Power supply across Nigeria has continued to deteriorate as the
generation has dropped massively from the celebrated 5000 megawatt
initially achieved by the power sector.
Power supply in the country has dropped by 1,647.88 megawatts from
4,447.88MW achieved on February 2, thereby worsening the rationing that
the electricity distribution companies have been subjecting consumers
to in recent days.
The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission said on Tuesday that
power supply through the national grid had dropped below 2,800MW due to
vandalism of vital electricity facilities.
The nation achieved its peak generation of 5,074.70MW on February 2, when 4,541.85MW was generated and 4,447.88MW was sent out.
The drop in generation has caused severe reduction in load allocation from the national grid to the distribution firms.
Since February 27, the Ministry of Power has not updated the data on
daily electricity generation and supply, checks by our correspondent on
Wednesday showed.
The ministry put the electricity generated on February 27 at 3,601.78MW, out of which 3,531.88MW was sent out.
Electricity generated on February 25 stood at 3,601.78MW, down from
4,245.53MW on February 22, according to data obtained from the
Presidential Task Force on Power and the Federal Ministry of Power.
Power supply to households and businesses across the country dropped on
February 25 to 3,531.88MW from 4,155.64MW on February 22.
The Eko Electricity Distribution Plc had over the weekend gave reasons
for the current power rationing and intermittent outages being
experienced in areas under its coverage in the past few weeks.
The company, in a statement signed by its Head of Corporate
Communications, Mr. Idemudia Godwin, said the instability in supply was
partly due to inadequate bulk electricity load allocation to the
company from the national grid.
It said this arose from a drop in the national generation level as a
result of incessant acts of vandalism on gas pipelines and transmission
towers.
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