You live in a hyperinflationary economy, so you should be used to this. Electricity tariffs have gone up and this is how much it’s going to cost you to keep the lights on. Of course, we are talking about the 4 hours or so in the day that you’ll actually get the electricity.
So, I guess that’s the one thing we can thank the power cuts for – the lower electricity expenses. Anyway, here it is:
On the first purchase, you get:
UNITS/kWh | Amount |
50 | 1135 |
100 | 3410 |
150 | 7390 |
200 | 11380 |
250 | 17070 |
300 | 22750 |
350 | 29290 |
400 | 35830 |
450 | 42650 |
500 | 49470 |
600 | 63110 |
700 | 76760 |
800 | 90400 |
900 | 104050 |
1000 | 117690 |
Charge per kWh | Amount | |||
First 50 | 0-50kWh | 50kWh | 22.70 | 1135 |
Next 50 | 51-100kWh | 50kWh | 45.50 | 2275 |
Next 100 | 101-200 | 100kWh | 113.80 | 7980 |
Next 100 | 201-300kWh | 100kWh | 130.80 | 13080 |
Above 400 | 136.40 |
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The post These are Zesa’s new electricity charges, effective 1 March 2023 appeared first on Techzim.