Nigeria
has been hit by widespread power cuts following a "total system
collapse", electricity distribution companies say.
Levels of power being
generated fell to zero megawatts early on Thursday.
Some supplies have been
restored but only a tiny fraction of normal consumption in Africa's most
populous country.
Power supplies are often
erratic in Nigeria, despite its role as a major oil and gas producer.
This is the most serious
such outage for a year - the West African country's grid collapsed at least
four times in 2022, which the authorities blamed on technical problems.
Less than 50% of Nigeria's
population has access to a regular power supply, with most people dependent on
generators, inverters, and other sources of electricity. Most homes and office
buildings are not solely dependent on the national grid for power supply.
The theoretical maximum
amount of power Nigeria could produce is 12,500MW, but the country normally
produces just a quarter of that, the Reuters news agency reports.
On Thursday at around 10:30
local time (09:30 GMT) power levels rose from zero to 273MW, which is still
well below the daily average of 4,100MW, data from the Transmission Company of
Nigeria showed.
President Bola Tinubu, who
has been in power for just over 100 days, has promised to improve supply by
allowing state governments to build their own power plants.
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