Tag: Electricity tariffs

  • Why increasing electricity tariffs won’t solve problem

    Why increasing electricity tariffs won’t solve problem

    • By Monica Maduekwe

    Sir: Nigeria’s long-standing struggle to provide stable electricity reveals something more fundamental than technical or financial challenges: it points to a system that either lacks the will or the capacity to deliver on its promises. If low tariffs were truly the core problem, then after years of reforms, countless policies and multiple price adjustments, we would have solved it by now.

    Electricity is a market, yes—but not just any market. While it involves supply, demand and pricing like others, electricity underpins the entire economy. When power costs are too high, the effects ripple across production, manufacturing, service delivery and daily life. Local goods become uncompetitive, businesses shut down and economic growth slows. A government serious about development must regard a functional electricity market as non-negotiable.

    The fact that Nigeria has failed to build such a market decades after independence raises critical questions. Is it a lack of political will or a lack of institutional capacity?

    Let’s assume the will exists. That makes the capacity gap even more troubling. The technologies to achieve universal electricity access are available. The global body of knowledge on market design, regulation and grid modernisation is vast. The issue is not knowledge, but implementation.

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    Why is that? One likely explanation is interference from entrenched interests whose agendas are misaligned with the goal of reliable electricity for all Nigerians. These may be individuals or groups—both public and private—who benefit from the current dysfunction. Upstream, we see this when substandard equipment is procured to maximise profit margins, contracts are awarded on anything but merit, or power projects are approved without rigorous supervision, leading to recurring breakdowns and reinvestment cycles.

    Downstream, the sabotage continues: electricity infrastructure is vandalised or repurposed for personal gain, meters are bypassed, and large users simply refuse to pay their bills, sometimes using intimidation. These are not isolated incidents; they are routine, systemic, and corrosive.

    While no society is immune to dysfunction, the difference in Nigeria is that these behaviours occur so frequently and at such scale that they undermine even well-meaning policy interventions. This is not about blaming citizens. A high-performing government is one that can resist such pressures and deliver outcomes regardless.

    Against this backdrop, the government’s plan to increase electricity tariffs, citing the unsustainability of subsidies, seems dangerously simplistic. Proponents argue that higher prices will attract investment. But what if, instead, they push more consumers toward self-generation? Already, many households and businesses rely on solar systems, diesel generators, or standalone gas solutions. This trend could fragment the grid further, reduce economies of scale, and widen the gap between those who can afford reliable power and those who cannot.

    How do we achieve universal energy access and net-zero emissions in the power sector when energy decisions become household decisions, rather than a national, government-led strategy?

    A steady climb in electricity tariffs, without addressing the underlying structural and governance issues, will not deliver lasting results. At best, these strategies offer the fleeting comfort of ointment on a deep wound. Without a systemic rethink, electricity may remain one of Nigeria’s most enduring failures.

    What then must be done? Despite this grim picture, the current administration has an opportunity to write a different chapter in the story of Nigeria’s power sector. Minister Adebayo Adelabu could go down in history as the son of the soil who instilled a culture of excellence in a sector long plagued by mediocrity.

    At the personal level, this means reviving a culture of meritocracy, attention to detail, discipline, and pride in work—from subordinates to supervisors. At a systemic level, it means:  Adopting a mindset that failure in the power sector is a personal failure for every staff member in relevant MDAs—federal and state alike; Tracking institutional capacity, by establishing and publishing clear indicators of delivery success and accountability; Establishing a leadership track, identifying and grooming young talent to rise into reform-driven leadership roles.

    Nigeria has dwelt too long in the land of quick fixes. Yes, when there is a fire, the instinct is to find a bucket and douse the flames. But we must also ask: what caused the fire, and how do we prevent the next one?

    Whether increasing tariffs is good or bad is the wrong question. It is not good for the government, which seeks economic growth, nor for the citizens, who will bear the burden. But if accompanied by bold, systemic reforms, such moves could at least reflect solidarity with the people and a genuine determination to break free from the cycles that have held the sector back for decades.

    •Monica Maduekwe

    PUTTRU, Abuja

  • Electricity tariffs to crash with time, says minister

    Electricity tariffs to crash with time, says minister

    • Fed Govt targets 6,000mw generation by year end

    • Adelabu: Power sector reforms have attracted investments

    Power Minister Adebayo Adelabu yesterday described the current electricity tariff regime as a temporary hardship which over time will crash in the manner of telecoms tariffs in the country.

    Adelabu, who has come under attack from consumers over the recent hike in electricity tariff and the poor electricity supply across Nigeria, was optimistic that the hardship would “lead to permanent gain.”

    “It might look expensive at the moment, I am optimistic that these tariffs will go down,” he said while presenting his ministerial scorecard in Abuja.

    Drawing a comparison between the current situation in the electricity sector and the early years of telecoms, the minister said: “We know how much we were buying SIM cards when telecoms first came. We know how much we were buying the telephone sets. But gradually, it scaled off.

    “Generation, transmission and distribution, these prices will also go down. So, it is a temporary hardship and it will lead to permanent gain.”

    The electricity distribution companies (DisCos), according to him, are now responsive to their duties because the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has improved on its oversight over them.

    Besides, he said, the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) has introduced a guaranteed service level for the Band A customers that get a minimum of 20 hours of supply per day, for the first time in Nigeria.

    Similarly, government has decided to test run a cost reflective tariff and the liquidity conditions necessary for attracting investments with only 15% of its customers.

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    “For the first time in Nigeria, we have what we call guaranteed service level. It might be for Band A today, but no government has ever guaranteed 20 hours of supply, not to even 1% of consumers,” he said.

    “But to 15% of consumers, we said let us start from here, and we have guaranteed service level for Band A customers with the introduction of cost reflective tariffs to that band, including liquidity conditions suitable for driving investment.”

    He said the reforms in the NESI have attracted investments from the World Bank and the Nigerian Investment Sovereign Authority (NISA).

    He credited the progress in the industry to the Electricity Act 2023, claiming that prior to the President Bola Tinubu reforms implementation, investors deemed NESI unattractive on account of what he called its uninspiring tariff policy and huge debt overhang.

    The banks had also stopped lending funds to power sector investors.

    Adelabu said the situation has now changed for the better following the launch of the Nigerian Power Investment Opportunities and Guidelines 2.0 which highlights opportunities in the sector.

    Some of the immediate results are a $500 million investment from the NSIA (Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority and another of $750 million from the World Bank.

    His words: “We have been able to attract investment into the sector because before now, nobody was ready to touch this sector because the tariff policy was not inspiring; the debt overhang was too much.

    “Nobody wanted to bring capital. Even bankers didn’t want to lend anybody money. But now that is a thing of the past.

    “The federal ministry of power has launched the Nigerian Power Investment Opportunities and Guidelines 2.0 that highlights some of the opportunities in the sector.

    “We have also attracted $500 million dollars initiative from NSIA (Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority) and the World Bank $750 million.

    “We are beginning to see some progress from the outcome of the reforms process and key achievements of the administration in the last one year.”

    Adelabu insisted that the power sector has improved in the last one year, contrary to the impression in some quarters.

    He said: “The question is, has power improved? Yes. It is no longer where we were in February, and the journey of a thousand mile starts with a step in the right direction. We are facing the right direction.”

    Adelabu said the Federal Government would, in the next couple of months, award a contract for the provision of 1.5 million metres to Meter Asset Providers.

    He said the project which is funded by the World Bank, is targeted at improving liquidity in the sector and also reducing estimated billing.

    Government, he said, plans to deploy 10 million meters in the next five years with the provision of two million meters yearly.

    Adelabu said: “We just completed the bidding process for 1.5 million meters financed by the World Bank to improve sector liquidity and reduce estimated billing.

    “Within the next couple of months, this contract will be awarded to the meter providers.”

    On the metering gap, he said: “We have a Presidential Initiative scheduled to provide 2 million meters per annum for the next five years to bridge the meter gap that we have.

    “We have about 7million meter gap in the industry. Out of over 10 million customers, just a little over 5 million are metered.

    “Everybody is complaining of estimated bills. Mr. President is determined to put an end to estimated billing so that nobody is cheating anybody.”

    Adelabu said almost 50,000 meters have been procured now and deployed to all military formations nationwide to reduce Ministry Departments and Agencies (MDAs) debts and improve sector liquidity.

    He, however, noted: “We will not relent until we have a resilient and efficient electricity sector that meets the needs of all Nigerians.”

    The Minister said the government has started settling the N47.19 billion MDAs debts owed the Electricity Distribution Companies (DisCos) through one source – the Nigerian Electricity Liability Management Company (NELMCO).

    “They’ve started paying. But we don’t want a situation whereby we are going to apply haphazard solutions for settlement of MDA’s debts.

    “It is going to be centralised now so that a singular point will be the point of payment of MDA’s debts.

    “There won’t be another accumulation of MDAs debts again. A lot of them are paying now. But we have what is called legacy or historic debt of these MDAs.

    “It is so much that they will not be able to pay at a go. We have an agency we call the Nigerian Electricity Liability Management Company.

    ” We are putting all these debts together and transferring them to NELMCO so that NELMCO will go into negotiation with all the DisCos and they will agree on modalities or final settlement of these legacy debt, because as government is owing the DisCos, the DisCos too have liabilities to government.

    “So NELMCO is in a position to negotiate this and ensure we zerorise government debts to power distribution companies.”

    Adelabu said the government has given the DisCos which are still under the management of the Assets Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON) and the banks a deadline to resell the firms to core technical operators.

    He said the ministry has secured a World Bank project to procure the Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) in 24 months since 2023.

    He gave the assurance that with SCADA in place the National Control Center can monitor the entire national grid to ward off its collapse.