ENUGU — The Enugu Electricity Distribution Company has announced the completion and deployment of its SuperEdge integrated billing system across its distribution network. The system is designed to reduce energy theft, improve meter accuracy, and recover billions of naira in revenue losses that have been undermining the company’s financial sustainability.
EEDC Managing Director Emeka Eze made the announcement on Monday. He said SuperEdge represents the most significant technology investment in the company’s history and will transform how it manages customer accounts, tracks electricity consumption, and bills for services delivered.
“SuperEdge is not just a billing system. It is a complete integrated platform that connects our meters, our customer database, our payment channels, and our operational management in one unified system. It will change everything about how we do business,” Eze said at the launch event.
EEDC serves customers across Enugu, Abia, Ebonyi, and Anambra states. The company has struggled with some of the highest aggregate technical and commercial losses among Nigeria’s electricity distribution companies. Energy theft, meter tampering, and unpaid bills have combined to deprive EEDC of revenue needed to maintain and expand its network.
How SuperEdge Works
SuperEdge uses smart metering data to detect anomalies in consumption patterns that indicate energy theft or meter tampering. When the system identifies a suspicious pattern, it automatically flags the account for field investigation. This replaces the manual inspection process that was slow, expensive, and often ineffective.
In addition, the system integrates with multiple payment channels including bank transfers, mobile money, USSD codes, and point-of-sale terminals. Customers can pay for electricity through whatever channel is most convenient for them, reducing the friction that previously led many customers to delay or avoid payment.
Furthermore, SuperEdge generates automated billing statements that clearly show consumption, previous balance, charges, and payment history. The transparency is expected to reduce disputes between EEDC and customers who previously could not verify the accuracy of their bills.
Industry Significance
EEDC’s deployment of SuperEdge is being watched closely by other Nigerian electricity distribution companies. Nigeria’s power sector has suffered from chronic underinvestment partly because distribution companies lack the revenue to fund network improvements. Reduced losses through better billing could change this dynamic.
The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission said it will monitor EEDC’s financial performance over the next 12 months to assess the impact of SuperEdge on revenue recovery. If the results are positive, NERC may encourage or require other distribution companies to adopt similar systems.
Customers in EEDC’s coverage area have responded with cautious optimism. Many said they have long complained about estimated billing and disputed charges. They said SuperEdge’s promise of accurate, transparent billing is welcome but they want to see the system deliver real improvements before changing their assessment of the utility.
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