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Workers’ strike: Power supply shut down nationwide; TCN’s rescue efforts frustrated

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The national grid system has dropped to zero megawatts as a result of the complete disruption of power supply to all 11 electricity distribution companies in the country, Channels Television reports.

In a statement on Monday, the General Manager (Public Affairs) of the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN), Ms. Ndidi Mbah said the nationwide blackout was due to staff of the TCN, under the aegis of the National Union of Electricity Workers (NUEE), completely shutting down all power substations across the country at approximately 2:19 am on Monday, causing the national grid system to drop to zero megawatts.

After a four-hour meeting with the leadership of the National Assembly on Sunday evening in Abuja, organised labour leadership said there was no going back on the nationwide industrial action slated to start on Monday.

The President of the Trade Union Congress (TUC), Comrade Festus Osifo said: “For now, we don’t have the power to call off the strike tomorrow (Monday) morning. The strike will kick off as we take their (National Assembly) plea asking us to call off the strike to our various organs”.

Osifo and his counterpart in the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Joe Ajaero also met with Senate President Godswill Akpabio and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas.

The meeting was part of last-minute efforts by the legislators to persuade aggrieved workers to shelve their planned industrial action for a new minimum wage.

The decision of the organised labour followed the deadlock between the Federal Government and the unions over a new national minimum wage and reversal of the recent hike in electricity tariffs.

The labour unions had said the current minimum wage of N30,000 can no longer cater to the well-being of an average Nigerian worker, lamenting that not all governors are paying the current wage award which expired in April 2024, five years after the Minimum Wage Act of 2019 was signed by former President Muhammadu Buhari. The Act should be reviewed every five years to meet with contemporary economic demands of workers.

On efforts to recover the lost power generation, Mbah said that at about 3.23 am, TCN commenced grid recovery, using the Shiroro substation to attempt to feed the transmission lines supplying bulk electricity to the Katampe Transmission Substation.

“The situation is such that the labour union is still obstructing grid recovery nationwide. We will continue to make effort to recover and stabilise the grid to enable the restoration of normal bulk transmission of electricity to distribution load centres nationwide”, the statement added.

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