REASONS
 NIGERIA ELECTRICITY REGULATORY COMMISSION AND ELECTRICITY DISTRIBUTION COMPANIES MUST SUSPEND HIKE 
IN ELECTRICITY 
TARIFF                                                                                                                 
 
The
 Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission, NERC, in conjunction with 
Electricity Distribution Companies in Nigeria, popularly called DISCOS, introduced a 45% hike in
 electricity tariff with effect from February 1, 2016. The argument of 
NERC and DISCOS  for this  latest outrageous hike in electricity tariff 
is that it would bring about enhancement in service delivery and 
customers' satisfaction. However, this reason advanced by NERC and 
DISCOS does not hold water in view of the fact that past increases in 
electricity tariff never brought about corresponding increase in 
quantity of power supply in Nigeria, enhancement in service delivery and
 customers' satisfaction. 
Whatever
 reasons NERC and DISCOS have for the current hike in electricity tariff, the 
reality on ground remains that it is a wrong step at the wrong time and 
should not have come in the first place. Here are reasons NERC DISCOS 
must suspend the latest anti-people and outrageous 45% hike in 
electricity tariff. 
The
 latest hike in electricity tariff by electricity regulators in Nigeria 
is an unlawful act and tantamounts to a contempt of court order. Justice
 Mohammed Idris of the Federal High Court, Lagos, had on May 28, 2015 
directed NERC to suspend all actions relating to any increment in 
electricity tariff pending the hearing and final determination of a suit
 filed by a lawyer on the matter. That NERC has gone ahead to increase 
electricity tariff in face of a pending suit on the matter is the height
 of disobedience against the law of Nigeria.
Currently, electricity distributions companies have not metered millions of electricity consumers in Nigeria. They overbill consumers indiscriminately without relying on electricity meters. Nigerians are already over-paying DISCOS for electricity in the country. The issue of hike in power tariff should only become a matter of discussion and perhaps, consideration when electricity supply improves and consumers metered. 
Nigeria
 is perhaps, the only country in the world where consumers pay for 
services not delivered and enjoyed. The challenge of power generation 
and supply in Nigeria has been with us for decades. The reality is that 
there has never been any time since independence of Nigeria in 1960, 
when Nigerians enjoyed sufficient and uninterrupted electricity supply. 
Many Nigerians have paid  electricity authorities in the country for 
supplying them darkness and this should not be allowed to continue.
Many
 Nigerians are already facing serious financial challenges and find it 
difficult to meet their basic needs as a result of the dwindling 
economic fortune of their country in the face of drastic fall in price 
of crude oil, their country's mainstay. Thousands are losing  jobs and 
the purchasing power of millions of Nigerians have been reduced 
drastically as a result of continued decline in the value of Nigerian 
Naira vis-a-vis major international currencies. Obviously, ordinary 
Nigerians cannot afford any hike in electricity tariff now. This is not 
the best of times economically for millions of poor Nigerians.
Nigeria
 is a country where the government takes its citizens for granted by not
 consulting them before embarking on actions and policies that affect 
the them. The Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission and Electricity 
Distribution Companies did not consult widely with Nigerians, with a 
view to carrying them along and obtaining their consent before 
effecting  the current outrageous hike in electricity tariff.
Poor
 power supply is one of the key reasons the industrial/manufacturing 
sector in Nigeria remains comatose. This latest increase in electricity 
tariff, if not reversed by the government would only succeed in further 
killing industrial sector in Nigeria by stifling industries that are 
already spending humongous amounts of money  buying diesel and other 
petroleum products for production and take away what could have remained
 as their profits. The ultimate consequence of this would be shut down 
of several production outfits in the country, more job losses for 
Nigerians and increase rate in crime and other social vices in the land.
Every
 free market economy should be regulated by the forces of demand and 
supply. The former Power Holding Company of Nigeria was privatised by 
the Federal Government of Nigeria in 2013. Power distribution in the 
country has been in the hands of private distribution companies 
popularly known as DISCOS. The various DISCOS in Nigeria should provide 
sufficient electricity supply for consumers. Power generation and 
distribution in Nigeria now hovers between 4500 and 5000 megawatts. This
 is grossly inadequate for millions of private, commercial and 
industrial  consumers in Nigeria. It therefore makes no logical sense 
that electricity tariff is being increase in Nigeria when supply is 
still very low. Nigerians CANNOT afford to pay more for a service in 
short supply to them and almost out of reach from many.
The
 Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission and  DISCOS cannot be said to
 be acting in isolation from the government of Nigeria in this latest 
outrageous increase in electricity tariff. To lend credence to this 
view, reacting to the mass nation-wide protests by the Nigerian Labour 
Congress as a result of the hike in electricity tariff, the Nigerian 
Minister of Power, Babatunde Fashola  describes latest increase in 
electricity tariff as ''a painful pill Nigerians MUST (emphasis mine) 
swallow''. It is therefore obvious that the federal government of 
Nigeria is behind this inhuman, unlawful and anti-masses hike in 
electricity price to further strangulate millions of Nigerians who are 
already maligned economically and further impoverished them. While 
looking for alternative  ways and avenues to generate revenue for the 
country as a result of the fall in the fall of crude oil, the federal 
government of Nigeria MUST be careful not to create more problems and 
destroy the country's economy further. Government is about the people 
and should therefore, listen to the people. The people of Nigeria say no
 to hike in electricity tariff and the government MUST listen and act in
 the interest of its citizens whom it claims to represent. Poor 
Nigerians should not be made to pay for decades of corruption and sins 
of the so-called 'ruling class' in Nigeria that have brought the country
 to the sorry and appalling state she finds herself in every aspect of 
her life today. 
I take responsibility for any errors that may be found in this article.
Frank, Chukwuka Osimi.
Lagos Nigeria.