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On and Off: Nigeria’s power generation still stuck despite repair of Escravos-Lagos Pipeline

Despite claims by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) that it had repaired the Escravos-Lagos Pipeline System (ELPS) and resumed gas supply to power stations in the South-west, the country’s electricity generation was still around 3,600MW.

A section of the ELPS at Abakila in Ondo State blew up on January 2 as a result of bushfire, which disrupted gas supply to five power stations, leading to two system collapses within 24 hours.

NNPC said, in a statement, that it had completed repairs and restored gas supply to the affected power plants.

However, despite the restoration of gas supply to the plants, average power generation was approximately 3,600MW, as of Monday.

Before the fire incident last Tuesday, average generation was put at 4,300MW on the previous day by the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN), with 4,685.3MW as peak generation and 3,667.5MW as the lowest electricity generated.

This performance was above the average of 3,610MW recorded on Monday, despite the restoration of gas supply to the power stations.

The spotlight on grid operations showed that on Saturday, peak generation was put at 3,929.7MW, while the lowest generation was 173MW.

According to the operational report, a total of 3,227.90MW was sent to the grid as of 06:00hours on Sunday.

With the poor performance of the grid, electricity supply has remained epileptic across the country.

NNPC had noted that with the restoration of the ELPS and resumption of gas supply, the affected power plants with a combined generating capacity of 1,143MW would resume power generation.

The power plants include Egbin Power Plant in Lagos State; Olorunshogo Power Plant, PEL Olorunshogo and Paras Power Plant in Ogun State; and Omotosho Power Plant in Ondo State.

The Corporation, however, did not indicate when it completed the repairs and when the affected power stations would resume full operation.

Before last Tuesday’s fire incident, the country had on December 18, 2017, attained a generation peak of 5,222.3MW.

The 36-inch ELPS is a natural gas pipeline built in 1989 to supply gas from Escravos in the Niger Delta to various consumption utilisation areas.

It supplies gas to power plants in the South-west and also feeds the West African Gas Pipeline System.

Apart from the Escravos-Lagos Pipeline System, Nigeria has the Trans-Saharan gas pipeline which extends from Nigeria to Algeria and the West African Gas Pipeline which supplies gas from Nigeria’s Escravos region of Niger Delta area to Benin, Togo and Ghana. It is the first regional natural gas transmission system in sub-Saharan Africa.

By Thursday, the NNPC again shutdown Escravos after yet another incident.

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