Energy and Power
Inadequate distribution facility stalls 17,945.3mw electricity generation
There is a challenge occasioned by the lack of distribution infrastructure of the electricity generation of 17,943.5 megawatts between April 24 and May 3, 2020.
Following the inadequacies in the distribution of power, it has been revealed that unavailability of gas is responsible for the daily constraint to power generation.
The industry data obtained in Abuja on Tuesday showed that lack of distribution infrastructure stalled the generation of 17,943.5 megawatts of electricity between April 24 and May 3, 2020, adding that the lack of distribution infrastructure also prevented a large quantum of electricity generation during the 10-day review period.
NND gathered that lack of distribution infrastructure was recorded as the highest constraint to power generation on April 25 as it stalled the production of 3,125.6MW of electricity on that day.
The Advisory Power Team in the Office of the Vice President explained that the unavailability of distribution infrastructure led to high frequency issues in the system, a development that hindered the generation of power daily.
An analysis of the sector’s daily service delivery from the APT showed that on April 24, 26 and 27, the lack of distribution infrastructure halted the generation of 1,231.1MW, 2,204.7MW and 2,485.4MW respectively.
It was also observed that on April 28, no electricity was stalled by the unavailability of distribution infrastructure, rather it was only gas constraint that stopped the production of 2,371MW of power on that day.
But on April 29 and 30, distribution constraints prevented the generation of 2,292MW and 1,831.1MW respectively.
It further stalled the generation of 1,395.4MW, 1,631.5MW and 1,748.5MW on May 1, 2 and 3 respectively.
Report also said transmission infrastructure did not halt the generation of electricity for nine days, out of the 10-day review period.
The unavailability of transmission infrastructure prevented the generation of 156MW of electricity on April 25.
The Transmission Company of Nigeria had repeatedly called for the recapitalisation of power distribution companies in order to help upgrade the country’s distribution network.h
It had been contested by distribution Companies (Discos), as the power distributors had also repeatedly described transmission as the weakest link in the power value chain.
The feud between both arms of the power market prompted the intervention of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission recently (NERC).