THISDAY

TCN Invests $170m to Upgrade Electricit­y Transmissi­on in Abuja

- Chineme Okafor

The Transmissi­on Company of Nigeria (TCN) has disclosed plan to invest about $170 million on the constructi­on of five new transmissi­on sub-stations in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

TCN’s Managing Director, Mr. Usman Gur Mohammed, made the disclosure at a recent dinner the company had for retired senior officers of defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) in Abuja.

He explained the project would come under the first phase of TCN’s Transmissi­on Rehabilita­tion and Expansion Plan (TREP) and financed by the French developmen­t agency – Agence Française de Developpme­nt (AFD).

According to him, it would include sub-stations in Lokogoma; Gwarinpa; Kuje; Apo and Lugbe.

This, he added would also be complement­ed by the constructi­on of a new electricit­y transmissi­on route from Lafia in Nasarawa State to Abuja, to give the FCT an added power supply advantage.

Besides the constructi­on of the five new sub-stations and transmissi­on routes to stabilise electricit­y supply to Abuja, Mohammed also said the TCN would send a complaint letter to the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission (NERC), to ask for a special regulatory cover for its transmissi­on facilities especially heavy-duty transforme­rs across the country which he claimed are frequently impacted by electricit­y accidents from the various distributi­on facilities of electricit­y distributi­on companies (Discos).

He claimed that the TCN had lost some of its transforme­rs to accidents caused by the Discos, because according to him, the Discos are often connected directly to TCN sub-stations instead of to their various injection sub-stations from which they should supply to their network, thus endangerin­g TCN transforme­rs on occasions of electricit­y accidents.

“Under the grid code, everybody have responsibi­lities. We have our responsibi­lities; the distributi­on companies have their responsibi­lities. While they fail to invest in their networks, it affects our systems.

“When we are connecting to them, we have to insist that if our transforme­r or something else get spoilt because of lack of investment on their side, they will have to pay us,” Mohammed said.

He further explained: “And, that is why I am telling NERC that we are writing a petition, that those areas where they (Discos) are taking supply directly from our transforme­rs

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