The Federal Government says plans are ongoing to increase electricity tariffs “over the next few months”.
It, however, said that the planned increase needed to be balanced by subsidies for less-affluent electricity users.
According to Bloomberg, the Special Adviser to President Bola Tinubu on Energy, Olu Verheijen, gave this hint at the Africa Heads of State Energy Summit in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, where Nigeria presented a $32 billion plan to expand electricity connections by 2030.
According to the presidential aide, Nigeria is trying to resolve the transition to a cost-efficient but cost-reflective tariff to attract private investors.
She said: “One of the key challenges we’re looking to resolve over the next few months is transitioning to a cost-efficient but cost-reflective tariff.
“So the sector generates revenue required to attract private capital, while also protecting the poor and vulnerable.”
This comes one year after the federal government approved a threefold increase in electricity tariff for customers under Band A
Trending
- Gabon Swears In Ex-Junta Chief Oligui As President
- NNPCL: EFCC investigates Mele Kyari, 13 others over $2.9bn refinery funds
- President Trump posts AI-generated photo of himself as pope
- Sterling Bank Introduces AlwaysOn, Offering Nigerians Up to ₦1 Million Monthly
- VP Shettima Arrives In Libreville for Gabon’s President-elect Inauguration
- $290m Fine: Meta Threatens To Shut Facebook, Instagram In Nigeria
- Fubara Returns To Port Harcourt After Two-Week Vacation Overseas
- ‘We want Fubara’ — women walk out of Remi Tinubu’s empowerment programme in Rivers