Nigeria's grid collapses again
Nigeria's creaking grid collapsed for the fifth time this year in the early hours of Monday, highlighting the country's inability to provide reliable power after raising tariffs for wealthier consumers by 230 per cent only two weeks ago.
Nigeria's electricity
regulator on April 3 approved an increase in tariffs for the 15 per cent of
consumers who use the most power, as the government tries to reduce the $2.6
billion worth of subsidies for the sector.
The head of the Nigerian electricity regulator, Musiliu Oseni, defended the tariff increase saying it will mean an end to grid collapses and bring investment into the sector.
National supply data
showed the supply of power via the grid fell to around 50MW early on Monday
from 4,020MW the previous day.
The Transmission Company
of Nigeria, which oversees the grid, has not yet issued a statement on the
cause of the latest near complete halt to the supply of power via the grid and
did not immediately reply to an inquiry.
Gas shortages and
vandalism have triggered grid collapses in the past.
The new rate raises the
tariff to 225 naira per kilowatt hour from a maximum of 68 naira for about 15 per
cent of customers, who will enjoy a maximum of 20 hours of supply daily.
Some analysts have
criticised the tariff increase because it pushes more power to wealthier
consumers from the meagre 4,000MW available for distribution to over 200
million Nigerians from the grid.
Nigeria, Africa's most
populous nation, faces perennial power shortages that have contributed to years
of weak economic growth.
Its electricity sector
faces a myriad of problems, including a failing grid, gas shortages, high debt
and vandalism. The country has 12,500 megawatts of installed capacity, but
produces only about a quarter of that, leaving many Nigerians reliant on
expensive diesel-powered generators.
Reuters

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