Business
Manufacturer Lists Gains Of MAPR Policy
An indigenous meter manufacturer, Mr Kola Balogun says the Meter Asset Providers Regulations (MAPR) policy will bridge the widening metering gap in the electricity supply industry.
Balogun, the Chairman, Momas Electricity Meters Manufacturing Company Ltd., spoke with newsmen yesterday in Lagos on the importance of the MAPR initiated by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC).
Reports say that a meter asset provider is an entity that is granted a permit to give metering services, including meter financing, procurement, meter tests, supply, installation, maintenance and replacement.
Balogun said that the new regulation on metering would stand as a relief for electricity consumers as it would enable them to get meters as quickly as possible.
He said that the new arrangement was aimed at eliminating the estimated billing practice, attracting private investment into the provision of metering services and closing the metering gap through accelerated meter rollout in power sector.
According to him, the new metering regulation initiated by NERC was commendable, which he described as a “step in the right direction’’.
Balogun said: “The only language electricity consumers understand currently is metering of their premises which Discos are not doing.
“The meter manufacturers have meters, but we cannot sell it directly to the consumers, so there is a big gap.
“Now that MAPR has come up, it is another scheme that can be explored so that consumers will be metered as and when due.
Balogun said that MAPR would source a minimum of 30 per cent of their contracted metering volume from the local meter manufacturing companies in Nigeria.
“It is a very big lift; it will enable the meter manufacturers to be busy and enhance their capacity. We were even agitating for 70 per cent local content.
“The potential is there for the local manufacturers, but the capacity utilisation is low.
“It will allow some investors to inject a high-value capital into the metering scheme, which will eventually lead to the liberalisation of metering, because there is an opportunity for consumers to pay and get meters immediately.
“Let’s pray that the implementation will be as good as the policy, because most of the time we have good regulation, the implementation will be defective,’’ Balogun said.
The Momas chief said that access to foreign exchange required to source raw materials from abroad was a major challenge for local meter manufacturers.
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