On Saturday under the Presidential Power Initiative the Federal Government announced that the mega transformers it ordered had successfully undergone a factory acceptance test at Siemens’ transformers factory in Trento, Italy.
According
to report, it also announced that the “first batch of the transformers is
expected to arrive Nigeria in September 2022.”
The
spokesperson to the Minister of Power, Isa Sanusi, in a statement issued in
Abuja, said the Managing Director, Federal Government of Nigeria Power Company,
Kenny Anuwe, led Nigeria’s delegation to the factory in Italy.
He said
the delegation, which had engineers from Transmission Company of Nigeria,
witnessed the factory acceptance test conducted on July 28, 2022, in Italy.
“The
factory acceptance test paves the way for Siemens Energy to start delivering
the transformers to Nigeria,” he said.
He
stressed that this was coming after the Minister of Power, Abubakar Aliyu, led
a delegation to Germany in April where he paid visits to Siemens Energy
factories in Berlin and Frankfurt.
He said
the minister also held meetings with the senior leadership of Siemens Energy on
the need to fast-track the delivery of the early orders that would kickstart
the transformation of Nigeria’s electricity.
The
minister was quoted saying, “The successful factory acceptance test shows
Nigeria’s engagement with Siemens Energy is on track. It also shows the Federal
Government’s commitment to addressing Nigeria’s electricity challenges.”
In
December 2021, the Minister of Finance, Zainab Ahmed, and Aliyu secured the
approval of the Federal Executive Council of €63m for the procurement of
equipment to boost power supply under the Presidential Power Initiative.
The first
phase of the PPI is to provide 10 mobile power sub-stations and 10 mega
transformers to be deployed across the country to boost and stabilise the
electricity supply.
In 2018,
the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), initiated the
Presidential Power Initiative to enable Siemens Energy to upgrade Nigeria’s
electricity systems.
The first
phase of the PPI seeks to modernise, rehabilitate and expand the national grid.
It is to
achieve this by investing in the electricity value chain, including generation,
transmission, and distribution systems.
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