Sule Abdulaziz, Managing Director and CEO of Nigeria’s Transmission Company, has revealed that Nigeria provides 24-hour electricity to neighbouring Togo and Benin amid current talks in the country following a recent power grid collapse.
“We supply Togo, Benin, and Niger. They get power from Nigeria on a 24-hour basis, and they are paying for it,” Abdulaziz stated during an appearance on Channels TV’s Politics Tonight program on Sunday.
Speaking on why many Nigerians do not enjoy uninterrupted power, he responded, “Nigerians are getting 24-hour supply, but it’s not everyone. Those in Band A receive 20-22 hours of power supply.”
Abdulaziz expressed optimism about achieving constant electricity supply across Nigeria within five years.
“I am telling you we can get a consistent power supply in less than five years. The new minister is looking at the problems; he is not doing cosmetic showdowns,” he said.
He mentioned that the National grid collapses do not necessarily originate from the TCN.
“If there is a system collapse, it doesn’t mean all the problems are from TCN; it can be from generation, it can be from transmission, it can be from distribution. Some of these can also come from disaster. You cannot say it is the fault of the TCN just like that. TCN are in charge of managing the grid,” he said.
Abdulaziz also clarified the distinction between the TCN and the now-defunct National Electric Power Authority (NEPA).
“People have to understand the difference between the TCN and Nepa. When we were Nepa, we were the ones doing the generation, transmission, distribution, and marketing.
“But now we are only doing one leg, which is transmission. But there could be issues in all other sectors, which are the generation and the distribution. But people only know Nepa, and they think TCN is NEPA, and they put the blame on TCN,” he stated.
The TCN boss blamed infrastructure challenges for the incessant collapse of the national grid, noting that much of the equipment is outdated.
“Most of the equipment we use is over 50 years old,” he lamented.