The number of hydropower plants producing electricity in Nigeria has increased to four as a new plant has been connected to the nation’s power grid.
The Dadin Kowa Hydropower Plant, located in Gombe State, has an installed generation capacity of 60 megawatts, data obtained from the Nigerian Electricity System Operator on Sunday showed.
The NESO data showed that the new plant made its debut on the national grid on Friday with a generation of 30MW as of 6am that day. It generated 30.65MW as of 6am on Sunday.
The country generates most of its electricity from gas-fired power plants, while output from hydropower plants account for about 30 percent of total generation. The other hydropower plants are Kainji, Jebba and Shiroro.
Total power generation in the country stood at 4,482.55MW as of 6am on Sunday, down from 4,658.90MW on Saturday.
Gas constraints and low demand by electricity distribution companies left a total generation capacity of 1,915.8MW unused as of 6am on Sunday, up from 1,716.6MW on Saturday, according to the system operator.
Egbin, the nation’s biggest power plant, located in Lagos, saw its output surge to 773MW on Sunday from 692MW on Thursday.
The Chairman, Board of Directors, Egbin Power Plc, Mr Temitope Shonubi, said in October that Egbin had the capacity to evacuate at least 860MW of power but was producing about 500MW.