The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has advised
electricity consumers to be alert to certain irregularities by some
employees of Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN).
Giving the advice on Thursday in Uyo, Dr Tony Akah, NERC’s General
Manager, Government and Consumer Affairs, said the commission was aware
that some PHCN officials compelled consumers to pay for transformers,
electricity poles, cables, and meters.
Akah, who spoke at the commission’s “Power Consumer Assembly’’, urged
consumers to watch out for such employees, adding that consumers who
felt cheated should file complaints with the commission for action.
He stated that the commission had given PHCN an 18-month ultimatum to
provide consumers with meters and stressed that it was illegal for the
company to arbitrarily give consumers estimated bills.
“We are aware of such things like customers being forced to buy meters,
transformers, electric poles. We are urging you as journalists to help
us expose these people.
“Nigerian consumers should be fully alert to the trend. You have
phones that have cameras, record these things and bring them to us.
“Be rest assured that as soon as we prove that there is a violation
of this, we will consider it as a pure criminal violation and we as a
commission will take it to the highest level and ensure that whoever the
culprits are, will be brought to book.
“We ask the consumers to compile and properly file any complaints
about PHCN employees asking them to buy transformers, poles, cables and
meters.
“When we look at the individuals’ consumers complaints from our
databank, we will be able to make PHCN do what it is supposed to do.
He advised on the importance for consumers to first file their complaints at the PHCN office that charged them for any item.
“We are aware of the increased complaints that people are being given
crazy bills, bills that are not based on scientific reasons,’’ Akah
said.
He said that even if the meters were not available, there was a
methodology that had been created to produce a “more or less scientific
projection to what consumer billing may look like instead of arbitrary
billing’’.
Akah said as regulators, the commission also had useful information
from different stakeholders that would enable it to come up with more
effective regulations, and effectively monitor the rules.
He said that the power consumer assembly was a platform to bring
stakeholders together to harness ideas and receive complaints from
consumers with a view to addressing their complaints. (NAN)
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