The Guardian (Nigeria)

Darkness imminent as vandals down transmissi­on lines in fresh attacks

- From Kingsley Jeremiah, Abuja

NIGERIA may face worse power outages given rising attacks on transmissi­on infrastruc­ture, a developmen­t the Transmissi­on Company of Nigeria ( TCN) blamed for grid collapse.

At least four 330kv towers were, according to the government agency, vandalised on Monday along the Jos - Gombe 330kv transmissi­on line.

The vandalism, which the spokespers­on of the agency, Ndidi Mba, said occurred at about 3: 32 pm, followed over 117 132kv/ 330kv electricit­y towers vandalised across the country between January 2022 and February this year. That has left the country with multiplier economic losses with about N110 million required to fix each of the vandalised assets.

The prevailing vandalism brings a snag to the over $ 7 billion loans taken by former

President Muhammadu Buhari’s administra­tion to overhaul the transmissi­on segment of the electricit­y sector. Coming on the backdrop of rising insecurity in the country, economic crisis and worsening power supply that has plagued to about 3,000MW, the rising vandalism is happening at a time when Nigeria is yet to pay back loans borrowed to fix transmissi­on infrastruc­ture.

TCN said in a release that when the 330kv transmissi­on line tripped, its operators attempted to restore it to service, but it tripped again, prompting the dispatch of TCN lines men to trace the line to detect and rectify the fault.

While fault tracing, TCN’S engineerin­g crew discovered that towers 288,289,290, and 291 were vandalised and that some tower members were carted away.

Also, the towers had equally collapsed as a result of the incident.

Currently, bulk power supply to Gombe, Yola, and Jalingo Substation­s has been disrupted, affecting bulk power supply to parts of Yola and Jos Electricit­y Distributi­on Companies’ franchise areas, Mba said.

She said to mitigate the effect of the incident on electricit­y consumers affected by the incident TCN was trying to first backfeed Gombe through its 132kv transmissi­on line from Bauchi and subsequent­ly Ashaka, Potiskum, Damaturu and Billiri/ Savannah.

“We will do everything possible to ensure that supply is restored to the affected areas, while efforts are made to reconstruc­t the four vandalised towers,” she said.

 ?? PHOTO: AYODELE ADENIRAN ?? Publisher, Energy Times, Kayode Ekundayo( left); Commission­er for Mining and Energy, Edo State, Ojiefoh Enaholo and representa­tive of Chairman Dangote Group, Tunde Olafipo, during the presentati­on of the Business Man of the Year award to Aliko Dangote, at the maiden edition of the Energy Times award in Lagos.
PHOTO: AYODELE ADENIRAN Publisher, Energy Times, Kayode Ekundayo( left); Commission­er for Mining and Energy, Edo State, Ojiefoh Enaholo and representa­tive of Chairman Dangote Group, Tunde Olafipo, during the presentati­on of the Business Man of the Year award to Aliko Dangote, at the maiden edition of the Energy Times award in Lagos.

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