Because the Transmission Firm of Nigeria begins the 25-day maintenance on the Omotosho–Ikeja West 330 kV transmission line (July 28–Aug 21, every day between 8am and 5pm), this is what Lagos residents and companies ought to know:
The Fundamentals: How Does Lagos Get Electrical energy?
Consider Lagos’s energy provide like a freeway system. The 330 kV transmission traces are like main expressways that carry electrical energy from energy crops to your neighborhood. Similar to how Lagos-Ibadan Expressway or the Third Mainland Bridge normally want upkeep that causes site visitors, these energy “highways” additionally want repairs.
How Many 330 kV Traces Provide Lagos?
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electrical energy (Credit score: getty-images)
Lagos is served by a number of 330 kV transmission traces (once more, consider them as a number of main roads), together with the Omotosho–Ikeja West line on the coronary heart of this train. Just lately, TCN reinstated and doubled capability on one other 330 kV line from Egbin to Ajah, ensuring there are backup choices in case one energy line fails.
Precise public counts fluctuate, however Lagos has no less than two parallel 330 kV circuits – like having Victoria Island accessible through each Third Mainland Bridge and Carter Bridge. When one is underneath upkeep, the opposite can nonetheless carry site visitors, but it surely will get congested.
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Nigeria’s Energy Actuality Verify: The Numbers That Matter
Nigerians are raging over the new electricity tariff and poor power supply. [Pius Utomi Ekpei/Getty Images
Here’s the shocking truth about Lagos electricity:
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National capacity: Nigeria can generate 10,000–13,000 MW of electricity
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What actually gets transmitted: Only 4,000–6,000 MW makes it through the grid system
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What Lagos needs: About 9,000 MW daily
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What Lagos actually gets: Only around 1,000 MW daily from the national grid
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The gap: Filled by millions of generators, solar systems, and inverters across Lagos
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The maintenance impact: Minus est. 350 MW during work hours (losing 35% of an already tiny supply!)
To put this in perspective: Lagos(Ikeja Electric and Eko Electric) gets only about 11% of the electricity it actually needs from the national grid. The remaining 89% comes from generators, solar panels, and other private sources that residents and businesses provide for themselves.
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Essentially, the maintenance may disrupt nearly one-third of Lagos’s grid-supplied power during working hours. While other lines will carry some load, customers can expect significant dips in supply, prompting widespread load shedding and intermittent outages.
Breaking it down:
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Normal Lagos grid supply: ~1,000 MW (already very low)
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During maintenance: ~650 MW available (35% reduction)
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Other transmission routes: Still active but handling extra load
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Result: More frequent outages and longer “hold-ups” in power supply
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Who Gets Hit the Hardest?
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Everyone on Ikeja Electric and EKEDC networks – that’s basically all of Lagos including Lagos Island, Mainland, Lekki, Ikorodu, Apapa, Surulere, Festac, and beyond. Also, Ogun border towns like the industrial hub of Agbara, Ota, Agbado-Oke Aro and parts of Mowe and Ibafo will be affected.
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Daytime users – If you work from home, run a business, or need power between 8am–5pm, you’ll feel it even more
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People without backup power – No generator or solar? You’ll experience the longest outages
Do Band Classifications(A, B, C, D) matter?
Even if you’re on a Band A feeder, the maintenance will squeeze available grid supply. While your feeder may get priority, expect intermittent outages during work hours. Lower bands will likely experience longer disruptions with fewer restoration windows.
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Band A areas get priority when power is available, but there will simply be less power to go around
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Lower bands (B, C, D, E) will experience longer outages with fewer “restoration windows”
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Think of it like this: Band A customers are VIP at a concert, but if the power to the venue is cut by 35%, even VIPs sit in partial darkness
If your area is classified Band A, you’re in a relatively better position, but no one is immune during this 25-day window.
What You Can Do
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Charge devices and plan essential work before 8am or after 5pm.
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Rely on offline or backup power sources during the day.
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Stay briefed via Ikeja Electric or EKEDC notices for updates.
RELATED: 25-Day Power Outage: 5 Alternatives for People Who Work from Home

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