The Eko Electricity Distribution Company
has announced plans to roll out 360,000 electricity meters to customers
who are presently being billed without meters through estimation. The
project will cost N1.3bn.
The Managing Director/Chief Executive
Officer, EKEDC, Mr. Oladele Amoda, told journalists in Lagos on Monday
shortly after the oversight visit of the Senate Committee on
Privatisation and Commercialisation to the company.
The first phase of the project, according
to him, will start with about 5,000 meters for all high voltage or
maximum demand customers, who he said, were responsible for about 70 per
cent of the company’s revenue profile.
Amoda stated that under the scheme, apart
from those who did not have meters, all customers with obsolete and
malfunctioning meters would also have them replaced.
Earlier in his post-privatisation update
report presented to the committee, the EKEDC boss said the company had
embarked on a number of measures to ensure a total turnaround in the
company’s services to its customers.
These he said, included the embedded
generation project, evolvement of a new human resource policy with
emphasis on workers’ safety, training and improvement of the general
working condition.
Amoda added that another N2.3bn would be
spent on network rehabilitation, system upgrade and reinforcement with a
view to drastically reducing equipment downtime and enhancing customer
satisfaction and service delivery.
Responding, the Chairman of the
committee, Senator Gbenga Obadara, said the Senate would always be ready
to work with the newly privatised electricity distribution companies
and other stakeholders in the electricity sector for the purpose of
jointly finding a lasting solution to the problems militating against
regular power supply in the country.
According to him, the Senate is aware of
both the expectations of Nigerians from the newly privatised electricity
companies as well as the constraints still bedevilling the sector.
He said energy theft and vandalism still constituted one of the major challenges facing the companies.
Speaking further, Obadara said while the
Senate would always want to protect the interest of Nigerians to ensure
that they were not exploited by the new companies, it would also
facilitate the existence of a conducive atmosphere for the firms to
operate without any hindrance.
He added that the companies could not be
left alone to tackle the problems they were facing considering the
pervasive influence of electricity in the socio-economic life of the
nation.
“We will always be in constant touch with
all stakeholders like the NERC, BPE and others so that we can sit down
together and look at the problems for us to be able to find a lasting
solution to the power problem in the country,” he said.
Similarly, the management of the Ikeja
Electricity Distribution Company has said it is working in conjunction
with its technical partners, Korea Electric Power Company, to ensure
meter accuracy and loss reduction within the network.
Speaking during the oversight visit of
the Obadara-led committee to the firm on Monday, the Managing
Director/Chief Executive Officer, IKEDC, Mr. Abiodun Ajifowobaje, said
the company had made significant progress in its quest to ensure a
robust metering system that would enhance accuracy in billing.
Ajifowobaje, according to a statement
made available on Monday, said KEPCO was spearheading an exhaustive
review of IKEDC’s network to achieve the introduction of effective
meters as well as promote reduction of energy losses through continuing
upgrade and optimisation of the company’s installations and facilities.
“IKEDC is working with KEPCO to provide a
strategic solution to metering that takes cognizance of the needs of
all customers within the network. I am happy to report that with the
adoption of new technology, we have made substantial progress in this
regard and remain committed to ensuring that all our customers are
adequately metered,” he said.
Listing inadequate power supply as one of
the company’s greatest challenges, Ajifowobaje said the company,
instead of receiving daily supply of 1,351 megawatts, was receiving an
average of 345MW, representing a shortage of 700MW, which placed a huge
strain on daily distribution.
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