The national energy grid crashed again on Tuesday morning, following Monday’s catastrophe. The grid collapsed on Monday at about 6:18 p.m., leaving many people in the dark.
Our correspondent’s checks showed that electricity generation plummeted from 3.87 gigawatts at 5 p.m. to 3.56GW at 6 p.m. and then to 0.00GW by 7 and 8 p.m.
Various power distribution providers have confirmed the development.
At 9:17 a.m. on Tuesday, the grid collapsed.
By 10 a.m., grid supplies had suddenly plunged to 0.00MW across all areas, sending the entire country into another round of total blackout.
This incident marks the second grid collapse in less than 24 hours, raising serious concerns about the stability of the nation’s electricity supply.
The Eko Electricity Distribution Company confirmed the system collapse, which resulted in a loss of power.
“Dear Valued Customer, kindly be informed that there was a system collapse at 09:17hrs, which has resulted in a loss of power supply across our network.
“We are currently working with our partners and hope for a speedy restoration of the grid. We will keep you updated as soon as the power supply is restored,” the company stated.
The spokesperson for the Transmission Company of Nigeria, Ndidi Mbah, did not respond to messages and calls from our correspondent.
Power supply was distributed across several distribution companies (DisCos), with Abuja allocated 44MW, Benin 35MW, Eko 62MW, Enugu 40MW, Ibadan 85MW, Ikeja 72MW, Jos 10MW, Kaduna 15MW, Kano 20MW, Port Harcourt 23MW, and Yola 11MW.
Speaking to our correspondent about the repeated collapses, the Executive Director of the Electricity Consumer Protection Advocacy Centre, Princewill Okorie, expressed regret that the grid continues to collapse despite the increase in electricity tariffs.
Okorie lamented that unmetered customers would still be charged for the period of the collapse, questioning what the government is doing to prevent such incidents.


