Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) condemned the proposed hike in electricity tariffs by July 1st, noting that the plan is both insensitive and callous and reflects an organised indifference to the well-being of consumers, especially, the poor ones.
The NLC noted that with the recent policies of the government in the area of the removal of petrol subsidy and the unification of Naira exchange rates, many Nigerians are already struggling and finding it difficult to cope with the current reality.
An official of the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) confirmed that a review of Multi- Year Tariff Order (MYTO) is ongoing and will be implemented from July 1.
The senior official from the NERC said: “The commission is mandated to review the tariff twice in a year. It is statutory. Until the outcome, which one cannot presume, I cannot say it will be an upward or downward review as it could go either way,” she said.
The major determinants of the review are mostly inflation rate, Naira/Dollar exchange rate, and the price of gas.
On his part, NLC President Joe Ajaero in a statement said: “The plan to increase electricity tariff by 40 per cent by July 1st is both insensitive and callous and reflects an organised indifference to the well-being of consumers, especially, the poor ones.
“The massive increase is explained away as a response to the over 100 per cent increase in the pump price of premium motor spirit (pms).
“Details reveal a movement in inflation from 16.9% to 22.41 (threatening to needle 30), and a shift in exchange rate from N441 to N750.
“We believe not even these figures are a justification for this reckless proposed tariff increase.
“The issue of capacity to pay and quality of service delivery are not only germane but superior to any rationalisation by market logic.
“The service providers in spite of sundry support have not been able to meet the threshold of 5000 megawatts.
“Coupled with this, there have been surreptitious increases without notice in violation of statutes.
“The inherent risk in the new regime of tariff is that there is no control, implying that by August, consumers will pay new rates.
“The other risk is that by the time other product or service-rendering entities come up with their new prices or rates, the ordinary person would have been compacted into dust.
“We would want to advise apostles of the market who have called NLC all sorts of names to check their conscience.
“The rate at which they are going is highly combative and combustible. With contemplation of payment of school fees in tertiary institutions and increases in privately-owned ones in addition to other costs/tariffs on the way, life in Nigeria could truly be Hobbesian.
“The market economies which the market fundamentalists seek to emulate, have in place socio-economic safeguards which we do not have.
“In light of this, our advice is that this proposed tariff hike should be shelved for our collective safety.”