By Adekunle Adekoya
On Wednesday, the national power grid managed by the Transmission Company of Nigeria, TCN, collapsed for the 11th time in 2024, leaving the country in complete blackout. Some people said that it wasn’t the 11th but the 12th time, on the average, a collapse of once a month.
Data from the National System Operator, NSO, showed that as of 2pm that day, none of Nigeria’s 26 power plants was on the grid.
Confirming the collapse of the grid,
Abuja DisCo, Eko DisCo and Ikeja Electric apologised to their customers over
the failure in supply.
It is only in our country that
this shame will endure, to the consternation of all victims and nothing will
happen to anybody, not even a query. We seem so used to the negative, including
mass killings and kidnaps perpetrated by criminal gangs that we have stopped
being surprised by their occurrence.
I had written about this before,
wondering how, in a bid to simplify the problem, we don’t use one switch for
all the appliances in a building. Somehow, we have insisted that just one
switch is enough for the whole country.
I also averred that this needs a political solution, since politicians make policy which technocrats simply implement. By March, the grid had collapsed four times, and between then and now should have been ample time to look at the situation dispassionately towards generating a solution that will endure. No. All we see are just agbadas flying from one private jet to one airport terminal or the other in pursuit of things that have little to do with the welfare of the people who elected them.
What is worrisome about the
power situation is the unrelenting release of platitudes on what will be done,
can be done, but which never gets started and will never get done. It is a sign
of mega unseriousness in the management of public affairs.
A few weeks ago, the National
Bureau of Statistics released GDP growth figures, which the Presidency
celebrated. In a statement, a presidential aide reiterated the president’s
commitment to growing a trillion-dollar economy. Words that have no relation to
reality. How do you grow a trillion dollar economy without stable, reliable
electric power? Of all the power generation options available globally today,
we remain stuck somehow with only hydro and thermal options.
It is clear that there exists a
lot of potential with other options, especially solar and wind. Where are the
policy frameworks to actualise these? Zip.
Minister of Power, Adebayo
Adelabu told Nigerians that by year end, 150 MW of electricity would have been
added to the national grid.
Adelabu said this while speaking with
State House correspondents after a meeting between President Bola Tinubu and
visiting German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier.
Adelabu added: “We have
completed about 80 per cent of the pilot stage, which includes the importation,
installation, and commissioning of 10 power transformers and 10 power mobile
substations.
“These efforts have already
added 750 megawatts to our grid capacity, and by year-end, an additional 150
megawatts will be realised upon full completion of the pilot phase.”
These efforts might come to
nought if there isn’t a mindset change to deal with the single national grid.
I’m no engineer, but common sense dictates that the single national grid cannot
efficiently serve a huge area like Nigeria. We simply need to have smaller
grids, perhaps on regional basis.
If not, the 750 MW already added
and the 150 being expected, according to Adelabu, will remain shut-in due to
inadequacies of the existing grid.
In short, breaking up the grid will open up an audit of aged and obsolete equipment, which will be easier to deal with. What I think Minister Adelabu should do is to engage his engineers on blueprints for smaller, more manageable grids and get the necessary political support to actualise it. Our electricity conundrum is not insoluble; what has kept us in the dark all these years is the mindset that insists on one grid.
Most Nigerians agree that the little we generate can serve us more if
better distributed. Distribution starts with transmission. In fact, I venture
further to suggest complete privatisation of the transmission system after the
grid has been broken down. What is National Control Centre? It is not only
unneeded, but a carry-over from our experiences with military command and
control. Even then, modern militaries function better with decentralised
control systems, so long as operations are in tandem with political objectives.
One other thing being overlooked
is electricity supply based on need and demand. Apart from the Lagos-Ibadan
axis, the other part of the country that needs all the electricity it can get
is the South-East. There are clusters of home-grown industries and enterprises
in that part of the country that have thrived so far on generator power and
will do better with public electricity. All these and more are what should
inform ministerial policy initiatives on power.
Then, our state governors also
have a lot to do about this. Since removal of subsidy, far more money has flown
into state coffers than before. Let governors invest in power projects, instead
of competing to build unviable airports that gulp billions with little effect
on their states’ economies. Power projects will yield greater dividends than
airports, and most of them won’t cost as much as airports.
Now that local government
autonomy is assured by the recent Supreme Court judgment, local governments too
can weigh in and invest in power, perhaps solar or wind. We need to break out
of the binding chain of generated power with its convoluted and expensive
distribution systems and embrace embedded power. But, let the politicians put
on their thinking caps and provide the policy frameworks to make this happen.
In terms of national development, it’s morning, yet!
*Adekoya
is a commentator on public issues
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