Haruna Abdulrashid
The Transmission Company of Nigeria on Tuesday disclosed that its 330kV Ugwaji–Apir double circuit transmission lines1&2, tripped due to a fault, resulting in a forced power outage affecting the North-East, North-West and parts of North-Central.
This was contained in a press release signed by the General Manager Public Affairs, Ndidi Mbah, assuring that efforts were on to restore the cut.
The statement partly read, “At approximately 4:53am on, Monday 21st the Ugwuaji–Markurdi 330kV Line 2 tripped and 243 MW on that line was transferred to Line 1 on the same route. At 4:58am, Line 1 also tripped, resulting in a total loss of 468 MW. By around 5:15am and 5:17am Line 1 and Line 2 were tried, but they all tripped immediately on the same relay indication.”
Mbah disclosed that following the tripping incidents on Monday, two teams of linesmen were dispatched adding “One from the Apir Transmission Sub-Region and another from the Enugu transmission to expedite fault tracing along the 215 km route, which includes 245 transmission towers.”
TCN’s Public Affairs General Manager added, “Throughout yesterday, the Apir team patrolled the line, navigating challenging terrains in search of the fault, reaching as far as the River Benue. They were unable to locate the cause of the tripping and have continued in the fault tracing early this morning.”
Meanwhile, the lines patrol team from Enugu Region of TCN were unable to commence lines patrol on Monday due to the ‘sit-at-home’ directive in the South East for October 21st and 22nd, 2024. This hindered not only the patrol team but also made it difficult to refuel patrol vehicles for the long distance line trace.
“Arrangements were, however, made for security operatives to guide the team, who have commenced fault tracing this morning. Currently, TCN has restored supply to the 132kV transmission line from New Haven to Apir, but the 330kV lines remain out of service, impacting power supply in the Northern region of the country.
“Sadly, the TCN Shiroro-Mando transmission line is also down due to security reasons, causing power outage in the North. TCN is making every effort to trace the cause of the outage to enable our engineers effect repairs and restore bulk power supply through both lines.
“TCN is sincerely apologising to the government and electricity consumers in all the affected states and acknowledge that their patrol teams would have continued their search into the night yesterday, if not for the challenging terrain, which includes swamps and rivers, as well as insecure areas in the forest.
“Their team has reconvened very early this morning with security operatives and have continued the fault tracing to locate and address the cause of the line tripping,” Mbah added.



