"background": "Chronic inefficiencies in power-distribution networks, characterised by high technical and commercial losses, severely constrain electricity supply and economic development. A persistent gap exists in the rigorous, longitudinal analysis of operational performance across diverse infrastructural assets within these systems. ", "purpose and objectives": "This study aims to develop and apply a panel-data econometric framework to methodologically evaluate the performance of distribution equipment and quantify the drivers of yield improvement within a national network. ", "methodology": "A balanced panel dataset was constructed from operational records of 2, 347 distribution transformers across multiple service regions. The core relationship was estimated using a two-way fixed effects model: Y{it = \0 + \1 Xit + \ + \ +, where Yit is the technical yield. Robust standard errors were clustered at the feeder level. ", "findings": "Proactive maintenance interventions demonstrated a statistically significant positive association with technical yield. A one-standard-deviation increase in the maintenance index was associated with a 4. 7% improvement in yield (95% CI: 3. 1% to 6. 3%), holding other factors constant. Load diversity and transformer age were also significant determinants. ", "conclusion": "The methodological approach confirms that systematic, data-driven asset management is a critical lever for enhancing distribution efficiency. The panel model effectively isolates the impact of operational practices from time-invariant unobserved heterogeneity. ", "recommendations": "Distribution network operators should institutionalise panel-data analytics for performance benchmarking and prioritise predictive maintenance schedules based on the identified key drivers. Regulatory frameworks should incentivise yield improvement linked to these evidence-based operational metrics. ", "key words": "power distribution, technical losses, fixed effects model, asset management, infrastructure efficiency", "contribution statement": "This paper provides a novel application of panel-data econometrics to power-distribution asset performance, introducing a robust methodological framework for isolating causal drivers of yield improvement in a developing economy context
Nwachukwu et al. (Mon,) studied this question.