Business
TCN Seeks Regulation To Protect Transformers
Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) has called for a regulation by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) to protect its transformers in the event of any damage caused by Electricity Distribution Companies (DisCos).
TCN’s Managing Director, Mr Mohammed Usman made the call in an interview with journalists in Abuja yesterday.
Mohammed said the inability of the DisCos to invest in their distribution infrastructure had resulted in the use of some of TCN’s transformers by DisCos to supply electricity.
This, he said, had sometimes resulted in the breakdown of the transformers.
“Under the grid code, everybody has their responsibility; we have our responsibility; and distribution companies have their responsibility.
“And where they fail to invest, it is not our problem that they fail to invest, but their lack of investment is affecting our system when we are connected to them.
“And that is why I am telling NERC that we are writing a petition regarding those areas where they are taking supply directly from our transformers because they have failed to build their own injection sub-station.
“We are going to ask NERC to put it as a rule to say that if our transformers get spoilt because of the DisCos’ failure to invest, they are going to compensate us.
“Because if they connect directly from our station without passing through their injection station; if there is a fault on their line, it will hit our transformers directly.
“Sometimes, they will come and say the fault has been cleared and TCN will restore supply, while they did not truly clear the fault and then that will scatter our transformer.
“We are saying, if such thing happens, we are going to write a petition asking NERC to do a regulation that will protect us.’’
Mohammed added that given the presence of several uncompleted transmission projects by some contractors in the past, TCN management was taking over the expired contracts.
“You know those contracts actually, have expired; most of those contracts are contracts for supply and installation of 330Kv sub-station and they are supposed to last for 18 months.
“The one in Damaturu was awarded in 2006, it is about 12 years, this contract has expired.
“The problem TCN had in the past was that it awarded contracts to incompetent companies, but under current TCN management we have changed the way we do contract now.
Business
Niger Delta Investment Summit Targets $5bn Inflows, 500,000 Jobs
Business
NPA Targets N1.489tn Revenue In 2026
Business
NPF Disburses ?21.68m To Fallen Heros’ Families …Reinforce Welfare Commitment
-
Editorial2 days agoDomesticate FG’s Exit Benefit Scheme
-
News2 days agoRSU Unveils Five-Year Strategic Dev Plan …Calls For Collective Commitment To Institutional Excellence
-
News2 days agoDHQ Confirms Deaths Of Terrorists, Soldiers In Borno Attack
-
News2 days agoTinubu Commissions Bayelsa Gas Turbine, Other Projects Today
-
Rivers2 days ago
Dep Gov Seeks Collaboration, Transparency Between RIVCHPP, PHCMB
-
Business2 days ago
Niger Delta Investment Summit Targets $5bn Inflows, 500,000 Jobs
-
Nation2 days ago
Rumuji Youth Leader Condemns Protest, Disowns Alleged Government Empowerment Claim
-
Nation2 days agoHaniel Jack Foundation Awards Five Rivers Indigenes Scholarship
