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FG pays N376bn electricity subsidy in nine months, says NERC

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Federal Government paid a total sum of N375.8 billion as a subsidy for Electricity used from January to September 2023, according to data from the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC).
The data showed that subsidy payments gulped N36 billion in the year’s first quarter,  increased to N135.2 billion by the second quarter, and hit N204.6 billion in the third quarter.
The NERC said the subsidy payment was due to the absence of cost-reflective tariffs.

“In the absence of cost-reflective tariffs, the government undertakes to cover the resultant gap (between the cost-reflective and allowed tariff) in the form of tariff shortfall funding. This funding is applied to the NBET (Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Company) invoices that are to be paid by Discos.

“The amount to be covered by the Disco is based on the tariff that they are allowed to charge and set out as their Minimum Remittance Obligation in the periodic Tariff Orders issued by the Commission.

“It is important to note that due to the absence of cost-reflective tariffs across all Discos, the government incurred a subsidy obligation of N204.59bn in 2023/Q3 (average of N68.20bn per month), which is an increase of N69.37bn (+51.3 percent) compared to the N135.23bn (average of N45.08bn per month) incurred in 2023/Q2; this increase is largely attributable to the government’s policy to harmonise exchange rates.

“The rise in the government’s subsidy obligation meant that in 2023/Q3, Discos were only expected to cover 45 percent of the total invoice received from NBET. For ease of administration of the subsidy, the MRO is limited to NBET only with the MO (Market Operator) being allowed to recover 100 percent of its revenue requirement from the Discos,” the commission explained.

Meanwhile, during the review period, power distribution companies billed electricity users a total of N1.06 trillion nationwide and collected N782.6 billion.

Consumers paid N247.09 billion, N267.86 billion, and N267.61 billion in the first, second, and third quarters of 2023 respectively.

It was also observed that during the three quarters, the electricity bills from Discos to consumers were N349.55 billion, 354.61 billion, and N359.38 billion respectively, bringing the total bill for the nine months to N1.06 trillion.

In its latest third quarter 2023 report, the NERC stated that “the total revenue collected by all Discos in 2023/Q3 was ₦267.61bn out of ₦349.55bn billed to customers.

“This translates to a collection efficiency of 76.56 percent, which represents an increase of +1.02 basic points when compared to 2023/Q2 (75.54 percent). The increase in collection efficiency can be attributed to the implementation of various collection campaigns for improved remittance by post-paid customers.”

On market remittance, it stated that “in 2023/Q3, the cumulative upstream invoice payable by Discos was ₦208.7bn, consisting of ₦167.4bn for generation costs from NBET and ₦41.3bn for transmission and administrative services by the Market Operator.

“Out of this amount, the Discos collectively remitted a total sum of ₦158.43bn (₦124.53bn for NBET and ₦33.9bn for MO) with an outstanding balance of ₦50.27bn.

“This translates to a remittance performance of 75.91 percent in 2023/Q3, which is down by 19.30 basic points compared to the 95.21 percent recorded in 2023/Q2.”

For remittance by special and cross-border customers in 2023/Q3, the commission stated that none of the four international customers being supplied by Nigeria’s power generation companies in the sector made any payment against the cumulative invoice of $11.16m issued to them by the MO for services rendered in 2023/Q3.

“Similarly, none of the 16 bilateral customers operating in the NESI (Nigeria Electricity Supply Industry) made any payment against the cumulative invoice of N2,814.68m issued to them by the MO for services rendered in 2023/Q3,” the NERC stated.(Source: 21stcenturychronicle)

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