Friday, February 5, 2016
Labour To Mobilise Nigerians Against New Electricity Tariff
3:54 PM
  
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The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) said it will be 
embarking on a nationwide street protest along with the Trade Union 
Congress (TUC) and civil society allies against the 45 percent increase 
in electricity tariff on Monday.
The NLC declared the new electricity tariff announced by the Federal Government of Nigeria
 unacceptable.
In a statement signed by its 
president, Ayuba Wabba, NLC said the planned protest will hold Monday, 
February 8, in Abuja and the 36 states of the federation.
“Our members have been sufficiently 
mobilized and are ready to go. If you are an electricity consumer and 
you are not happy with the bills electricity companies serve you every 
month, you are invited to join this protest rally.”, the NLC said.
According to the statement, the protest are
 scheduled to start in Abuja from the Labour House, Central Business 
District at 8.00am before moving to the NERC head office at Adamawa 
Plaza, Plot 1099, First Avenue, Off Shehu Shagari Way, Central Business 
District. From the NERC office, they will proceed to the Abuja 
Electricity Distribution Company at Zone 4 and thereafter to the 
National Assembly.
Wabba explained that the protest have 
become inevitable following the inability of the labour unions to get 
the Federal Government to rescind its decision to hike electricity 
tariff.
NLC noted that due process in the extant 
laws for such increment was not followed in consonance with section 76 
of the Power Sector Reform Act, 2005;
“There has been no significant improvement 
in service delivery. Moreover, the fact is that most consumers are not 
metered in accordance with the signed privatization Memorandum of 
Understanding (MOU) of November 1, 2013, which stipulates that within 18
 months gestation period, all consumers are to be metered;
“There is a subsisting Court Order dated 
28th May, 2015 by Justice Mohammed Idris of the Federal High Court, 
Ikoyi, Lagos, in the case of Toluwani Yemi-Adebiyi versus NERC & 
Orders, that there shall be no further increment until the determination
 of the substantive suit.
“• The increment at this time negates the 
present biting and prevailing economic recession vis-a-vis an attempt to
 further impoverish the poor masses.” NLC stated.
The labour union explained that, “We 
stakeholders, on Increment in Electricity Tariff (a broad coalition) met
 in Lagos on January 28, 2016 and issued a communiqué demanding an 
“immediate halt of this morbid and exploitative intention” failure of 
which would lead to:• Mobilization of all Nigerians to resist the new 
tariff; Mass protests/picketing of all DISCOs’ offices across the 
country; Directing all consumers to reject any bill with the new tariff 
and other actions necessary.”
It said, “Earlier, Nigerians had 
spontaneously moved to the streets in Lagos, Benin, Kano and other 
cities when NERC announced this increase in the last quarter of 2015.
“At the level of the Congress, we had 
issued a communiqué on December 22, 2015 rejecting this tariff hike and 
demanding that pre-paid metres be made available free to all consumers.
“We noted that Distribution Companies “have
 continued to exploit Nigerians by estimated billing system for the 
majority of consumers, while deliberately refusing to make available 
prepaid metres.
“We reached out to core government 
constituencies including the Minister of Power, the leadership of the 
National Assembly and NERC, all in an effort to find an amicable 
resolution through the quality of the logic of argument and practical 
realities on ground which include the incontrovertible fact that even 
before this increment, Nigeria paid the highest tariff per kilo-watt in 
Africa and contiguous regions. We pay much higher than Egypt and 
countries with stronger economies.
“With the increment, this disparity will 
not only be substantial, it will kill Nigerians and businesses. The 
saddest part of it all is that there is no co-relation between the 
quality of service delivery and this tariff.
“The implementation of this tariff is an 
act of lawlessness because there is a subsisting restraining court order
 on further increases. And yet we are in a democracy.
“The point must also be made that the 
immediate past government in its twilight approved a whoppingN18.26 
billion for these companies in order to boost electricity supply. Yet 
there is nothing to show for it. A privatised sector that continues to 
parasite on government with insignificant benefit to Nigerians is at 
best a leech on our economy and should be interrogated.
“We would want to make the point that this 
tariff increase is only intended to protect the investment of a select 
few and not to serve the interest of other Nigerians. In light of all of
 the above, this increase is illegal, unfair, unjustifiable and a 
further exploitation of the already exploited Nigerians.
“We also said the challenges in the economy
 which have adversely reduced the purchasing power of ordinary Nigerians
 and slowed down businesses including manufacturing have made this 
increase unsustainable and unjustifiable.”
Recall that, the Nigerian Electricity 
Regulatory Commission, NERC; had in December last year announced a new 
electricity tariff regime that has various rates of increase in energy 
charges for consumers across the country.
The commission also announced the discontinuation of fixed power charges for all classes of electricity 
consumers. However, electricity consumers are to pay for what they 
consume.
With this development, power distribution 
companies would no longer charge their customers monthly fixed charges 
that require electricity consumers to pay an approved amount of money 
not minding whether electricity was consumed during the billing period.













