Nigeria’s energy story is one of paradox: a giant sitting on 209 trillion cubic feet of proven gas reserves, yet perpetually shrouded in the darkness of a “Power Debacle.” For decades, the narrative has been a repetitive cycle of systemic collapses — both literal and metaphorical. As of 2026, despite the legislative milestone of the 2023 Electricity Act, the national grid remains a fragile architecture of vintage equipment and mounting debt, now exceeding N6.2 trillion. We find ourselves in a situation where average generation stagnates at roughly 4,000 MW, a figure that would be comical if it weren’t so tragic for a population of over 200 million.
The debacle is not merely technical; it is a crisis of contract enforcement and regulatory misalignment. We have moved from the monopoly of NEPA to the unbundling of PHCN, yet the experience of the average Nigerian — who still instinctively shouts “Up NEPA!” — remains unchanged. The “rules of the game” have remained static even as the names on the office doors changed. We are witnessing a sector where the cost of “non-supply” far outweighs the cost of a reflective tariff, yet we remain stuck in a political tug-of-war over who bears the burden of a broken system.
On the home front, the power crisis is the single greatest “tax” on Nigerian productivity. In my frequent interactions within the agribusiness and manufacturing sectors, the refrain is always the same: we are not just producers; we are independent power utilities. The reliance on diesel and petrol generators has moved from being a backup to the primary source of lifeblood for industry. This decentralisation-by-necessity has created a fragmented market where the wealthy and the industrious “hedge” against the national grid, leaving the vulnerable to bear the brunt of total darkness.
The North-South disparity is also widening; while the South benefits from proximity to gas-fired plants, large swathes of the North remain under-electrified despite having the highest solar irradiation in the country. This is a political tinderbox. If we do not address the regional inequities in power distribution and infrastructure, we are essentially fuelling social instability. The “way forward” locally requires more than just new laws; it requires a move toward Energy Democracy, where states finally exercise their new constitutional powers to create competitive, sub-national electricity markets that can bypass the lethargy of the centre.
Globally, the conversation has shifted toward a Net Zero future, placing Nigeria in a precarious “trilemma”: balancing decarbonisation, energy security, and affordability. While the world demands a rapid pivot to renewables, our local reality dictates a more nuanced path. We must champion a “just transition” that recognises natural gas as our essential transition fuel.
To the global community, we must be clear: Nigeria cannot be expected to leapfrog into a green future while its industrial base is starved of basic baseload power. Our Energy Transition Plan (ETP) targets 30 GW of renewable energy by 2030, but current licensing data shows a disconnect between ambition and delivery. The global outlook for Nigeria depends on our ability to de-risk the sector for foreign direct investment.
International investors are not looking for more “talk shops”; they are looking for bankable projects, creditworthy offtakers, and a stable regulatory environment. We must leverage our position in the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to become an energy hub, but that requires fixing the “Power Debacle” at home first. We cannot export what we do not have.
The way forward is not found in another round of bailouts or a mere reshuffling of institutional chairs. It lies in system-wide thinking:
First, we must bridge the metering gap; transparency in revenue collection is the only way to attract the trillions needed for infrastructure.
Second, we must move from “licensing momentum” to “project delivery.” A permit on a piece of paper does not light a bulb; we need to track the actual electrons reaching the factory floor.
Third, the federal government must relinquish its grip on the transmission “bottleneck” and allow for independent, regional transmission networks that can actually evacuate the power we are capable of generating.
Finally, we must embrace a hybrid energy mix — gas for the industrial heartlands and decentralised solar mini-grids for the rural frontiers.
As a proud citizen, I see the immense potential of Nigeria every day. We have the talent, the resources, and now the legal framework. What we need is the political will to stop managing the crisis and start leading the transformation. This debacle must end; the era of power must begin.
Ultimately, this transformation requires a shift in our national psyche regarding the sanctity of the “Value Chain.” We must move beyond viewing electricity as a social welfare gift and begin treating it as a high-stakes commercial commodity that requires rigorous protection. This means implementing “smart” infrastructure that can detect energy theft in real-time and establishing specialised fast-track courts to prosecute those who sabotage our collective progress through vandalism or bypasses.
By digitizing the interface between the DisCo (Distribution Company) and the consumer, we remove the human element that often invites corruption and inefficiency. When every kilowatt is accounted for and every payment is secured, the “circular debt” that has paralysed our sector will finally dissolve. Nigeria does not lack the technical capacity to keep the lights on; we lack the systemic discipline to ensure that those who consume power pay for it, and those who provide it are rewarded. Turning this corner is not just an engineering feat — it is the ultimate test of our maturity as a modern economy and nation.
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Ade Adefeko is director of corporate and regulatory affairs, Olam Agri, an ex-officio of Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), and Honorary Consul of Botswana in Lagos.








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