List of 60 Areas In Lagos Newly Upgraded to Band A For 20 Hrs Daily Supply

. NERC Okays 60 Feeders Upgrade For EKEDC, Ups Number On Band A To 134

 

The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has approved the upgrade of 60 additional feeders of Eko Electricity Distribution Company, bringing the total to 134.

Platforms Africa reports that the upgrade follows a review of the feeders in line with their capabilities to give the customers classified under the feeder at least 20 hours of power supply daily.

The list

The feeders are Agbara Local T5, Agbara Local T6, Beecham, Medallion Data Centre, Custom 2, New Idumagbo, Federal Secretariat 33, Berkley Express, Ilubirin, Old Niger, Ajele 1, Ajele 2, Commercial, NIMASA, Apapa Mains 1, Apapa Road Local T1, Apapa Road Local T2, Amuwo Local T3, Promenade, Kirikiri Express, Causeway 1 33, Abeokuta XI, Alcove Homes, Sabo 33, New Yaba (Akangba), NRC (Akangba), UNILAG, Print Serve, Causeway 2, Psychiatric, UNILAG 1, Engineering Close, Alagbon Local T2, Alagbon Local T1, and Anifowoshe 1.

READ ALSO: NERC Under Fire As Labour, Chambers of Commerce, Consumers Reject Electricity Tariff Cut

LIST: Post UTME 2024/2025 Is Out In These Universities, Polytechnics

Meet Oluchukwu, First Nigerian To Graduate In Female British Military Academy’s History

Meet Pure Water Hawker Who Scored 309 In 2024 UTME

United Nations Institute Names Adeola Yusuf Panelist For African IDEP Event

The list also includes Anifowoshe 2, Anifowoshe 3, Fowler 1, Fowler 2, Federal Palace Express, IHS, Ademola 1, Utilita, Novatel Hotel, Lekki, and New Yaba (Akoka), NAFDAC (New Yaba).

Others are Federal Medical Store, Ladipo, LUTH Complex, Randle, Ijesha (Itire 2), LUTH, Idi Araba 33, Isolo Local, Iba 33, Ojo Local T1, Ojo Local T3, Adelabu 1 and Adelabu 2.

This was revealed in a statement by the General Manager, Corporate Communications of EKEDC, Babatunde Lasaki who displayed optimism in the Company’s capacity to accommodate more feeders in the Band A category subject to the commission’s approval. He further stated the EKEDC’s commitment to improving its services by leveraging technology and improving turnaround time on fault resolution.

“We will continue to meet our obligations to our customers by giving them power commensurate with their tariff classification. Being value-driven is one of our core values and we remain resolute in keeping to our service promise to our customers. We won’t stop until all our customers have a minimum of 20 hours daily”, Lasaki added.

The commission also announced a downward review of the tariff from N225 to N206.80 per kilowatt-hour due to changes in foreign exchange, inflationary indicators, generation and transmission costs.

Platforms Africa

Related posts

Leave a Comment