The
Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) has said the nation’s power
generation capacity dropped from 3,959 megawatts on January 4 to 2,662
megawatts on January 22.
The Nigerian
Electricity System Operator (SO) website, a sub agency of TCN,
disclosed the figure in its daily forecast on power generation data in
Lagos yesterday.
The News
Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reported that TCN
attributed the drop to low
water levels at the hydro power stations and dearth of gas to the power
generating companies.
The TCN said
the total output of 2,662.20 megawatts from all the generation
companies yesterday had been transferred to the 11 distribution
companies across the country.
According to
the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) operational report for
January 4, the power sector hit a peak generation of 4,959 megawatts but
dropped to 2,662.20 megawatts on January 22.
NESI said
the sector recorded highest system frequency of 51.32Hz and lowest
system frequency of 48.52 Hz, while the highest and the lowest voltage recorded on Sunday were 372KV and 300KV, respectively.
An official
of TCN who preferred anonymity, said electricity generation had been
dwindling due to challenge of accessing gas by generation companies.
The official said low water levels at the country’s hydro thermal stations also contributed to the drop in generation.
He added that most hydro stations are currently confronted with low water challenges to generate energy.
The TCN
official said this often caused system collapse when the system
scrabbled to distribute energy from the grid to distribution companies
and the quantum of energy was not sufficient.
According to
him, it is a challenging period for power sector but it will get better
once the hydro swing into high water level and gas becomes available.
He
attributed the drop in generation to the attack launched against
pipeline facilities belonging to the Nigerian Petroleum Development
Company, (NPDC), on January 17 around Ugheli in Delta State.
Similarly, a
top official of Egbin Power Station, who also pleaded anonymity, said
the power plant, with a capacity of 1,320 megawatts now generates 340
megawatts due to gas constraint.
The official said the 340 megawatts Egbin generated was wheeled out to the national grid at 6a.m. yesterday.
The Minister
of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, had last Friday said
the sabotage of power assets by militants prevented Nigeria from
generating 7,000 MW of electricity.
“Today, at its most frugal, the nation’s power grid would support 6,500MW; pushed to its limit, it would carry 7,200MW.
“So it is
not true when you hear that the grid capacity is not more than 5,000MW.
It is growing every day and more projects are coming up. “We have
completed some and more are still coming up. So that is where we are,”
Mr. Fashola said at the Nextier Power Dialogue in Abuja last Friday.
The minister
said while power was out due to attacks in one axis, the expansion of
either the grid or gas supply was kept alive on another axis and hydro
power was also being expanded.
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