Accept reality, no going back on new electricity tariff – Fashola tells Nigerians
He said the increment was effected so that Nigerians can enjoy reliable power supply.
“If we want to experience reliable electricity, we must accept the reality of tariffs and possible upward or downward reviews. We must stop going to court to get injunctions to stop tariff reviews,” Fashola told Thisday.
“We don’t do so, when exchange rate, inflation and prices of other commodities change. What we must insist on, is the provision of meters, so that we can monitor and control what we consume.”
The contract, which is worth N37 billion, was awarded during the era of the National Electric Power Authority (NEPA) and was not executed before the power sector privatisation was concluded in 2013.
He added that the government had negotiated the judgment to allow it go back to execute the contract.
Fashola said the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan made the mistake of failing to make metering of consumers a compulsory obligation of the 11 electricity distribution companies (DisCos).
“One of the omissions of the privatisation carried out by the last administration was lack of compulsory metering before the privatisation.
”This is compounded by an inaccurate consumer projection of six million households, without a consumer audit.
“These are the problems the Buhari government is now trying to fix with the power sector recovery programme.”
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