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Six TCN towers vandalized along Apir–Lafia 330KV transmission lines

The Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) has announced that its 6 towers were vandalized along Apir–Lafia 330KV transmission lines.

This was contained in a statement by Ndidi Mbah, General Manager (GM), Public Affairs of the Company on Tuesday.

Giving details, Mbah said: “The Transmission Company of Nigeria, TCN, wishes to inform the public that six transmission towers, from T125 to T130, on Apir–Lafia 330kV Transmission Lines I and II have been vandalized.

“The collapse occurred at about 1:15 a.m. on 30th May 2026, during a heavy downpour. Trial reclosure of these line II was made at 2:08 am following the initial tripping and failed.

“The tripping of lines prompted a physical line trace to determine the fault which revealed damage to critical components of towers T125 to T130, confirming acts of vandalism on the affected sections of the transmission corridor.

“As a result, both Apir–Lafia 330kV Transmission Lines I and II remain out of service pending reconstruction of the affected towers,” the statement said.

She said that the Company has already begun efforts to restored services.
“TCN engineers have been mobilized to site to assess the extent of damage and ascertain materials required to commence to restore normal transmission along the corridor.

“Meanwhile, the Lafia 330kV Transmission Station is being supplied through the Lafia–Jos transmission line as a temporary measure to minimise the impact of the outage on affected electricity customers within the franchise areas of Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) and Jos Electricity Distribution Company (JEDC).

Mbah decried the nefarious activities of vandals and called on host communities and the public help protect the Company’s installations.

“TCN strongly condemns the continued vandalism of power transmission infrastructure as it undermines years of investment in the sector.

“We appeal to host communities and the general public to remain vigilant and report any suspicious activities around transmission installations to security agencies or the nearest TCN office.

“Collective action,” She insisted, “is essential to protect national grid assets and ensure reliable power supply.”

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