Home Electricity FG pledges varsities, hospitals electricity subsidy for Band A feeders

FG pledges varsities, hospitals electricity subsidy for Band A feeders

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The Federal Government said it would start subsidising electricity in universities and health institutions under Band A feeders.

The Minister of Power, Chief Adebayo Adelabu disclosed this on Saturday when he appeared on a programme aired by different radio stations in Ibadan, Oyo State.

Adelabu said the government would not subsidise private businesses operating in these universities and hospitals.

After the Federal Government removed subsidies from customers categorised as Band A and upgraded their daily electricity supply to a minimum of 20 hours daily, universities and public hospitals cried out that their bills had skyrocketed.

Recently, the College of Medicine of the University of Lagos and the Lagos University Teaching Hospital cried out over what they described as an outrageous electricity bill charged by the Eko Electricity Distribution Company for May.

The institutions said they were jointly presented with a bill of about N280 million for May instead of the less than N100 million they used to pay.

The monthly bill given to UNILAG jumped from N180 million to N300 million.

The Federal University of Technology, Akure had its bill raised from N20 million to N60 million by the Ibadan DisCo.

At the University of Benin, the tariff was hiked from N80 million monthly to N250 million.

The Vice-Chancellor of Babcock University, Ogun State, Prof. Ademola Tayo, said in July that the institution paid N300 million as electricity tariff in May, lamenting that the high electricity tariff was a great threat to quality education in Nigeria.

Speaking of this, the minister said the government is aware that universities and hospitals are having challenges paying the bills.

“We know they are development institutions, they are social institutions. However, inside health and educational institutions, private businesses are hiding. These people charge their customers commercially and they expect to be subsidised because they are located within the territories of these institutions.

“We said no, go and do a proper search and meter everybody. For the ones that are properly health and education-related, we are ready to subsidise them, even if they are on Band A. We are compiling our data, DisCos will collect a certain amount and the government will pay the balance. But we must get the data right so that we are not subsidising a private business that is charging its customers commercially. That will be an abnormal profit and it is unfair”, he stated.

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