what computes a tariff. Tariff is not a guesswork. There is a calculation you do to get there.”

He said he believed in team work for quick wins, adding that some of the quick wins should be what the commission could do in terms of estimated billings and how to ensure that it gets enough data to convince customers to pay for the power they use.

Momoh said: “If we remain the same, and we remain static, and we are not solving real problem, we will just be doing fire brigade promise. The GenCos will always tell you there is a blackout without knowing why.

“You are going to ask question why. I know why, because I know the Mathematics behind it, I know the Physics behind it. I know also the Economics behind it. If we are able to teach people to know why things go wrong, perhaps, we learn from our mistakes,” he said.

Momoh, who said the industry should anticipate problems, insisted that “we look back, we use lessons of yesterday to solve tomorrow’s problem.”

Earlier, Fashola said observers would admit that power supply has increased since 2015, submitting that “without a doubt, we have increased generation to 7000Mw, increasing the transmission to over 7,000Mw, and increasing the distribution from 2,690 to average of 4,900 or 5,000.”

He said the electricity market has a capacity of 2,000Mw that has been stranded, which the ministry is working to distribute before this year end.

According to him, the NESI has a new stock of 459Mw underway from Azura that has notified him on the completion of its plant and its readiness to commence operation.

Momoh said the sector is expecting another 240Mw from Afam and another 215Mw from Kaduna. Besides, he noted that the market is also expecting power from Kashimbilla, “but the distribution end is where our challenge lies.”

Fashola said the mini-grid regulation has started yielding results, and the ministry is already seeing the impacts in the market.

He said this year, markets such as Suru in Lagos, Sabon Gari in Kano, Ariria in Aba, and some other markets are going to be energised.

Fashola noted that since the completion of the privatisation of the sector, the size of the ministry has shrunk from the previous staff strength of the 50,000 to less than 1,000.

https://www.financialwatchngr.com/2018/05/04/expect-more-increase-in-electricity-bill-nerc/
I can tell you from what I read up there, the man was just talking in parables, beating about the bush. He didn't say anything directly about tariff increment. May be he was afraid of backlash from the public.
Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by authority2006(m): 3:20pm On May 04, 2018
HAH:
here in kaduna I wish I can be taken back to my estimated billing, they just installed some smart prepaid meters that are rigged to overcharge and burn quickly, imagine a two bedroom consuming about 20k worth of unit in a month, when we were on estimated bill consumption can not br above 10k sometimes even 5k
My brother, being on prepaid meter is not easy at all. One has got to learn how to conserve energy, how to ration your units. Now, I'm jealous of those who are on estimated billing in my environment. All of them are either on 2k or 3k naira fixed monthly billings.
Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by authority2006(m): 3:30pm On May 04, 2018
desmond2pk:
Some people are better as opposition. Apc and its criminal followers like tunde bakare would have been in the street protesting against old government
You are not making sense here. May be you've forgotten whose administration privatised power sector, Jonathan. May be you've forgotten those who encouraged him to sell it to crooks who had nothing to do with power sector, you and your likes. Now, you're crying as if APC sold power sector to incompetent bidders. Government of the day is as powerless as you who encouraged Jonathan to sell power sector to cronies at giveaway prices.
I'm sure that you will be happy to hear that government has taken back the power sector, forgetting that you all had song back then: "government has no business being in business". Pay your energy bills, stop crying.
Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by cjfavour(m): 3:42pm On May 04, 2018
ezekielenejeta:
Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) Chairman Prof. James Momoh yesterday vowed to review the prevailing electricity tariff.

Speaking with reporters after the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola inaugurated him in Abuja, he said the commission would look into the computation of the tariff.





When will you increase electricity supply? Na only tarrif you know?

He said: “The tariff is not a challenge you cannot solve. It happened, you learnt something about it last week. You don’t have to relearn the same lesson today.

“You should be able to ask question–what are we going to do tomorrow to avoid the problem?. There is what you call data science in the new thinking of the world, where we collect data, you learn from the information and you predict the future. So if we don’t do that, we are wasting our time. Because you know it is going to rain tomorrow so you get your umbrella. You don’t wait until it rains before you go by umbrella.”

Momoh added: “We have no choice; we have to look at what computes a tariff. Tariff is not a guesswork. There is a calculation you do to get there.”

He said he believed in team work for quick wins, adding that some of the quick wins should be what the commission could do in terms of estimated billings and how to ensure that it gets enough data to convince customers to pay for the power they use.

Momoh said: “If we remain the same, and we remain static, and we are not solving real problem, we will just be doing fire brigade promise. The GenCos will always tell you there is a blackout without knowing why.

“You are going to ask question why. I know why, because I know the Mathematics behind it, I know the Physics behind it. I know also the Economics behind it. If we are able to teach people to know why things go wrong, perhaps, we learn from our mistakes,” he said.

Momoh, who said the industry should anticipate problems, insisted that “we look back, we use lessons of yesterday to solve tomorrow’s problem.”

Earlier, Fashola said observers would admit that power supply has increased since 2015, submitting that “without a doubt, we have increased generation to 7000Mw, increasing the transmission to over 7,000Mw, and increasing the distribution from 2,690 to average of 4,900 or 5,000.”

He said the electricity market has a capacity of 2,000Mw that has been stranded, which the ministry is working to distribute before this year end.

According to him, the NESI has a new stock of 459Mw underway from Azura that has notified him on the completion of its plant and its readiness to commence operation.

Momoh said the sector is expecting another 240Mw from Afam and another 215Mw from Kaduna. Besides, he noted that the market is also expecting power from Kashimbilla, “but the distribution end is where our challenge lies.”

Fashola said the mini-grid regulation has started yielding results, and the ministry is already seeing the impacts in the market.

He said this year, markets such as Suru in Lagos, Sabon Gari in Kano, Ariria in Aba, and some other markets are going to be energised.

Fashola noted that since the completion of the privatisation of the sector, the size of the ministry has shrunk from the previous staff strength of the 50,000 to less than 1,000.

https://www.financialwatchngr.com/2018/05/04/expect-more-increase-in-electricity-bill-nerc/
Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by authority2006(m): 3:42pm On May 04, 2018
lobell:

Fashola noted that since the completion of the privatisation of the sector, the size of the ministry has shrunk from the previous staff strength of the 50,000 to less than 1,000.



In other words, you have sacked 49,000 people from their jobs in just one ministry. It shall not be well with all of you that promised one thing and delivered (if you can call it that) something else.
One of the intellectually lazy youth that Adesina was talking about is here. Jonathan sold both generating and distributing arms of the power sector that also happened to be biggest employers of the three arms, leaving only the transmitting arm with the FG. The money realised from the sales were used to settle disengaged workers. Some received as much as over 50 million naira, some as low as 6 million naira as compensation.
Now, some lucky workers were retained by the new owners, GENCOS and DISCOS. Others were told to go and start something with their payoffs. All these happened under Jonathan. Dunce head, Fashola didn't meet 50,000 workers on grounds, they were long gone before this administration came on board.
Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by cjfavour(m): 3:43pm On May 04, 2018
ezekielenejeta:
Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) Chairman Prof. James Momoh yesterday vowed to review the prevailing electricity tariff.

Speaking with reporters after the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola inaugurated him in Abuja, he said the commission would look into the computation of the tariff.
He said: “The tariff is not a challenge you cannot solve. It happened, you learnt something about it last week. You don’t have to relearn the same lesson today.

“You should be able to ask question–what are we going to do tomorrow to avoid the problem?. There is what you call data science in the new thinking of the world, where we collect data, you learn from the information and you predict the future. So if we don’t do that, we are wasting our time. Because you know it is going to rain tomorrow so you get your umbrella. You don’t wait until it rains before you go by umbrella.”

Momoh added: “We have no choice; we have to look at what computes a tariff. Tariff is not a guesswork. There is a calculation you do to get there.”

He said he believed in team work for quick wins, adding that some of the quick wins should be what the commission could do in terms of estimated billings and how to ensure that it gets enough data to convince customers to pay for the power they use.

Momoh said: “If we remain the same, and we remain static, and we are not solving real problem, we will just be doing fire brigade promise. The GenCos will always tell you there is a blackout without knowing why.

“You are going to ask question why. I know why, because I know the Mathematics behind it, I know the Physics behind it. I know also the Economics behind it. If we are able to teach people to know why things go wrong, perhaps, we learn from our mistakes,” he said.

Momoh, who said the industry should anticipate problems, insisted that “we look back, we use lessons of yesterday to solve tomorrow’s problem.”

Earlier, Fashola said observers would admit that power supply has increased since 2015, submitting that “without a doubt, we have increased generation to 7000Mw, increasing the transmission to over 7,000Mw, and increasing the distribution from 2,690 to average of 4,900 or 5,000.”

He said the electricity market has a capacity of 2,000Mw that has been stranded, which the ministry is working to distribute before this year end.

According to him, the NESI has a new stock of 459Mw underway from Azura that has notified him on the completion of its plant and its readiness to commence operation.

Momoh said the sector is expecting another 240Mw from Afam and another 215Mw from Kaduna. Besides, he noted that the market is also expecting power from Kashimbilla, “but the distribution end is where our challenge lies.”

Fashola said the mini-grid regulation has started yielding results, and the ministry is already seeing the impacts in the market.

He said this year, markets such as Suru in Lagos, Sabon Gari in Kano, Ariria in Aba, and some other markets are going to be energised.

Fashola noted that since the completion of the privatisation of the sector, the size of the ministry has shrunk from the previous staff strength of the 50,000 to less than 1,000.

https://www.financialwatchngr.com/2018/05/04/expect-more-increase-in-electricity-bill-nerc/
When will you increase electricity supply? Na only tarrif you know?
Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by lobell: 4:20pm On May 04, 2018
authority2006:
One of the intellectually lazy youth that Adesina was talking about is here. Jonathan sold both generating and distributing arms of the power sector that also happened to be biggest employers of the three arms, leaving only the transmitting arm with the FG. The money realised from the sales were used to settle disengaged workers. Some received as much as over 50 million naira, some as low as 6 million naira as compensation.
Now, some lucky workers were retained by the new owners, GENCOS and DISCOS. Others were told to go and start something with their payoffs. All these happened under Jonathan. Dunce head, Fashola didn't meet 50,000 workers on grounds, they were long gone before this administration came on board.
BMC, I hear you. If they were gone before he came why are you guys now claiming it as your achievement?
Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by Kingspin(m): 6:25pm On May 04, 2018
It is Fashola there own; therefore they are not talking. Useless country.
Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by Nobody: 6:58pm On May 04, 2018
huh
Re: Expect More Increase In Electricity Bill – NERC by onyxo76(m): 7:24am On May 05, 2018
tosinet:
But wait o, why is there no single solar panel manufacturer in Nigeria? This is the main reason the panels are expensive because of the cost of shipping them down to Nigeria
to be honest i don't know o, we have abundant sunlight here, we should not be suffering like this. Imagine a small town in Germany having a solar panel set up about 1km long which supplies power all year round, i just don't seem to understand why such things can't work here.
1 2 3 Reply

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