Audio By Carbonatix
The Africa Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP) says the delay by the Public Utilities Regulatory Commission (PURC) to communicate new tariffs could frustrate consumers.
PURC announced in February this year that the new electricity tariff would take effect from July 1, 2019, following a mandatory major tariff review consultations in January this year.
In a press statement issued on February 27, 2019, the Commission explained that its decision to postpone the announcement of the tariff to July was “…due to critical emerging issues in the sector which are expected to affect the final tariff setting. Amongst others, the emerging issues are related to the planned relocation of the Karpowership Plant resulting in fuel switch savings from Heavy Fuel Oil (HFO) to Natural Gas. Secondly, reductions in the price of natural gas are anticipated due to ongoing negotiations by government. These matters are outside the purview of PURC but their outcomes are likely to have measurable impact on the Commission's decision.”
The shift in the effective date of the major tariff was, therefore, to allow the Commission to accommodate the important variables it expected would influence the tariff.
“The practice has been that new tariffs are announced at least two weeks prior to effective date. This is necessary to allow stakeholders to adjust their systems and budget to accommodate the new tariff. However, today is the 19th of June (11 days shy of the proposed 1st July tariff effective date), yet the tariff has not been announced,” ACEP noted in the release signed by its Executive Director, Benjamin Boakye.
ACEP says it does not expect the Commission to, within few days to the effective date, ambush electricity consumers with the new tariff which holds about 90% chance of upward adjustment.
“This is because doing so potentially distorts the plans of consumers significantly, particularly the business community whose investment decisions have been held hostage by the uncertainty in the expected tariff adjustment level. ACEP’s interactions with key consumers of electricity show that anxiety is already high within the business community and expects the Commission to be fully sensitive to the realities on the ground in order not to inject unnecessary shock into plans of consumers and, by extension, the economy,” ACEP said.
ACEP has, therefore, called on the Commission to communicate to consumers what its intentions are, as to whether it will extend the effective date of the tariff or immediately announce the tariff, to allow consumers time to absorb and adjust to the changes.
Latest Stories
-
‘Physically attractive’ comment sparks outrage – FIDA accuses judge of gender bias
5 minutes -
IMF revises Ghana’s growth rate for 2026 to 4.8%, inflation at 7.9% despite global economic pressures
28 minutes -
Energy Minister John Jinapor likely to suspend some fuel margins today
40 minutes -
King Charles will not meet Epstein survivors on US visit
54 minutes -
Fela makes history as first African to be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
1 hour -
Nigerian music industry wasn’t fair to me – Kcee opens up
1 hour -
Why I changed my mind not to womanise – Singer Lojay
1 hour -
Nollywood actor, Patrick Doyle loses newborn baby daughter
2 hours -
He campaigned on it – Catholic Bishops’ president challenges Mahama on LGBTQ priority claim
2 hours -
LGBTQ law not important to him – Bishop Gyamfi accuses Mahama of undermining public will
2 hours -
LGBTQ Bill: You can’t trade jobs for values – Bishop Gyamfi rejects govt’s priority argument
2 hours -
Dangerous signal – Bishop Gyamfi warns Mahama is not taking LGBTQ bill seriously
3 hours -
Founder of China’s Evergrande pleads guilty to fraud
3 hours -
Rolls-Royce launches new two-seater electric car
3 hours -
Put bill before him, he will sign – Yilo Krobo MP backs Mahama on LGBTQ+ law
6 hours