AEDC Cites National Grid Supply Shortage for Outages

The Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) has attributed recent widespread power outages across its operational territories to insufficient energy supply from Nigeria’s national grid. The disruption affects customers in Abuja, Nasarawa, Niger, and Kogi states.

In a public notice issued via its official X account on Friday, AEDC acknowledged the “low power supply and outages” experienced by its customers. The company stated that while its technical team monitors the situation in real-time, the frequency and duration of supply interruptions are directly linked to the limited energy allocation it receives from the grid.

“Our technical team is closely monitoring the situation in real-time and remains fully committed to restoring normal service at the earliest possible time as soon as our grid allocation improves,” the statement read. AEDC emphasized that the issue is external, stemming from the overall national supply deficit, and that normal service restoration is contingent on an improvement in grid supply.

This official communication aligns with reports from local media, including the Media Talk Africa, which has documented an intermittent and unreliable power supply in Abuja and surrounding areas over the past week. The unstable supply negatively impacts both residential households and commercial enterprises, disrupting daily activities and business operations.

The current situation underscores the persistent challenge of energy sufficiency in Nigeria, where the national grid often operates below optimal capacity, leading to load shedding and supply outages for distribution companies nationwide. For AEDC, which is one of the country’s largest distribution utilities, grid allocation constraints directly translate to customer-facing supply gaps, regardless of its internal distribution capacity.

While AEDC has offered no estimated timeline for resolution, its statement indicates a passive waiting position dependent on systemic improvements at the national transmission level. Customers in the affected states can expect continued intermittent supply until there is a measurable increase in the total power available on the national grid. The episode highlights the direct link between national generation/transmission performance and end-user reliability in Nigeria’s vertically structured power sector.

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