Times Of Swaziland: PROPOSED ELECTRICITY HIKE: IT WILL BE 32 UNITS FOR E100, IF ...

PROPOSED ELECTRICITY HIKE: IT WILL BE 32 UNITS FOR E100, IF ...
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Nhlanganiso Mkhonta Mkhonta  and Stanley Khumalo on 06/11/2024 07:28:00


MBABANE – For E100, consumers will now get only 32 units of electricity, that
is if the 25.51 per cent tariff hike is approved on February 1, 2025.
Currently, for the same amount, domestic users of electricity are getting 42
units at E100. This is because Eswatini Electricity Company (EEC) has tendered a
request to increase electricity tariffs to the regulator – Eswatini Energy
Regulatory Authority (ESERA). EEC requested for an average tariff increase of
25.51 and 27.06 per cent for 2025/26 and 2026/27, respectively. This hike
proposed by the utility, if approved, will result in the value of electricity
units depreciating significantly in 2026. The proposed increment is against the
backdrop of an 8.02 per cent tariff hike, which was implemented on April 1,
2024. The 2023/24 financial year tariff increase saw a downward spiral in the
value of units, as E100 was at the time equivalent to 47 units of electricity.
Proposed
However, following the tariff hike, the value of the electricity units at E100
became equivalent to 42 and with the proposed two-year multi-year price
determination (MYPD), for domestic users, if the proposed tariff hikes are
approved, the same money will buy 32 units in 2025/26 and then in 2026/27, it
will give a mere 24 electricity units. On the other hand, small commercial users
for the same amount currently get 36 units. However, the units are accompanied
by a E189 facility charge. With the proposed increment, their units will
decrease to 28 units, while their facility charge will increase with E10 and
tally to E199. In the subsequent year (2026), the value of units bought at E100
shall decline to 22, while the facility charge will increase to E280.
Meanwhile, for lifeline tariff customers, the amounts of units bought with E100
are currently 72; however, with the proposed 25.51 per cent, they shall decrease
to 53 and when the proposed 27.06 per cent increase, if approved, is implemented
in 2026/27, they shall decline further to 39. The projected value of units is to
be determined by the input of the public and the findings of the regulator. This
follows that as part of the process, ESERA will solicit input from the public
and interested stakeholders, to incorporate into the review.
“The public and all interested stakeholders are, therefore, invited to submit
their comments on the application for review by December 14, 2024,” said the
ESERA Chief Executive Officer (CEO),  Sikhumbuzo Tsabedze. Tsabedze said the
authority will further hold public hearings to gather comments on the review. He
said members of the public and various stakeholders are encouraged to attend the
public hearings. He said this when announcing EEC’s application for the tariff
review, during a press briefing yesterday morning, held at the Mountain View
Hotel. Tsabedze stated that EEC requests for a revenue requirement of E4 219 416
214 for the financial year 2025/26, and a revenue requirement of E4 570 140 772
for the financial year 2026/27.
“This translates to an average tariff increase of 25.51 per cent for the
financial year 2025/26 and 27.06 per cent for the financial year 2026/27,
excluding the 2.5 per cent electrification access fund levy and 15 per cent
value-added tax (VAT),” said Tsabedze. In terms of Section 5 (1) (f) of the
Energy Regulatory Act, read with Section 32 of the Electricity Act, together
with Section 5 and 6 of the Tariff Methodology, ESERA is mandated to undertake a
review, once the request is received, by November 1. The authority is expected
to announce a decision not later than February 1, of the following year, after a
three months’ review process. According to the tariff review proposal, this is
to fully cover its costs for each of the financial years being applied for. Once
approved by ESERA, the increases will be effected on April 1, 2025 and April 1,
2026 respectively.
Deducted
EEC is requesting the regulator to consider a total of approximately E11.6625
million as an over recovery to be deducted in the upcoming years’ tariffs. The
proposal is to spread these recoveries over the two-year application period as
part of the revenue requirement. The utility mentioned through its proposal that
currently, electricity prices do not cover the full costs of supplying
electricity across the various tariff categories.  “This application,
therefore, continues the migration to cost-reflective tariffs,” read the
proposal in part. The company said it recognises the impact of tariff increases
on the economy and households, especially the small businesses and the indigent.
It said this tariff proposal considers the adoption of the subsidy framework by
legislators, which includes an inclining block tariff for the company’s
lifeline customers who are considered to be low-income consumers.