Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Electric infrastructure suppliers demand price revision as inflation drives up costs

By Eyasu Zekarias, Photo by anteneh aklilu

Domestic manufacturers supplying Ethiopia’s electrical infrastructure are urging the Ethiopian Electric Utility (EEU) to revise its pricing structure, citing the severe impact of soaring inflation, rising import costs, and currency fluctuations on their operations.

The call for price adjustments was made during a recent consultative forum organized by the EEU, which brought together local manufacturers and suppliers of key electrical components such as transformers, cables, and conductors. Participants voiced growing concern that the current pricing model is unsustainable in the face of escalating production expenses.

“The current inflation in the country has become more severe than we anticipated. The price of our raw materials is increasing at an alarming rate, making the existing pricing approach unsustainable,” one manufacturer stated. Many noted that most inputs are imported, and the combined effect of fluctuating exchange rates and higher transportation costs has significantly raised their production costs.

Another supplier emphasized the need for a comprehensive revision of the EEU’s pricing system, explaining, “When we set the prices for our products, we take into account everything from the cost of raw materials to profit margins and other operational expenses. However, the constant fluctuations in the exchange rate are having a major impact.”

Manufacturers also called for greater transparency and responsiveness from the EEU regarding price adjustments. “The EEU should have a clear assessment and price schedule in place. With the current high inflation affecting the country, their response to these price hikes is slow, which is severely impacting us manufacturers,” a participant asserted.

In response, the Ethiopian Electric Utility stated that it considers all factors related to domestically produced electrical infrastructure inputs, including the cost of raw materials. The utility acknowledged the reliance on imports and affirmed that costs incurred from procurement to delivery are taken into account.

“Our pricing has historically considered domestic production costs, profit margins, and other operational expenses. Price revisions are typically made when significant changes occur, such as fluctuations in fuel prices or currency exchange rates. Our ‘flat rate’ pricing is mostly reviewed annually. We hope to work on this in a clearer manner,” the EEU said.

Hot this week

Production up, but the ‘cost’ variable weighs heavily

Production is up in 2021 for the Italian agricultural...

Luminos Fund’s catch-up education programs in Ethiopia recognized

The Luminos Fund has been named a top 10...

Well-planned cities essential for a resilient future in Africa concludes the World Urban Forum

The World Urban Forum (WUF) concluded today with a...

Private sector deemed key to unlocking AfCFTA potential

The private sector’s role is vital to fully unlock...

የፈረንሳዩ ካርፉር የኢትዮጵያን ገበያ ለመቀላቀል የመሰማሪያ ሞዴል ማዘጋጀቱን አስታወቀ

የዓለማችን ግዙፍ የጅምላና ችርቻሮ ንግድ ኩባንያ ካርፉር በቅርቡ ወደ...

በኢትዮጵያ የሚገኙ ሱዳናውያን በጦርነትና በገቢ እጦት መካከል 300 ዶላር ቅጣት እየተጠየቁ ነው

ተባለበኢትዮጵያ የሚገኙ በጦርነት የተፈናቀሉ ሱዳናውያን፣ ከሰብዓዊ እና ከኑሮ...

Cotton Village Ethiopia: Pioneering Regenerative Cotton for Sustainable Growth

The Cotton Village Initiative (CVI), also known as Cotton...

Debt restructuring, currency challenges highlighted in IMF’s review

An International Monetary Fund (IMF) delegation is currently in...

COMESA court of justice rules in favor of Ethiopian lawyer, invalidates judge appointment

In a landmark ruling with significant ramifications, the Common...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img