Connect with us

Business

Nigeria to export stranded power to West Africa

Published

on

Epileptic power supply may persist till 2023 – DisCos

The Transmission Company of Nigeria, TCN, has said that Nigeria will exporting excess quantum of electricity that is unutilised in the country to other other West African countries.

According to the TCN, this would increase the quantum of electricity being exported from Nigeria to the West African region.

TCN Managing Director, Usman Mohammed, disclosed this while speaking at the meeting of the joint technical working group of the West African Power Pool (WAPP) in Abuja on Monday.

Mohammed, who is also the chairman of the WAPP executive board, said power distribution companies in Nigeria were still not taking all the electricity from generation companies.

Mohammed said: “For Nigeria, if you look at the generation and what the distribution networks can take, we don’t have a shortage, we have a surplus.

“From the system point of view, we cannot say Nigeria has a shortage, the excess we have, we can send to other parts of West Africa but we need to have some few things put in place. One of such is the synchronisation so that we can actually export energy from Nigeria to West Africa.”

Read also: AfDB commits $410m to power transmission projects in Nigeria

It would be recalled that the Federal Government had said that about 2,000 megawatts of electricity had been stranded over time due to the inability of the Discos to distribute the additional quantum of energy to domestic power users.

Mohammed also stated that apart from selling power to other countries of West Africa and earning foreign exchange from such, the expected expansion and synchronisation of the region’s electricity lines could help expand Nigeria’s generation capacity, adding that the meeting of the WAPP executives was to advance the grid synchronisation programme.

He said: “We are holding a meeting for the synchronisation of the interconnections between the various countries. The intention is to synchronise them because WAPP wants to ensure that energy flow from Nigeria to Senegal and back.

“Where energy is cheap, it can flow to where it is demanded and in that respect, we can now reduce the cost of electricity in West Africa which is the most expensive in the world.

“We want to synchronise to bring our frequency level to that of WAPP standard – 49.80 and 50.20 hertz, which is the standard all of us must look towards. When we achieve that and synchronise our networks, energy will flow across.”

Join the conversation

Opinions

Support Ripples Nigeria, hold up solutions journalism

Balanced, fearless journalism driven by data comes at huge financial costs.

As a media platform, we hold leadership accountable and will not trade the right to press freedom and free speech for a piece of cake.

If you like what we do, and are ready to uphold solutions journalism, kindly donate to the Ripples Nigeria cause.

Your support would help to ensure that citizens and institutions continue to have free access to credible and reliable information for societal development.

Donate Now