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Nigeria's electricity generation increases 30% with grid upgrade

After completing a part of a major overhaul of Nigeria's generation infrastructure, the electricity output of the nation has risen by 30% in the last week.

The infrastructure is there to produce 13,000 MW, but only a third has reached the consumers. This is due to an old grid covering roughly half of the country, which forces businesses and households into expensive generators.

Sule Abdulaziz said that the Transmission Company of Nigeria had built and commissioned new substations, transmission lines, and 66 new transformers.

He said, "We built new substations as well as increased the capacity of the existing ones."

The German banks funded a 2019 agreement between Siemens and the German government to renovate transmission lines and substations for power distribution. This was to reach 7,000 MW and 11,000MW of reliable electricity by 2021. It has been faced with regulatory, logistical, and financial challenges.

Abdulaziz stated that the Federal Executive Council has approved the Siemens project for the improvement of seven existing substations.

Six projects have added 335 MW to the capacity of six substations in the pilot phase. By the end of phase two, 15 brownfield substations and 22 new substations are expected to be built.

Government funding and multilateral organizations like the World Bank, African Development Bank and World Bank also support grid improvements.

The AfDB granted the government $1.1 billion in January to improve the transmission system. A separate five-year plan of $192 million was also announced.

The electricity generation reached a record-high of 5,801.84MW on Tuesday, and was 5,590MW on Thursday. The government believes it will surpass 10,000 MW before the end of this year.

(source: Reuters)