Tag: NERC

  • NERC: 38% of electricity generating plants available

    NERC: 38% of electricity generating plants available

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) yesterday said only 38 per cent of power generating plants were available for dispatch in December 2025.

    It was an indication that 62 per cent capacity of plants were not available for dispatch.

    Of the 13,625 Mw Installed capacity in the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) in the period under review, only an average of 5,151MW was the available capacity.

    7,0474Mw of the installed capacity was not available for dispatch, according to the December 2025 Factsheet on the Operational Performance of Power Plant, The Nation obtained yesterday.

    NERC noted that the average hourly per generation recorded was 4,367Mw.

    The document said the top 10 largest energy producers accounted for 81 per cent of the total energy generated during the month.

    Read Also: NERC, NMDPRA meet on security

    The plants were Egbin 1, Delta 1, Kainji 1, Zungeru 1, Afam 2, Shiroro1, Jebba 1, Okapi 1, Ihovbor 2, and Geregu 1.

    Of the the 10 plants, only Zungeru 1 generated 100 per cent of its capacity being 700Mw.

    Ihovbor 2, according to NERC, produced 99 per cent being 459Mw out of 491Mw while Jebba recorded 538MW being 93 per cent of its 578MW.

    The factsheet also said Kainji 1 generated 564Mw of 760Mw, which is 74 per cent of its capacity.

    NERC added that Egbin produced 320Mw of 582MW while Afam 2 generated 115Mw being 18 per cent of its 650Mw capacity.

    Of the 26 power plants in the grid, in the period under review, only 18 were operational.

  • NERC: 38% of electricity-generating plants available for dispatch in December

    NERC: 38% of electricity-generating plants available for dispatch in December

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) on Tuesday said only 38 per cent of power-generating plants were available for dispatch in December 2025.

    It was an indication that 62 per cent capacity of plants was not available for dispatch.

    Of the 13,625MW installed capacity in the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) in the period under review, only an average of 5,151MW was available capacity.

    7,047.4 MW of the installed capacity was not available for dispatch, according to the December 2025 Factsheet on the Operational Performance of Power Plant, The Nation obtained yesterday.

    NERC noted that the average hourly per generation recorded was 4,367MW.

    The document said the top 10 largest energy producers accounted for 81 per cent of the total energy generated during the month.

    The plants were Egbin 1, Delta 1, Kainji 1, Zungeru 1, Afam 2, Shiroro1, Jebba 1, Okapi 1, Ihovbor 2, and Geregu 1.

    Read Also: NERC, NMDPRA meet on security

    Of the 10 plants, only Zungeru 1 generated 100 per cent of its capacity, being 700MW.

    Ihovbor 2, according to NERC, produced 99 per cent, being 459MW out of 491MW, while Jebba recorded 538MW, being 93 per cent of its 578MW.

    The factsheet also said Kainji 1 generated 564MW of 760MW, which is 74 per cent of its capacity.

    NERC added that Egbin produced 320MW of 582MW while Afam 2 generated 115MW, being 18 per cent of its 650MW capacity.

    Of the 26 power plants in grid, in the period under review, only 18 were operational.      

  • DisCos collected N210 billion in October last year

    DisCos collected N210 billion in October last year

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) yesterday stated that the 12 Distribution Companies (DisCos) collected N210 billion revenue in October 2025.

    This was contained in its document titled: “Commercial Performance of Distribution Companies (DisCos).”

    In the period under review, NERC’s Fact sheet for October listed 12 DisCos, which include: Aba, Abuja, Benin, Enugu, Eko, Ibadan, Ikeja, Kaduna, Kano, Port Harcourt, and Yola.

    The DisCos, said NERC, could not collect N45.19billion revenue out of the N255.19bills they issued.

    The total energy that was sent to the DisCos cost N303.85 billion, according to the factsheet, which also noted that allowed average tariff per kwh was N116.25 while only N95.89 kwh was actually collected.

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    This is an indication of N20.36kwh subsidy.

    Of the 303.85billion energy sent to the DisCos, N48.66billion was not billed, being the subsidy.

    In the month under review, the Federal Government absorbed electricity of N48.66bilion.

    NERC also disclosed that in October 2025, the Discos recorded 83.99 per cent billing efficiency, 82.66 per cent collection efficiency and 82.49 per cent recovery efficiency.

  • NERC, NMDPRA meet on security

    NERC, NMDPRA meet on security

    Owing to their desire to enhance energy security and economic growth, the Chief Executive of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), Engr. Saidu Aliyu Mohammed, alongside members of his management team, paid a courtesy visit to the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) in Abuja.

    This was made known in the X handle of the NERC, which said the the visit was aimed at strengthening institutional collaboration between the two regulators in recognition of their strategic roles in Nigeria’s energy landscape.

    Discussions focused on enhancing synergy between the power and gas sectors to support national economic growth and energy security.

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    Speaking during the meeting, both parties emphasised that as regulators of two critical sectors of the economy, there is a need for continuous engagement and coordinated strategies to develop practical solutions that will move their respective sectors forward.

    The NERC Chairman, Dr. Musiliu Oseni welcomed the visit, noting that closer cooperation between the electricity and petroleum regulators would promote policy coherence, operational efficiency, and sustainable development across the energy value chain.

    The meeting concluded with a shared commitment to deepen collaboration and explore joint initiatives that will advance the growth and stability of Nigeria’s power sector.

  • Tinubu reconstitutes NERC board, charges members on power sector reforms

    Tinubu reconstitutes NERC board, charges members on power sector reforms

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has approved the reconstitution of the Board of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), following the confirmation of its members by the Senate on December 16.

    The reconstituted board is headed by Dr Mulisiu Olalekan Oseni as Chairman, with Dr Yusuf Ali appointed as Vice Chairman. 

    Other members are Mr Nathan Rogers Shatti, Mr Dafe Akpeneye, Aisha Mahmud Kanti Bello, Dr Chidi Ike, and Dr Fouad Animashaun.

    According to a statement issued by Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, on Thursday, Dr Oseni, who joined the commission as a commissioner in January 2017 and later served as Vice Chairman, assumed office as Chairman with effect from December 1, 2025. 

    His tenure will run until the completion of his 10-year term at the commission, in line with the provisions of the Electricity Act, 2023.

    Dr Ali, who was first appointed as a commissioner in February 2022, takes over as Vice Chairman on December 1, 2025, and will serve in that capacity until the completion of his first term.

    Mr Shatti and Mr Akpeneye are both serving second terms on the commission, having been first appointed as commissioners in January 2017, while Aisha Bello is also serving a second term following her initial appointment in December 2020.

    Dr Ike, first appointed as a commissioner in February 2022, is serving his first term, while Dr Animashaun joins the commission for the first time, with his appointment taking effect from December 2025.

    Dr Animashaun is an energy economist with extensive experience in the Nigerian power sector and most recently served as Executive Commissioner and Chief Executive Officer of the Lagos State Electricity Regulatory Commission.

    President Tinubu charged the reconstituted NERC board to deepen and consolidate the ongoing transformation of Nigeria’s power sector, urging members to discharge their responsibilities in strict adherence to the letter and spirit of the Electricity Act, 2023.

    The President reaffirmed his administration’s commitment to strengthening regulatory institutions as part of broader efforts to improve electricity supply, enhance investor confidence, and drive sustainable growth in the power sector.

  • Power plant availability for dispatch increased by 1 percent in one month

    Power plant availability for dispatch increased by 1 percent in one month

    …5,544MW available out of 13,625MW

    Plant availability for dispatch in the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) increased by 1 per cent in November 2025 from the 40 per cent availability recorded in October 2025.

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) disclosed this in its “November 2025 Operational Performance Factsheet” in its X handle yesterday.

    In the previous month, only 5,506MW, representing 40%, was available for dispatch, an indication of 38MW, representing 1 percent increase in the period under review.

    In its November highlights, NERC said “Plant Availability Factor (PAF): 41%, showing that an average of 5,544 MW was available for dispatch out of 13,625 MW installed capacity.”

    The factsheet also said the average load Factor was 85 per cent, an indication that 4,701MWh/h of available capacity was utilized.

     “Average Load Factor: 85% showing that 4,701 MWh/h of available capacity was utilised,” said NERC.

    The factsheet said top Energy Producers: Ihovbor, Kainji, Zungeru, and Jebba stood out with strong availability and high utilisation levels.

    According to the monthly factsheet, the top 10 largest energy producers accounted for 81 per cent of the total energy generated during the month.

    NERC added that in November, only Zungeru operated at its full capacity, generating 700MW out of its 700MWH.

     Egbin, on the other hand, operated at 50 per cent, generating 656/1320MW. Delta 1, operated at 50 per cent capacity, producing 450MW/ 900MW.

    The factsheet added that Ohovbor 2 operated at 99 per cent capacity, generating 457MW/461MW.

  • NERC to withhold DisCos opex over meter refund

    NERC to withhold DisCos opex over meter refund

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has vowed to withhold the Operational Expenditure (opex) of the Distribution Companies (DisCos) at the national wholesale level.

    The threat came on the heels of the report that some DisCos have only attained two per cent of performance on Meter Asset Provider (MAP) refund to customers.

    According to NERC on its X handle, the commission’s Vice Chairman, Dr. Musiliu Oseni said the breach will be met with the necessary penalties.

    NERC said: “Reacting to a report that some DisCos have only achieved two per cent performance on MAP meter refunds to customers, NERC Vice Chairman Dr. Musiliu Oseni issued a stern warning regarding financial penalties: “This would be met with necessary sanctions.”

    “Dr. Oseni proposed a direct enforcement mechanism utilising the wholesale market structure: “You still have your Operational Expenditure (OPEX) at the national wholesale market level.

    “If you refuse to refund customers, that money can be withheld from your OPEX until you have done so.” He insisted that strict timelines be issued immediately to ensure compliance.”

    Recall that the MAP refunds to customers involve repaying the cost of meters paid upfront by electricity customers through energy credits credited by DisCos.

    NERC oversights the refund system under the MAP and National Mass Metering Program Regulations (NERC-R-113-2021).

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    The Customers had paid upfront for meters since 2018 under the MAP framework that never received the meters.

    They are now entitled to refunds paid in energy credits, with the schedule set by NERC, taking into account the financial capacity of the Distribution Licensee.

    The refund process means that customers do not get a direct cash refund but rather receive the value of the meter cost back as energy credits on their electricity bills over time.

    The repayment under MAP commenced on April 1, 2023.

  • NERC’s leadership void puts power sector on edge

    NERC’s leadership void puts power sector on edge

    A dangerous leadership vacuum has engulfed the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), where the tenure of the Vice Chairman and several Commissioners expires today, compounding a crisis that began in June when the Chairmanship fell vacant. With the Electricity Act 2023 offering no provision for an Acting Chairman, the Commission now risks operating without a legally recognised head—an unprecedented situation stakeholders warn could plunge the already fragile power sector into a full regulatory shutdown, reports Assistant Editor MUYIWA LUCAS.

    A leadership vacuum now grips the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) as the tenure of the Vice Chairman and several Commissioners expired yesterday, deepening an institutional crisis that began in June when the Chairmanship position fell vacant. The Electricity Act 2023 does not provide for an Acting Chairman once an incumbent’s tenure lapses, meaning the Commission may, in strict legal terms, operate without a head—an outcome stakeholders warn could trigger a “full regulatory shutdown” in a sector already fraught with instability.

    To avert this, President Bola Tinubu had, in August, nominated Abdullahi Garba Ramat—an engineer and former Local Government Chairman—as substantive Chairman, alongside two Commissioner nominees: Abubakar Yusuf for Consumer Affairs and Dr. Fouad Olayinka Animashun for Finance and Management Services. But the confirmation process has stalled in the Senate. Last month, Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs Chairman, Senator Yemi Adaramodu, disclosed that the upper chamber halted Ramat’s confirmation due to what he described as a “baggage of public and private complaints” surrounding his nomination. According to him, the Senate was “statutorily bound” to step down any nominee under intense public scrutiny, noting that several appointees before now had withdrawn in similar circumstances. He insisted that the National Assembly could not be “dragged into public opprobrium” through allegations—however unproven—such as the widely circulated but unsubstantiated claim of a $10 million bribery scandal linked to the process.

    Despite this, pressure continues to mount. On November 11, protesters comprising civil society groups, human rights activists, and supporters of Ramat marched to the National Assembly, demanding the Senate fast-track his confirmation. They expressed frustration that although Ramat had already undergone screening by the Senate Committee on Power, led by Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, he has yet to be cleared for the role—leaving NERC’s leadership uncertainty unresolved.

    Appointment on merit

    Checks revealed that 39-year-old Abdullahi Garba Ramat may possess credentials that suggest potential for modernisation. He holds a Doctoral degree (PhD) in Strategic Management and has earned recognition for introducing blockchain-driven revenue systems and energy-efficiency initiatives during his tenure as Chairman of Ungogo Local Government Area, Kano State. Yet, despite these achievements, many stakeholders insist that his lack of direct power-sector experience stands as a significant drawback—one that could undermine his ability to lead Nigeria’s most sensitive regulatory institution.

    The Chief Executive Officer of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE), Dr. Muda Yusuf, expressed deep concern over the growing leadership vacuum in NERC. According to him, the electricity sector is already grappling with liquidity crises, widespread metering deficits and persistent operational inefficiencies. In such a fragile environment, a leadership void at the apex regulatory level could stall critical decisions, delay ongoing reforms and further erode investor confidence in a sector in desperate need of stability.

    For Yusuf, the position of NERC Chairman cannot be treated casually or politicised. It requires an individual with deep knowledge of the sector, someone who has acquired technical understanding through years of engagement with electricity market dynamics. This, he stressed, must guide appointments at all levels—government, leadership, management and operations. “The sector has gone through a major transition which needs to be managed strategically and competently by operatives who understand the electricity sector,” he warned. “This is not a sector where the quality of personnel or the quality of governance can be compromised. We need to prioritise prompt appointments to fill vacant positions and build a sustainable succession pipeline within the Commission. These are essential for sound regulatory governance.”

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    Yusuf further emphasised that the electricity industry plays a strategic role in Nigeria’s quest to mobilise private-sector capital, both locally and internationally. Attracting such investments, he noted, demands a regulatory environment that inspires confidence. The calibre of leadership and staff at NERC, therefore, is central to building that trust. He urged the Presidency to critically evaluate all issues surrounding appointments, succession and leadership in the sector. “Nigeria is not short of competent people from every region who can serve effectively. What we must avoid is creating capacity or governance gaps in NERC. This matter requires urgent attention,” he added.

    While political debates continue at the National Assembly over NERC’s nominations, experts argue that the real crisis lies in the failure to appoint a substantive Chairman based strictly on merit. According to a critical stakeholder in the electricity space who requested anonymity, “The uproar in the Senate is a distraction. The real problem is the refusal to elevate people within the system who understand the regulatory environment and have the competence required for the job.”

    Indeed, since NERC’s creation 20 years ago, the Commission has repeatedly appointed individuals with little or no grounding in the electricity sector as chairmen. In most cases, these appointees have had to rely heavily on long-serving technocrats within the Commission to navigate its complex regulatory and market frameworks. This, industry watchers say, undermines regulatory efficiency and slows down reform implementation. This is why many experts insist that promoting seasoned professionals who have grown through the ranks at NERC would provide greater stability, continuity and technical competence. Over the years, however, appointments into NERC’s leadership have tilted more towards political considerations than technical merit—a pattern analysts warn is dangerous for a sector central to Nigeria’s economic survival.

    Even with the comprehensive reforms embedded in the Electricity Act 2023, several economists argue that NERC’s persistent leadership deficiencies remain a key reason for the electricity sector’s recurring failures. Without strong regulatory leadership, they insist, the Act’s intended benefits will remain largely unrealised. The Executive Director of PowerUp Nigeria, a consumer-rights and power-sector advocacy organisation, Adetayo Adegbemle, also expressed worry over the prolonged delay in confirming the Chairman-nominee. According to him, since August—when the President submitted the nominee’s name—the Senate has confirmed several other appointees, yet the NERC nomination remains suspended. “This is a dangerous precedent in a very critical sector,” he warned. “We still do not know whether the nominee will be confirmed or rejected. This uncertainty does not bode well for the health of the power sector.”

    Adegbemle stressed that the indecisive approach of government institutions toward such a sensitive regulatory appointment sends the wrong message to investors. In a sector where confidence and predictability are essential, he said, prolonged political delays can discourage investment and stall development. “This is not the time to play politics,” he cautioned. “We have not made significant progress in the sector, and leadership uncertainty only makes matters worse.”

    Past occupants and status of current Commissioners

    Complicating the ongoing leadership crisis at the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) is the sensitive issue of geopolitical balance. A review of historical appointments into the chairmanship shows clear disparities, with several geopolitical zones yet to produce a NERC Chairman in the Commission’s two-decade existence. The North-West has produced Sanusi Garba, who retired in June 2025 after serving as Chairman. The current nominee, Abdullahi Ramat Garba, also hails from the North-West (Kano State), though his confirmation remains stalled in the Senate.

    The South-South has produced two past chairmen — Prof. James Momoh from Edo State and Ransom Owan from Cross River State. The South-East has produced Dr. Sam Amadi from Imo State. However, the South-West, North-Central, and North-East have never produced a chairman. This imbalance has fuelled renewed calls for future leadership selections to reflect federal character and ensure a more equitable distribution of strategic national positions. Beyond the chairmanship vacuum, stakeholders are expressing alarm over emerging patterns of tenure violations among commissioners. Section 36 of the Electricity Act 2023 stipulates that the Chairman shall serve a single five-year term, while Commissioners serve four-year terms, with eligibility for reappointment where applicable. Yet, some commissioners appear to have exceeded these statutory limits — a development that could invalidate regulatory decisions taken during the extended period, should any operator legally challenge them.

    Among those whose tenure expired on December 1 is Dr. Musiliu Oseni (South-West), the Vice Chairman and Commissioner for Market, Competition & Rates, who bowed out after completing a full 10 years in office across two terms. Also leaving the Commission is Hajiya Aisha Mahmud (North-West), the Commissioner for Consumer Affairs, who has now concluded her first term. But the exits are far from over. A fresh wave of tenure expirations looms between now and early 2026, threatening to further thin out the Commission’s leadership bench. Those nearing the end of their terms include: Nathan Rogers Shatti (North-East), Commissioner for Finance & Management, now in his second and final term; Dafe Akpeneye (South-South), Commissioner for Legal, Licensing & Compliance, also rounding off his second and final term; Dr. Yusuf Ali (North-Central), Commissioner for Planning, Research & Strategy, completing his first term; and Engr. Chidi Ike (South-East), Commissioner for Engineering, Performance & Monitoring, likewise finishing his first term.

    The clustering of these expiration dates has amplified fears that the Commission may soon struggle to form a statutory quorum — a legal minimum required to make decisions, issue regulations, approve tariffs, process licences, and carry out other critical regulatory functions. Without timely replacements, stakeholders warn, NERC could be pushed into a state of operational paralysis at a time when the electricity sector can least afford it.

    System threatened?

    As multiple commissioners depart without new appointees confirmed to replace them, experts warn that Nigeria risks breaching the Electricity Act 2023. Crucially, the Act does not allow for acting appointments for these high-level positions, meaning that once vacated, the seats remain empty until fully appointed and confirmed replacements are in place. “This trend can lead to a regulatory shutdown, endangering electricity market operations, tariff reviews, licensing, consumer protection and market settlement,” a stakeholder cautioned.

    Their concerns are grounded in the law. Section 35(1) of the Electricity Act mandates a full board of seven commissioners, appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, to constitute the Commission. Section 226 empowers these commissioners collectively to issue regulations and perform all statutory functions. Without the required number of commissioners, regulatory decisions — including crucial processes such as tariff adjustments, dispute resolution, market monitoring, and licensing — risk stalling. Section 33(3) strengthens the Commission’s mandate: “The Commission shall be the apex regulator of the NESI and shall be an independent body in the performance of its functions and exercise of its powers under this Act.” This independence is pivotal to investor confidence, sector governance, and market stability.

    Established under the Electric Power Sector Reform Act of 2005 — now replaced by the Electricity Act 2023 — NERC has long played a central role in Nigeria’s electricity sector. Its responsibilities span licensing participants across the value chain, developing technical standards and operating codes, defining consumer rights and obligations, and setting cost-reflective tariffs under frameworks such as the Multi-Year Tariff Order (MYTO). Over two decades, the Commission has contributed significantly to sector growth by expanding generation and network capacity through licensing, developing market rules, and driving reforms aimed at efficiency and transparency. These achievements have been anchored on rule-based governance and robust stakeholder engagement.

    However, experts warn that the current leadership gaps threaten to erode these gains. Without prompt, merit-based appointments and adherence to tenure provisions, NERC’s institutional progress — built painstakingly over 20 years — could collapse rapidly. The consensus among stakeholders is clear: restoring stability at NERC is not just an administrative necessity but an urgent national priority.

  • DisCos collected N196.26b in September, says NERC

    DisCos collected N196.26b in September, says NERC

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) yesterday said the 12 electricity Distribution Companies (DisCos) collected N192.26 billion in September 2025 out of the N241.54 billion total energy bills issued in the period under review.

    It was an indication that the DisCos could not collect N49.28 billion of the bills.

    This was contained in the Commercial Performance of Nigeria’s Distribution Companies in September 2025 factsheet.

    The performance factsheet which was in the commission’s X handle, noted that in the month under review, N279.45 billion total energy was received by the Discos.

    NERC said while 86.43 per cent billing efficiency was recorded in September, it was up by 2.58 per cent from the previous month.

     According to him, “Energy Billed & Billing Efficiency ₦279.45bn total energy received ₦241.54bn total energy billed Billing efficiency: 86.43% (2.58% from August) Revenue Collection & Collection Efficiency ₦241.54bn total billings ₦196.26bn revenue collected (2.69%) Collection efficiency: 81.25% (1.18%).”

    On Revenue Recovery Performance, NERC said ₦116.34/kWh was the allowed average tariff while ₦97.09/kWh was the actual average collection.

    The factsheet added that there was 83.45 per cent recovery efficiency, with (3.67 per cent) rise over the August record.

    NERC said DisCo Eko, Abuja, and Ikeja remained strong performers across billing, collections, and recovery efficiency. 

    Aba, according to the factsheet, achieved a 102.85 per cent billing efficiency, reflecting improved energy optimisation and legacy recovery. Benin, Port Harcourt, and Kano posted moderate efficiency levels, while Jos, Kaduna, and Yola continued to trail and show room for improvement. 

    NERC explained that the “figures give a clear picture of how effectively DisCos are billing, collecting, and recovering revenue, key indicators for strengthening liquidity and improving service delivery across the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI).”

  • NERC appointment options and need for urgency

    NERC appointment options and need for urgency

    By Michael Nwadike

    There is uncertainty among top officials of Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission following expiration of the tenure of the chairman in June and indications that the tenure of the vice chairman of NERC will lapse on December 8. But that should not be the way forward.

    President Bola Tinubu has since nominated Abdullahi Ramat, a former local government chairman, as head of the agency and two commissioners; Mr Abubakar Yusuf, commissioner of Consumer Affairs, and Dr Fouad Animashun, commissioner of Finance and Management Services, subject to Senate confirmation.

    However, the skirmishes in NERC have grown more unsettling. All eyes are on the 10th Senate, led by Senator Godswill Akpabio, given importance of the sector to Nigeria’s growth.

    NERC is an independent body, established by Electric Power Sector Reform Act of 2005 (repealed), now Electricity Act of 2023, to undertake technical and economic regulation of Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry.

    The commission is to, among others, license operators, determine operating codes and standards, establish customer rights and obligations, and set cost-reflective industry tariffs.

    Since its inception, NERC has recorded significant achievements, including expansion of capacity and network by issuance of licences for electricity generation, transmission, distribution, and trading, as well as development of industry codes and standards, market rules, and a multi-year tariff order. In addition, the commission has issued regulations and orders that created an attractive and stable electricity market in Nigeria.

    These achievements have been made possible by ensuring that market transactions are rule-based and regulatory interventions are preceded by robust consultative and stakeholder engagement processes to ensure transparency, fairness, and accountability.

    Transparency, fairness, and accountability are critical to NERC, Nigeria’s independent apex regulator. The Electricity Act was thorough in ensuring this independence.

    The Act gave statutory recognition to, and enshrined the principle of regulatory independence, by providing for creation of the apex regulator of the NESI by an Act of the National Assembly rather than by subsidiary legislation.

    Section 33(3) states: “The commission shall be the apex regulator of the NESI and shall be an independent body in the performance of its functions and exercise of its powers under this Act”.

    Regulatory decisions are to be taken by a board of commissioners under Section 35 (1), which states that the commission shall consist of seven full-time commissioners appointed by the President, subject to confirmation by the Senate.” These commissioners, under Section 226, may make regulations on which the commission has powers.

    Funding from internally generated revenue, as well as government subsidies. Section 53 deals with funding for the commission: “The funds of the commission shall consist of: (a) fees, charges and other income accruing to the commission from licensees and other things done by it in terms of this Act, excluding any fines or penalties recovered under this Act; (b) funds allocated to the commission by the National Assembly, under a request by the commission for additional funds required to meet its expenditure; and (c) such other moneys as may vest in or accrue to the commission, whether in the course of its operations or otherwise, among others.

    It is indeed, in view of the above, that experts have argued that appointing seasoned professionals who have grown through the ranks in the commission would bring far more stability and technical competence to the commission and sector than bringing on board those to start afresh to understudy workings of NERC.

    While National Assembly is debating NERC nominations, industry experts are reminding President Tinubu that there is a need for speed in the appointment of a merit-driven NERC chief on time because of importance of the energy sector in the development objectives of the government.

    Furthermore, complementing the incoming NERC chief with seasoned commissioners with legacy knowledge will do NERC a world of good.

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    The experts said Tinubu needs to act fast and look inwards into the commission to source for qualified and technically sound experts for the board, especially as the chair and vice chair will soon be vacant.

    As we move into 2026, energy experts believe President Tinubu must, sort out the leadership of NERC to enable the country to derive the maximum benefits for which NERC was established in the first place.

    In doing so, experts and insiders are calling on the President to act before the house of NERC, which is looking like a Fuji House of Commotion, crashes down on us. They said NERC has top officials with legacy knowledge of how to move the organisation forward. Presently, NERC has six commissioners:

    • Musiliu Oseni – vice chair and commissioner for Economic Regulations. Appointed in February 2017, he is serving his second term, which will expire on December 8.

    • Aisha Mahmud – commissioner for Stakeholder Management. A former head of Tariff and Rates at NERC, she has served the commission for years and contributed to its development. In recognition of her expertise and impact in the power sector, she was appointed commissioner in December 2020. She led the establishment of NERC Contact Centre, developed the Customer Protection Regulation, and oversaw 33 Forum Offices, among others. She is the only woman commissioner and remains eligible for reappointment.

    • Shatti Nathan Rogers – commissioner for Corporate Services. Appointed in February 2017 and reappointed in February 2022, his second term will expire in February 2027.

    • Dafe Akpeneye – commissioner for Legal, Licensing and Compliance. First appointed in February 2017 and reappointed in February 2022, his second term will expire February 2027.

    • Chidi Ike – commissioner for Technical Regulation. Appointed in February 2022, his first term will expire in February 2027.

    • Yusuf Ali – commissioner for Research and Data Analytics. Appointed in February 2022, his first term will expire in February 2027.

    To ensure continuity, it is essential  Federal Government decides on the future leadership structure of NERC ahead of the vice chairman’s tenure expiration in December.