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“IKEDC Signals Blackout In Lagos Areas Following ‘Jumper Cut’ At TCN Facility”

The Ikeja Electricity Distribution Company (IKEDC), has informed customers that there is a power outage affecting parts of its network — specifically around the Ogba, Ikeja, and Alausa axis of Lagos.

According to a message making media rounds, the outage was triggered by a “jumper cut” at the injection substation operated by Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN). A “jumper cut” refers to a fault that occurs when a jumper cable — a high‑voltage cable that helps connect transmission infrastructure — is damaged, disconnected, or intentionally severed, disrupting the flow of electricity.

“Dear Customer, the current power outage is due to a 132kV jumper cut at the TCN Injection Substation (ISS),” the notice read. “The TCN technical team is already working to clear the fault to ensure supply is restored as soon as possible.”

IKEDC’s communications spokesperson, Kingsley Okotie, emphasized that the outage does not affect the company’s entire franchise area — only the specific affected customers received the outage notice. He added that IKEDC and TCN teams are already mobilised to resolve the issue.

One resident from Ogba, speaking anonymously to a reporter, expressed frustration: “No light in my area since yesterday.”

What this Means for Lagos Residents

The blackout serves as a reminder of how vulnerable power supply remains even in relatively urban and industrial zones of Lagos. For many households and businesses in Ogba, Ikeja, and Alausa, the outage could bring considerable inconvenience — from disrupted daily activities to potential losses for small businesses relying on electricity for operations.

While IKEDC indicates that the fault is isolated, the uncertainty around how long restoration may take can be challenging. The reference to a “jumper cut” suggests a transmission‑level problem, which may take time to assess and repair depending on the extent of the damage.

Broader Context: Transmission Faults Impacting Power Supply

This recent incident is not isolated. Over the past year, several outages and load‑shedding episodes in Lagos have been linked to faults on transmission infrastructure under TCN’s purview. For instance, earlier disruptions were traced to damage on 330 kV transmission lines feeding the region.

In August 2025, IKEDC even announced a long — though scheduled — outage spanning 25 days, tied to maintenance on a major transmission line (Omotosho–Ikeja West 330 kV), which significantly affected electricity distribution.

These repeated incidents underscore a structural vulnerability in the electricity supply chain: when transmission-level faults occur — whether due to equipment failure, maintenance issues, vandalism, or other causes — downstream consumers across a broad area often bear the brunt.

What Needs to Happen — and What Consumers Should Do

For sustainable improvement in power reliability:

For the residents of Ikorodu, Ikeja, Ogba, Alausa and other areas in IKEDC’s service zone, the hope is that TCN’s technical team will resolve the jumper‑cut fault swiftly so power can be restored.

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