The Guardian (Nigeria)

Fashola commission­s transmissi­on substation in Lagos

- By Tayo Oredola

IN line with the Federal Government’s policy on incrementa­l power to boost electricit­y supply in Nigeria, the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Raji Fashola, recently commission­ed a 2X60MVA, 132/33KV Transmissi­on Substation at Odogunyan, Lagos State, to boost supply at Ikorodu and its environs.

The Odogunyan substation, which was supposed to have been completed seven years ago for poor funding, the Minister said, is aimed at improving capacity and performanc­e of the Ikeja distributi­on company (Disco).

The substation, he noted, would release close to 90 megawatts (MW) of power to Ikeja Disco starting from next week, and this would allow optimum function of industries and residents around the community, since they would be catered for from a direct feeder.

This implies that there is enough capacity and redun- dancy for Ikeja Ddisco to improve the quality, quantity and stabilisat­ion of power to end-users in the area.

Fashola revealed that apart from that project, there were 90 others yet to be commission­ed, which are at various levels of operations across the country, “so we are forging ahead because we have the momentum.”

He advanced that about 805 containers of equipment, which was held at the ports for over 10 years because of failure in payment of contractor­s have been cleared, and are on site to fast track the projects on ground.

The minister noted that towards the end of the year, distributi­on would be increased because all the 131 rural electrific­ation projects have been completed nationwide, so the entire value change is being touched.

He added that “Azura is going to start operations sometimes this month or early June, and that’s 459 megawatts added to the 2,000 we already have, Afam, which is 240 megawatt is coming too, but there is low investment in the distributi­on line.”

The Managing Director (MD) of Laga Cepower, (the contractor­s of the substation constructi­on) Rhoda Afolabi mentioned funding as the major challenge citing that the project was suppose to take three years, but due to poor funding, it was extended to seven years.

Afolabi who said she couldn’t cost the project at the moment due to the long extension of it appealed to government to establish trust in the Nigerian companies to boost local content.

In his remark, the Managing Director, Transmissi­on Company of Nigeria (TCN), Usman Gur Mohammed, said there have been significan­t changes in the power value chain as generation has gone from 3,500MW to 7,000, transmissi­on from 5,500 MW to 7,124MW, and distributi­on from 3,000MW to 5,234 MW between 2015 and now.

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