By Abolade Ademola
The electricity tariff of Laaga residents (in Ikorodu, Lagos) has gone so high that everyone cannot afford it. As a resident of the community, I will like to add my voice to this challenge and bring it to the notice of Ikeja Electric and NERC.
In Laaga community, located around Ewu-Elepe, a suburb of
Ikorodu, residents have been made to pay an estimated bill that is more than
the minimum wage of the entire country, Nigeria.
The steady rise in the bill is very discomforting in a country where the rate of inflation keeps rising without a commensurate rise in income.
The residents of a community with few pre-paid meters have been suffering in silence for some months now but it has become very unbearable with the bill sent for January 2022 in the last few days, a whopping sum of N23,000 only! It is such an exasperating amount that everyone is lamenting this outrageous amount that was sent.
From findings, this rate is not just for Laaga community, the
rate is also applicable to other adjoining communities. These include Mowo
Kekere, Oke Eletu, Eleshin, among others. This means it has become general
exploitation to residents of Ikorodu, most especially all those on Ijede Road.
Our rights as electricity consumers in Nigeria have been
trampled upon – new electricity connections are not done strictly based on
metering before connection. The community is filled up with new customers that
were connected to Ikeja Electric without a meter first being installed at the
premises.
As customers, we do not have an understanding of transparent
electricity billing at the current rate. We are being overbilled unjustly and
we are exercising our rights to contest any electricity
bill. Between October and December 2021, the bill was hovering
around N12,000 only and when the December bill was sent in January, it
was N18,000 only and the January bill was N23,000.
This progression is alarming; the residents feel slighted and
offended at this daylight robbery.
In January, after receiving
the bill, residents went to the Omitoro undertaking office to complain and they
were told that the hike was because of the electric consumption in December.
Grudgingly, people accepted but that of January cannot be
justified. In the last two weeks, residents of Laaga have been battling low
voltage and disruption in the availability of electricity because of the
malfunctioning transformer.
How can the consumption be the same when we are not having
light? That means the assumed estimated billing being done from the transformer
is not being done and we are just being exploited.
Historically, the old transformer was taken away but PHCN/Ikeja
Electric workers and the community was left in the darkness. It took the
efforts of the community residents to purchase the currently malfunctioning
transformer.
All the electric poles and cables within the community were
bought through communal efforts and people are still suffering from outrageous
bills like this. Asides from this, they provide security on their own,
streetlights, grade their road network from time to time, among others.Many of
the residents of Laaga are civil servants and private sector people who leave
their residences in the morning and return home late in the evening.
It is evident in the way they troop out and during the day. The
Small and Medium Scale Enterprises, MSMEs, in the neighbourhood have been
grounded because they cannot power their businesses except the big ones who
have generating sets. So, what we are made to pay has gone beyond the minimum
wage of Nigeria and we are also not “heavy-users” of electricity like the
industrial areas.
The request for pre-paid meters is also accompanied by its own
herculean tasks. Meters are now being paid for- a-one phase meter at about
N70,000 only, while a-three phase meter goes for about N120,000 only, excluding
the possibility of bribing one’s way to fast-track purchase and installation.
It is also rather unfortunate that Nigerians are made to still fill KYC (Know
Your Customer) form online and there is a time lag, which cannot be determined
on the period when mapping will be done and the metering will eventually be
done. Silently and unfortunately, there has been an increase in
electricity tariff in the last four months but it needs to be in tandem with
the economic realities of the time. The rate was 23.30 before it was
increased to 25.3, but the February bill is at 27.22. It is really a breach of
contract as our rights to adequate information have been violated over and
over.
The suffering and smiling mode are already on the extreme and
the residents of the community are ready to take the bull by the horn by
disconnecting electricity and resorting to generators like it is being done in
some houses. In the last two weeks, when we have been on low voltage we
have survived, and without electricity from Ikeja Electric, we will resort to
independent power generating houses.
We would call on Ikeja Electric and the Nigerian Electricity
Regulatory Commission to come to our aid so as not to discourage tax-paying
Nigerians from being customers of the electricity distribution companies. Of what
good will it do all these organisations if all people who provided electricity
infrastructure for themselves are being deprived of it? We need our pre-paid
meters now or Ikeja Electric should keep their low voltage, while we become our
Independent Power Generating Houses.
*Ademola, a
public affairs specialist, wrote from Ewu-Elepe, Ikorodu, Lagos.
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