Wednesday, November 6

Lai Mohammed Apologises for Worsening Power Situation

The Federal Government has apologized to the people of Nigeria over hardships experienced as a result of worsening power situation

in the last few months, blaming the prevailing situation on gas failure, sabotage and vandalisation of power infrastructure.

Minister of Information and Culture, Mr. Lai Mohammed, said in Abuja on Friday that all efforts were being made to rectify the situation and ensure a gradual improvement in the power situation.

He said, ”There will be a decent improvement in the power situation from this weekend, thanks to ongoing remedial efforts that will double the current power supply to 4,000MW. Getting back to the 5,074MW all-time high that was reached earlier will take a few more weeks”.

The minister claimed that the routine maintenance by the Nigeria Gas Company had affected the
supply of gas to power stations, forcing down power supply from a high of 5,074MW to about 4,000MW and that a combination of unsavoury incidents further crashed the power supply to about half that figure.

”The vandalisation of the Forcados export pipelines forced oil companies to shut down, making it impossible for them to produce gas. Then, workers at the Ikeja power distribution companies, who were protesting the disengagement of some of their colleagues after they failed the company’s competency test, apparently colluded with the National Transmission Station in Osogbo to shut down transmission, he added.

He said, ”Finally, the unfortunate strike by the unions at the NNPC, over the restructuring of the
Corporation, shut down the Ita Orogun Power Station, the biggest in the country. Due to these factors, only 13 out of the 24 power stations in the country are currently functioning. It is this same kind of unsavoury situation that has affected fuel supply and subjected Nigerians to untold hardship”.

Mohammed strongly condemned the situation in which some Nigerians, under the guise of the various unions in the oil and gas sector or sheer vandalisation, would continuously sabotage the country’s power infrastructure.

”The bitter truth is that for as long as these groups of Nigerians continue to sabotage the power infrastructure, Nigerians cannot enjoy a decent level of power supply. We therefore admonish all Nigerians who may be agitating for their rights in whatever form to refrain from any action that will further hurt the same people they claim to be protecting,” he said.

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