Electricity Energy Featured

IBEDC decries N130 million monthly revenue loss to illicit meters

IBEDC decries N130 million monthly revenue loss to illicit meters

The Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company (IBEDC) has decried the monthly loss of over N130 million revenue due to use of “illicit meters” by some electricity consumers.
Mr Oluwatoyin Akinyosoye, IBEDC Regional Manager for Osun, condemned the practice at a stakeholders’ town hall meeting on Wednesday in Osogbo.
Akinyosoye said that the town hall meeting was organised to draw attention of the consuming public to those who engage in the sabotage of its operations.
According to him, in Osun there are 15,000 illicit meters causing the company an average revenue loss of N130 million on monthly basis.
” To us as a company, this is huge loss in our revenue because this illicit meters consume energy on our network, but the revenue is not coming to us.
“If we can curb the use of these illicit meters, then we can take the revenue back to the company, improve on our network and embark on other metering interventions to serve our customers”, he said.
The regional manager said that the unregistered meters were not supplied to consumers by the company, explaining that IBEDC had different intervention on metering through which customers could obtain their meters.
He said customers could get metered through “meter self provider” whereby customers pay and get metered and the cost of the meter would be refunded to them over a period of time.
Akinyosoye also said that prospective customers could benefit from the IBEDC roll out meter intervention, whereby meters were given to customers for free.
He said that the recently concluded national mass metering programme by the Federal Government was another avenue customers could get meters.
” As a company, we have stopped this Non-Standard Transfer System meter in 2013.
“So every of this meter, that you have to use a card before you can load and that was installed between 2013 till now are illicit meter,” the official said.
Akinyosoye advised electricity consumers who have such illicit meters to visit the IBEDC to find out how it could be replaced.
” But any customer that we discover using the illicit meter would have his or her supply disconnected, charged for loss of revenue, pay for penalty and of course face prosecution”, he said.
Some of the IBEDC customers at the meeting who spoke with NAN urged the company to do more to serve them better.

Related posts

Frankfurt Airport slashes hours for 18,000 employees, secures wages

Our Reporter

Mass retirement hits N’Assembly

Our Reporter

Fuel subsidy: NLC issues seven-day nationwide strike notice  

Editor

Govt tasked on budget transparency, spending of tax revenues 

Our Reporter

Arafat Day: NASFAT wants Muslims take Nigeria’s challenges to God

By Aliyu DANLADI

Police parade 49 Yoruba nation agitators in Lagos

Our Reporter