Egbin Power Plant Halts Operations As Contractor Dies During Underwater Repairs
Egbin Power Plc has shut down operations after a contractor died during an underwater maintenance exercise.
The incident occurred on Tuesday, disrupting electricity supply.
Head of the company’s corporate affairs, Mr Felix Ofulue, confirmed the sad incident, and expressed condolences to the family of the deceased.
“Immediately following the incident, established emergency response, safety, and reporting protocols were activated, and the relevant authorities were promptly notified,” he said.
Ofulue said the company was cooperating with relevant authorities to determine the circumstances surrounding the incident, adding that a review was ongoing.
“Egbin Power remains firmly committed to the health, safety, and well-being of all personnel and contractors, and to maintaining the highest standards across its operations,” he added.
A source, who preferred anonymity, disclosed that the contractor was engaged in specialised underwater work at the plant’s pump house when the incident occurred.
The assignment reportedly involved retrieving or stabilising a submerged pumping machine.
The equipment was said to have unexpectedly powered on while the diver was still within the restricted zone.
“The diver went in to carry out a recovery operation inside the lagoon water pump system. Unfortunately, the pump came on unexpectedly and he was trapped and killed by the impeller,” a source said.
According to the source, the deceased contractor was affiliated with Browndive Underwater Services, a firm known for handling complex underwater industrial operations across Nigeria’s oil, gas, and maritime sectors.
The source added that to operations at the affected section were halted immediately, leading to a broader shutdown of the facility for safety checks and assessment.
“Since April 28, the plant has remained offline and disconnected from the national grid as engineers and safety officials conduct detailed assessments,” the source added.
As Nigeria’s largest thermal power station, Egbin Power is a 1,320-megawatt gas-fired plant located in Ikorodu, Lagos State. The plant supplies about 20% of Nigeria’s total grid power and remains a critical anchor for the national grid, though actual output often fluctuates between 400MW and 900MW due to gas constraints, transmission bottlenecks, and maintenance issues.
