Striking workers of the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) on Wednesday shutdown the electricity national grid causing blackouts across the country.
The strike by the workers under the aegis of the National Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE) was triggered by the directive of the TCN Board that all Principal Managers who are in acting capacity must undergo promotion interviews.
The impact of the strike began unfolding at 10am Wednesday when the grid dropped from 4,149 Megawatts recorded at 6am to 2,600MW. The grid capacity continued to drop as more workers at transmission stations downed tools.
It fell further to 939.4MW at 3pm and finally recorded zero generation at 4pm.
The protesting workers reportedly blocked the entrance to the Transmission Company of Nigeria, TCN, headquarters building in Abuja.
The building houses the Federal Ministry of Power where the Minister of Power and the Minister of State, Power have their offices. Their action locked out staff of the Ministry as well as both ministers and their aides.
NUEE General Secretary, Joe Ajaero had in the letter calling out the workers for strike said the directive for the promotion interview was in contravention of the workers’ condition of service and career progression path.
He said it was unilaterally done without the relevant stakeholders.
NUEE also decried the “stigmatization of staff from the office of the Head Service of the Federation from working in other areas in the power sector, and refusal of the Market Operator to fund the payment of entitlement of ex-PHCN staff as agreed in December 2019 agreement after an industrial action by the union”.
The strike action went on as planned despite the intervention of the Minister of State Power, Goddy Jedy-Agba who had appealed for a two weeks grace to allow the government address the issues raised by the workers.
It also followed the reversal of the TCN Board on the promotion interview directive.
The FCT Branch Chairman of NUEE, Godfrey Abah said the action will continue until their demands are met by the government and the TCN management.
Abah noted that though the workers were not happy that the nation has been left without electricity supply, he said the embarrassment is on the Federal Government.
“As citizens and as a labour union we want supply to be everywhere but you know that the only weapon we have is to withdraw our service and that is what we have done. We have withdrawn our service to enable the government to attend to our needs and do what is right.
“The ball is in the court of the government and they know what to do. We have just received an invitation for tomorrow (Thursday) and before the close of business today we will know if the meeting will be held. We are ready for the negotiation”.
Also speaking, the Zonal Organising Secretary of NUEE (Liaison), Engr. Ayodele Kolade workers would remain on strike until the issues are resolved.
“The government is aware of our decision to embark on this strike action. As you can see no one is working and everybody has gone home. There is no light anywhere in Abuja and Nigeria as a whole and it will continue until our demands are met. Failure to do this Abuja and Nigeria will be in blackout”, he stated.
In a statement on Wednesday via its verified Twitter handle, @IkejaElectric, the Ikeja Electricity Distribution Company announced the shutdown of operations.
The statement read partly, “Due to the ongoing nationwide picketing of Transmission Stations by the NUEE, we are currently experiencing disruption of power supply as most stations within our network have been shut down.
“Kindly bear with us as we await an amicable resolution by the relevant stakeholders.”