Manufacturers to shut factories over high electricity bills
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Manufacturers to shut factories over high electricity bills
February 26, 2015
Chairman, Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission, NERC, Dr. Sam Amadi
| credits: File copy
| credits: File copy
Some
manufacturers in the country have said that the increase in electricity
tariffs will force them to shut down their operations in the near
future if development is not urgently addressed.
Different producer groups of the
Manufacturers Association of Nigeria on Wednesday said if the Nigerian
Electricity Regulatory Commission failed to revert to the old Multi Year
Tariff Order, the industrialists would have no option but to down
tools.
Speaking at an enlarged stakeholders’
forum in Abuja on the revised MYTO 2.1, the manufacturers argued that
the new order had led to an astronomical increase in electricity
tariffs, a development they said was capable of crippling their
operations because consumers would not be able to absorb the
commensurate rise in products’ prices due in an already saturated
market.
NERC had announced that following the
conduct of a special review, it approved the revised MYTO 2.1, which
came into effect on January 1, 2015.
“A major highlight of the MYTO 2.1 is a
six-month freeze from January 1, 2015 on tariff increase for residential
consumers. The increase in tariffs will only affect non-residential
consumers; that is, commercial consumers of electricity,” the Chairman,
NERC, Dr. Sam Amadi, had said.
But the Coordinator, Steel Manufacturers
Group of MAN, Mr. Felix Okojie, stated that all producers across the
country were shocked by the quantum leap in the new electricity tariffs
approved by NERC.
Asked what would be the reaction of the
manufacturers if NERC failed to revert to the old order, Okojie said,
“We will shut down our operations. Tell me what else you expect me to
say. If they insist and we cannot pay the bills, then the only option
open to us is to close down the factories. And then, more Nigerians will
be thrown into the labour market and insecurity will increase.
“I agree with you that the action will
be too extreme, but that is why we are asking NERC to rethink because
the action they have taken now is completely anti-progress. It doesn’t
help the Nigeria Industrial Revolutions Plan; it goes completely
contrary to all these concepts.”
He argued that electricity tariffs in
the country were among the highest in the world, stressing that most
developed and developing nations were considerate of the rates given to
consumers.
Okojie said, “China, India, USA, Russia,
Angola and some other African countries that have stable electricity
pay between N3, in comparative terms, to N21 per Kwh. But here in
Nigeria, we don’t have constant electricity and power firms are
demanding N28.28 per Kwh.
“We have more darkness than light and yet pay high tariffs, for what? Is it for darkness or for light?”
He explained that most manufacturers had made their long-term projections based on the MYTO order laid out for 2012 to 2017.
“The MYTO 2012 to 2017, which was meant
to run for five years, formed the basis of our members’ long-term
planning, which NERC’s sudden increase has now seriously interrupted.
This is because we were not informed of the revocation of the MYTO
order. We consider this sudden action unfair to our members.”
Okojie stated that residential customers
were indirectly paying the new tariff despite claims by the commission
that they would only begin to pay in July.
He said, “The truth is that all of us
are operating the new order because we are either landlords or tenants.
You will notice that where you were paying N1,200 before, your January
bill will now be about N5,000.
“So, indirectly, they have started
taking the money, which they promised that it will be in six months. Why
are we fooling ourselves?”
The Executive Chairman, Sunchi
Integrated Farms Limited, an Enugu-based firm that specialises in
hatchery, feed mills and soya oil refining, Mr. Sunday Ezeobiora, said
the new tariffs would ground the company’s operations if not reversed.
Ezeobiora said, “We wish to state that
the current increase in tariff by 94.62 per cent for the C2 category as
approved for the Enugu Electricity Distribution Company by your
commission is beyond our absorption capacity and will halt our
operations and render our workers jobless.
“We cannot afford to pay our January
2015 electricity bills based on the new tariff and still remain in
business. We, therefore, plead that the implementation of the new tariff
order be halted pending wider consolations with agro-allied
industries.”
Defending the revised MYTO 2.1, the NERC
chairman stated that it was approved because it would help provide
clarity as to how prudent costs would be recovered by efficient
operators.
Amadi said, “The Electric Power Sector
Reform Act, 2015 obligates NERC to ensure that every efficient operator
recovers prudent costs of producing and supplying electricity. At the
same time, we are also obligated to ensure that tariffs are fair,
reasonable and affordable.
“Because the fundamental drivers of
costs in this industry – inflation rate, foreign exchange, cost of gas
and available quantity – could change quickly; there is a minor review
of the tariff structure every six months to re-index the tariff to these
changing fundamentals.”
He, however, admitted that the tariffs
that businesses and industries were paying for electricity in the
country was high and advocated for the production of embedded power by
firms that had the capacity to do so.
Amadi added, “Truly, the cost that
businesses and industries pay in Nigeria is high. But the highest
portion of this cost comes from self-supply of electricity. If power
from the grid is stable and adequate, we will see significant decrease
in the cost of energy.
“How to increase energy supply to
industrial and commercial consumers in Nigeria is the most important and
urgent challenge we face.”
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