Business
NERC Wants Court’s Order On New Tariff Vacated

R-L: Operation Divisional Manager, Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC), Dr Nwenenda Mpi, Divisional Manager, Stakeholders Management (NAOC), Dan-Jumbo and Manager Stakeholders Management (NAOC), Dan Onyeaghala, addressing the members of AD-HOC committee on Ebocha Gas explosion at the Rivers State House of Assembly, last Wednesday.
The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has filed an application to discharge the exparte order restraining it from implementing the new electricity tariff scheduled to take effect from June 1.
Mr Tonbofa Ashimi, the counsel to the commission, informed the court yesterday that he had filed the application to discharge the exparte order, including a preliminary objection challenging the substantive suit.
Justice Mohammed Idris of a Federal High Court, Lagos had given the order in a ruling on an ex-parte application filed by a Lagos lawyer, Mr Toluwani Adebiyi.
Idris had restrained the NERC and the electricity distribution companies from effecting any increment in electricity tariff pending the hearing and determination of the suit.
At the resumed hearing of the case yesterday, Ashimi told the court: “My Lord, I am the counsel representing NERC and we have filed an application seeking to discharge the exparte order.
“We also filed a preliminary objection challenging the suit in its entirety.”
Responding, the plaintiff’s lawyer, Adebiyi told the court that he needed more time to reply to the application on points of law.
Justice Mohammed Idris, however, adjourned sitting to July 21 for hearing of all pending applications.
At the last adjournment on June 11, NERC had yet to employ the services of a lawyer.
Adebiyi had at the sitting urged the court to renew the order to preserve the subject matter of the suit.
“My Lord, everybody is affected. Even this court is running on generator. There is a need to stop NERC from increasing the electricity tariff because Nigerians cannot afford such and there is no justification for such increment,” he said.
Idris had in a short ruling held that “the ex-parte order remains valid and subsisting.”
According to reports, Adebiyi is seeking an order restraining the NERC from implementing any upward review of electricity tariff without a meaningful and significant improvement in power supply at least for 18 hours in a day in most communities in Nigeria.
He also wants an order restraining the NERC from foisting compulsory service charge on owners of pre-paid meters until the meters were designed to read charges per second of consumption and not on a flat rate of service not rendered or power not used.
He wants the service charge on pre-paid meters not to be enforced until there was visible efficient and reliable power supply as being enjoyed in developed countries where the idea of service charge was borrowed from.
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