Pay nothing or report it, because the government says free power meters mean actually free, and anyone shaking customers down is heading for court.
The government draws a hard line
The government draws a hard line
- Alright, the Federal Government flatly told electricity distribution companies and installers to stop charging customers anything for meters.
- Any DisCo staffer or installer fishing for cash is getting prosecuted, not warned.
- This was not a memo leak; it was said out loud, in public.
- The message dropped during an on-site check of newly imported smart meters.
- Adebayo Adelabu showed up at APM Terminals in Apapa, Lagos.
- He was received by Emmanuel Oshoba at the Apapa Port Command of the Nigerian Customs Service.
- The meters came in under the World Bank-funded Distribution Sector Recovery Programme.
- The instruction was simple, installation must cost consumers zero naira.
- Any money request, direct or sneaky, counts as an offence.
- Another batch of about 500,000 smart meters just arrived.
- They sit inside a bigger plan to bring in roughly 3.4 million meters in two waves.
- Close to a million meters are already in-country, and nearly 150,000 are already installed nationwide.
- Adelabu sounded happy about the numbers but clearly annoyed by the slow pace.
- Every electricity customer qualifies, no matter the band.
- Band A, Band B, or Band C was described as a temporary sorting method, not a gate.
- The promise was universal access, not selective generosity.
- Proper metering means cleaner billing and fewer disputes.
- Consumers tend to pay more willingly when charges feel fair.
- Better payments feed liquidity back into the power sector.
- Adelabu said monitoring will follow installations end to end.
- Tip-offs from the public are officially encouraged.
- The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission and state regulators are part of the oversight web.
- A customer complaint desk is on the way for reporting extortion.
- Dirty customer records are slowing installations.
- The ministry is working with DisCos to clean addresses and customer lists.
- A register for unmetered customers is planned to speed things up.
- Confirmed cases will trigger prosecution.
- Status or rank will not save anyone involved.
- Names will be public, strictly as a warning shot to others.
- Ayo Gbeleyi said his office coordinates DISREP.
- He also sits on the boards of all 11 electricity distribution companies.
- A new order from NERC is coming into force, DisCos to allow meter installers through without games.
- Each meter is built for a particular DisCo.
- Anti-theft tech is baked in.
- A meter meant for Eko DisCo cannot magically work in Ibadan.
- Mojisola Abdul said almost 150,000 meters are already installed for free.
- She warned consumers not to hand money to anyone.
- A mobile registration push aims to install meters within three days of signup.
- Adelabu admitted that past experiences made people doubtful.
- Earlier shortages and paid installations poisoned trust.
- He said volume is no longer an issue, and free installation is non-negotiable.
- Officials spent hours mapping out fixes to old bottlenecks.
- Adelabu also checked the National Meter Test Station in Oshodi.
- Nigerian Electricity Management Services Agency tests meters before deployment.
- Nigeria still has over five million customers stuck on estimated billing, and this plan is meant to finally kill that practice.