Siemens Energy Limited has disclosed that it will upgrade 22 transmission substations in Nigeria in addition to the 11 new ones to be constructed under the presidential power initiative (PPI).
PPI is a power upgrade and modernisation programme between the Nigerian government and Siemens with the support of the German government.
This was disclosed by the chief executive officer of Siemens Energy, Seun Suleiman on the sidelines of a visit by Simbi Wabote, the executive secretary of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board, to Siemens service centre facility in Port Harcourt.
Recall that the federal government in July 2019 signed a power project deal (PPI) with Siemens AG with the aim of increasing Nigeria’s electricity generation to 25,000 megawatts (MW) in six years.
The power project will have three phases: to take Nigeria’s operational capacity of the grid from less than 5,000MW to 7000MW by 2021; further increase the capacity to 11,000MW by 2023; and achieve total operational generation and national grid capacity to 25,000MW by 2025.
President Muhammadu Buhari in July 2020 approved the payment of €15.21 million and N1.708 billion as counterpart funding for the PPI.
Speaking on the new development, Suleiman said the pre-engineering phase of the project would be completed in 10 months.
“The Presidential Power Initiative is going well. We are doing the pre-engineering. Pre-engineering is to design before you go to execution,” Suleiman said.
“We are not adding any generation capacity but we want to make sure that we fix the dilapidated transmission and distribution networks.
“We are doing the pre-engineering for the distribution network of this country. We have already got a letter of credit from the Federal Government to start it.
“The design is done in our head office. For the transmission scope, we were given initially 11 sites; they have added 22 sites.
“Execution is when you go to sites. But in the next three months, we want to start putting the proposal for phase one together, not when we finish the pre-engineering.
“So, if phase one goes into reality before the end of the current administration, it means we would have been able to move from 4,500MW to 7,000MW.”