Residents of Jakande Estate Ejigbo in Lagos state, Sunday, staged a peaceful protest against Ikeja Electric (ie), the only electricity distribution company in the area over high estimated billing system the community has been getting.
The residents also claimed that the six months period given to the company by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission, NERC, to give over 3,000 customers prepaid meters has elapsed without responding to their demands.
Displaying various placards with inscriptions such as: ‘No More Estimated Billing’, ‘We are overdue for the Usage of Prepaid Meter’, ‘Bring Prepaid Meter’ Now’, ‘We are sick and Tired of Estimated Billing Methodology’, etc, the aggrieved residents stated that they would be forced to drag the Ikeja Electric to court with the evidence from NERC’s ruling.
Addressing journalists, the Leader of Estate Youth Parliament (EYP), Yusuf Adeyemi said, the NERC had on May 24, 2018 ordered the Ikeja Electric to meter every customer in the Estate within six months which elapsed on the 24th of November 2018.
The electricity distribution company has, instead of heeding the order of the regulatory company, wrote back to the community that it would not be able to meter the community until 2019.
In that response letter, the Ikeja Electric claimed that the inadequate power supply to the community was due to limited allocation from Transmission Company on Nigeria, TCN.
It stated that its unmetered customers were billed based on supply availability in line with Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission, NERC’s approved estimated billing methodology.
Ikeja Electric’s letter reads: “In response to your complaint of poor power supply and billing on estimation.
“Permit us to state that our unmetered customers were billed based on supply availability in line with Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC’s) approved estimated billing methodology, which ensures that all accounts on the same starting and Distribution Transformer metered and unmetered are billed as closely as possible to ensure fairness and as much as possible eliminate outrageous billing.
“Please note that as a result of peculiarity of the business and attendant industry challenges, we are constrained to meter your community between now and November 2018, but the vicinity has been scheduled for the exercise in fourth quarter of year 2019. The community can as well engage the services of Meter Asset Provider vendors when full operation commences.”
But, the residents lament being over-billed with estimated billing system and assert that they would, henceforth, not pay for electricity until they are given prepaid meters.
“For more than three years now, we have been cheated by Ikeja Electric and we are not going to take that any longer.
“We are shorting down payment as from today until they bring prepaid meters for us,” Adeyemi said.
Also speaking, the NEPA Chairman of the community, Mr. Tajudeen Gbolahan Lawal said he has been engaging the Ikeja Electric on the matter for more than three years without any positive response.
He said the community could not take it any more, charging the company to come and remove its wires from the community if it would not meter them.
He claimed that other communities within the state have been metered and paying less while they are charged more than what they consume.
See copies of their documents below: