Tag: Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission

  • 5.36m electricity customers remain without meters– NERC

    5.36m electricity customers remain without meters– NERC

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has disclosed that 5.36 million electricity customers nationwide remain without meters, leaving them exposed to the unpredictable estimated billing methods by distribution companies (DisCos).

    According to the Commission’s third-quarter 2025 industry report published on its website, as of 30 September 2025, only 6.662 million of the 12.030 million active registered electricity customers across the 12 DisCos were metered, representing 55.37 per cent coverage. NERC stated that during the third quarter as of 2025, a total of 228,614 end-user customers were metered across all DisCos.

    Ibadan, Aba and Abuja DisCos recorded the highest number of meter installations, accounting for 23.38 per cent, 20.81 per cent and 19.06 per cent of total installations, respectively.

    The report noted that compared to the 226,959 customers metered in Q2 2025, there was a slight increase of 0.73 per cent in total meter installations in Q3 2025.

    Read Also: Transforming Nigeria’s economy: Policies, progress and continuity

    However, nine DisCos recorded declines in meter installation over the period, with Port Harcourt and Jos DisCos posting the largest drops of 62.35 per cent and 61.68 per cent, respectively. In contrast, Aba (+173.45%), Abuja (+38.28%) and Ibadan (+17.72%) DisCos recorded notable increases in meter installations during the quarter.

    “Out of the 228,614 end-user customers metered in Q3 2025, 176,302 (77.12%) were metered under the Meter Asset Provider (MAP) framework, 44,104 (19.29%) under the Vendor-Financed framework, 7,902 (3.46%) under the Distribution Sector Recovery Programme (DISREP), 175 (0.08%) under the Meter Acquisition Fund (MAF), and 131 (0.06%) under the DisCo-Financed framework,” the report stated.

    Under the MAP framework, a total of 176,302 meters were installed in Q3 2025, representing an 18.20 per cent increase compared to the 149,150 installations recorded in Q2 2025. Ibadan (53,441), Abuja (35,449) and Benin (26,690) DisCos recorded the highest MAP installations during the quarter, accounting for 30.31 per cent, 20.11 per cent and 15.14 per cent of the total, respectively.

  • NERC approves N21b for DisCos for meter purchase

    NERC approves N21b for DisCos for meter purchase

    • Says meter is free of charge

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) yesterday announced the approval of N21 billion for 11 electricity Distribution Companies (DisCos) to provide meters for end-use customers.

    This was contained in its ORDER NO: NERC/2024/072  on The Operationalization of “Tranche A” of the Presidential Metering Initiative Under the Framework of Meter Acquisition Fund.

    NERC said: “The Commission hereby approves the use of a sum of NGN21,000,000,000 (twenty one billion Naira only) apportioned pro rata to contribution by the DisCos as Tranche A of the MAF scheme. Attached to this Order as Schedule 1, is a breakdown of the funds available for each DisCo for the purchase of end-use customer meters.”

    NERC emphatically said that the DisCos shall buy and install the meters for customers under the MAF free of charge.

    “All the meters to be procured and installed under the MAF framework shall be at no cost to the customers of the DisCos,” said NERC.

    The order which NERC chairman, Engr. Sanusi Garba and Commissioner Legal signed on 19th January 2024, “shall become effective on 13th June 2024 and may be amended or revoked by subsequent orders issued by the commission.

    NERC had  introduced the Meter Asset Provider {“MAP”) Regulations 2018 and subsequently, the Meter Asset Provider and National Mass Metering

    [“MAP&NMMR”) Regulations in 2021 to address metering challenges in the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (“NESI“).

    Read Also: NERC approves N21b for DisCos to meter customers 

    The Regulations provided several options for metering end-use customers but the interventions, though significant, have not resulted in the closure of the national metering gap which currently stands in excess of seven million customers.

    The inability of distribution companies (“DisCos”} to raise financing in the form of debt or additional equity was identified as the major constraint in the acquisition and deployment of end-use meters and other capital investments. The Meter Acquisition Fund

    {“MAF”) scheme was therefore developed and approved by the Commission, primarily to address the challenge of DisCo creditworthiness inhibiting the deployment of end-use meter in NES| by creating a credible revenue stream from the market funds on the back of which long term financing may be secured by the utilities.

    NERC said the management of Fund Manager (“FM”) is based on terms and conditions negotiated by the DisCos and approved by the Commission.

    According to the commission, the Federal Government has approved the Presidential Metering Initiative {“PMI”) with the overarching objective of closing the metering gap in the NES! within three years leveraging on smart metering technologies for data analytics. The MAF shall form one of the revenue streams for the repayment of the long tenor financing for metering.

    Continuing, the order revealed that “The Commission approved the deregulation of meter prices under the MAP scheme

    vide Order NERC/2024/040 to ensure on efficient pricing of meters while

    responding more quickly to changes in macroeconomic parameters.

    “The Order provides that all prices of meters under the MAP scheme shall be determined through a transparent and competitive bidding process by eligible MAPs.

    “A competitive bidding process was held on 21 May 2024 based on the provisions of Order NERC/2024/040 where a total of 24 (twenty-four)] MAPs participated across the 12 (twelve) DisCos. A total of 44 bids were submitted for 10 (ten) meter specifications.”

  • Don’t pay after two weeks outage, NERC tells electricity users

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) on Friday said that the Meter Asset Provider (MAP) regulation has stopped the electricity Distribution Companies from collecting energy and service charges after two weeks of power outage. 

    Its chairman, Prof. James Momoh, broke the news at the Abuja Electricity Distribution  Company (AEDC) launch of the MAP in Abuja.

    The  MAP regulation, according to the General Manager, Finance and Management Services, Mr. Abudukadir Shetima,  who represented him, has insisted the meters must be installed not later than 10 days after payment.

    He added that should the DisCo refuse to replace a malfunctioning meter after two days, the customer is not expected to make any payment. 

    He noted the commission, the distribution companies and the customers have their deadline to provide the meters to the customers at the required time. 

    He said the regulation was designed in a manner the consumer that regards the consumer as the king in the Nigeria Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) value chain.

    The customer, he said, is expected to have the best services he can have. 

    According to him: “Deadlines were provided in the regulation for the DisCos, even the commission so that we don’t delay so that the customers get the service at the time that it is required.  

    “For instance, if a meter is about to be installed, it must be installed within 10 days of making payment. There will be sanctions of that deadline is not met. 
     
    “Number two, to ensure there will be sanction the MAP has been asked to provide  a bank performance guarantee that will be called upon. So they will lose money if they delay in providing the meters even by one day.

    “Number two, if the meters get bad, they will be replaced by the MAP without any payment for the entire ten years period. If the meters don’t work they must be replaced within two days, if they are not replaced within two days, the customer will not make the monthly customers service charge payment. That payment will be seized. 

    “Another part of the regulation is that if there is a prolonged outage and they are out of electricity for months, in addition to other measure that the commission is taking to address those kind of scenarios, the customer will not pay for the meter service charge and will not even pay for the electricity if there is outage for more than two weeks.”

    Listing the objective of the regulation, Momoh said the first important objective is the removal of estimated billing in order to remove the controversies around it. 

    READ ALSO: Crazy bills, crime against electricity consumers – Lagos Lawyers

    He added: “The customers are happy to make the payment. The second issue is revenue assurance, happy customers will be willing to pay. 

    “Nigerians are willing to pay for the services they can get so that there will be revenue assurance and that will  impact on the industry as a whole. Currently,  the revenues in the industry are nit sufficient to  enable investments and better services. So, it is like a vicious circle and this this metering is intended to correct that problem.”

    Speaking, the AEDC Managing Director, Engr. Ernest Mupwaya, revealed that altogether the company has planned to meter the customers in its franchise areas with 900,000 meters. 

    He said that bearing in mind that the customers would increase, the meter vendors would also cater for their metering. 

    He said: “In all, 900,000 customs have been scheduled for metering in AEDC franchise area in the first instance. Being a moving target, we are aware that the number may increase and as  it does, the vendors will take them along.”

    The representative of the  Federal Competition and Consumer Protection  Council, Omajo Nwachukwu, warned the parties not to compromise the process in the implementation of the regulation.

    She insisted that customers that are not comfortable with buying their meters with loans from the commercial banks should be allowed to purchase them directly from the Meter Assets Providers.

  • Crazy bills, crime against electricity consumers – Lagos Lawyers

    Worried by the monthly influx of inflated electricity tariff, otherwise described as “Crazy Bills”, some Lagos-based lawyers on Friday urged the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) to map out pricing guidelines for the benefit of energy consumers.

    They lawyers who spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) described as “outrageous” the monthly bills sent by Electricity Distribution Companies, and classified same as a crime against the Nigerian public.

    They called for the adoption of an urgent measure to serve as a control on the pricing system in electricity distribution.

    Mrs. Vivian Ekwegh, from the law firm of Chief Benson Ndakara and Co, said “Crazy Bills” was exploitative and a crime against the Nigerian masses.

    Exemplifying herself as a victim of excessive billing, she said: “Estimated billing is a crime against the Nigerian masses because this is just one out of many ways in which the masses are being exploited.

    “I am a victim of estimated billing, and in spite of erratic power supply, each month I am sent a “crazy bill” to pay up or risk disconnection,” she said

    Ekwegh said that efforts to go through several channels to redress the situation and obtain a prepaid meter had failed severally, as the bills kept coming in monthly.

    “In spite of going through the appropriate channels to get a prepaid meter which, in my opinion, is a proper pricing system to determine how much I really owe; it has proved abortive.

    “This raises my suspicion that indeed, estimated billing may be intentional; it is a racketeering against the Nigerian public,” she said, and called for proactive measures on the way forward.

    “The solution is for the NERC to live up to its responsibility of protecting the Nigerian consumers by ensuring that every household is issued a prepaid meter.

    “If this is done, it will foster a proper pricing system and better estimation of how much electricity consumers utilise,” Ekwegh said.

    A Constitutional lawyer, Mr Spurgeon Ataene, Managing Partner at Spurgeon Ataene and Co, puts his opinion in the following words:

    “Crazy, outrageous, excessive and nonchalant estimated billing has become a menace to the citizens of this country.

    “I live within the Yaba area of Lagos and for the past four years, I receive electricity bills between N15,000 and N25,000 monthly, with insistence that I must pay up before re-connection.

    “I have been paying under duress for some years now, and I have written several petitions, yet nothing has been done.

    “This has further emboldened them to target my apartment for disconnection every month just to humiliate me for daring to petition and demand for prepaid meter.

    “I live in a residential apartment with no industrial equipment like a factory,” Ataene said, calling for urgent redress of the billing system.

    “The truth is that urgent intervention is needed to curtail these excesses; imagine how they sometimes disconnect the light, leaving naked wires on the ground and endangering the lives of citizens in some instances.

    “The NERC must now embark on aggressive enlightenment exercises aimed at correcting the flaws, delete illegal accumulation of bills and ensure that every house without a prepaid meter gets checked to know their actual power consumption,” he said.

    He said that the billing system should be made dependent on the availability of power for the period under review.

    He noted that another panacea to curbing massive estimated billings is to commission a compulsory provision of prepaid meters nationwide, and which will be at no cost to consumers.

    “Revenue through this means will be directly sent to government instead of allowing some few people to sabotage the economy.

    “Those employed into sensitive places like Electricity Companies should be made to realise the enormity of their tasks, and sign undertakings that where they oppress citizens or sabotage the economy, they will be investigated and prosecuted with a consequent sack if found guilty.

    “Finally, the electricity authorities can publish phone numbers of officials to reach for complaints, so that illegal bills received, can be sent to their WhatsApp and specifying the nature of apartment, household equipment and location.

    “If these steps are taken, I am confident there will be an instant check; no one should be allowed to toy with the live wire of the economy,” he said

    In the same vein, another Lagos-based lawyer, Mr Emenike Nnoromlele of Divine Solicitors, urged regulatory authorities to come out with a billing system which will itemise how much each point will consume in a specified duration.

    He said that this was to void the orchestration of mischief, adding that the same will also prevent an abuse of the exercise.

  • Mojec, banks collaborate on meter provision for customers

    As the date for the take off of the Meter Asset Provider (MAP) scheme draws nearer, Mojec Meter Assets Management Company, a subsidiary of Mojec International Limited, and also one of the selected MAP operators, is partnering some banks to ease the roll out of meters to customers next month.

    Mojec with the banks – FirstBank, Wema Bank, Unity Bank, Keystone Bank, Zenith Bank, Sterling Bank, Polaris Bank and First Option Micro Finance Bank – entered into a deal to provide retail financing to electricity customers to ease their acquisition of prepaid meters.

    The banks will provide finance to customers within the coverage area of Mojec’s partner-electricity distribution companies (DisCos) across the country. The banks, this week, signed memoranda of understanding (MoU) with Mojec in Lagos.

    MAP is a scheme that was initiated by the Ministry of Power, Works and Housing and approved by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC).

    The MAPs will provide, install and maintain customers’ meters and fast-track the closure of the metering gap, which is five million and  end estimated billing.

    According to the regulation guiding MAP operation, a MAP must install a customer’s meter within 10 days of payment for such meter and the operators of the scheme must meter unmetered electricity users in Nigeria within three years from the time they strart work next month.

    Mojec International Limited Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Ms. Chantelle Abdul, said at a summit of the partnering banks and DisCos in Lagos that the company is determined to bridge the metering gap in the sector by ensuring provision of top quality electricity meters to customers in Nigeria.

    Abdul said: “Now that MAP is here, Mojec is once again blazing the trail in the provision of high-end quality prepaid meters to customers, helping to reduce the financial burden estimated billing is putting on electricity consumers. Mojec as a company has invested a lot of resources positioning it as best suited to meet the metering needs of all customers within the coverage of its partner DisCos.

    “Mojec would be partnering eight DisCos, including, Ikeja Electric, Eko DsCo, Abuja DisCo, Kano DisCo, Enugu DisCo, Jos DisCo, Ibadan DisCo and Kaduna DisCo, covering about 20 states of the federation.”

    The General Manager, Finance and Management Services, NERC, Abdulkadir Shettima, commended Mojec for its leadership in the metering subsector as demonstrated by its efforts towards the full scale implementation of the MAP scheme, which allows customers easy and direct access to meter assets.

    “This MoU signing between Mojec and these banks as well as the announcement of the company’s readiness to implement the MAP scheme is very commendable. It goes to show that Mojec is a real leader in this business and it is committed to industry’s mission of ensuring that every household in this country is metered.”

    Polaris Bank Chief Executive Officer Tokunbo Abiru explained that the bank was pleased to partner with Mojec by providing financing support to customers on the meter acquisition scheme. “Our bank is glad to be facilitating the acquisition of these meters by granting loans to eligible customers under the programme,” he said.

    Keystone Bank Acting Chief Executive Officer, Abubakar Sule, explained: “Energy cost is by all standards the major cost line in most homes and businesses. The scheme is set to eradicate the unnecessary prevalence of estimated billing, which deprived the national economy of funds which otherwise could be deployed into other productive use. We are, therefore, excited to be part of this initiative to bring electricity to homes and businesses at the most prudent cost, putting households and business in control of their expenditure pattern.”

    The Managing Director Unity Bank Plc, Tomi Somefun, explained that the development reinforces the long-standing beneficial relationship and business commitment it had maintained with Mojec International Limited for well over two decades, adding: “The partnership will create beneficial impact on electricity customers, further drive financial inclusion through consumer banking, restore customer’s confidence, increase transparency and thereby replacing the opaque estimated billing system that had prevailed.”

    The Divisional Head, Retail and Consumer Banking, Sterling Bank, Shina Atilola, represented by Ayodele Odulaja, Head of Power and Telecoms Team, stated: “We are excited to be a key driver of the pre-paid meter acquisition programme, which will eliminate the inefficiencies associated with estimated billing and inaccurate post-paid meter readings. Leveraging technology, Sterling Bank is reputed for providing Nigerians with a convenient way to access loans ranging from N10,000 to N5million in five minutes through the Specta online lending platform.

    ‘’Electricity consumers will benefit from the speed of this solution under this partnership without the attendant delays of traditional lending.”

    The Managing Director, Wema Bank, Ademola Adebise, noted that the partnership with Mojec is a proof of the bank’s commitment to provide simple and easy retail financing for Nigerians. ‘’As a bank that takes pride in applying innovative solutions to societal challenges, we are proud and excited to work with Mojec in meeting the demands of equitable electricity metering in the country. This is a reflection of our can’t stop, won’t stop drive to create avenues that will support Nigerians to achieve their future dreams today,” he said.

    The Managing Director, First Option Micro Finance Bank, Godfrey Ogbuehi, stated: “The MAP project resonates so much with the company’s goal of enhancing lives and in response, a new product,  Light-Up Loan (Prepaid Meter Acquisition Loan), has been  strategically   created   to   provide   funding   to   help   energy   consumers   (both individual  and businesses), especially  the  low-  income  earners and  rural  dwellers; acquire prepaid meters with ease under the Meter Asset Provider Regulations.”

  • Metering is DisCos obligation, NERC insists

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) Monday insisted that obligation of ensuring that electricity consumers are metered, remains with the Electricity Distribution Companies (DisCos) under Meter Asset Provider (MAP) Regulations 2018.

    This is consistent with their respective Licensing Terms & Conditions and Section 4 (1) of the said Regulations that provide that, inter alia, “Distribution licensee is responsible for the achievement of metering targets as specified by the Commission from time to time.”

    The commission’s General Manager, Public Affairs Department, Dr. Usman Abba Arabi disclosed in a statement that he issued in Abuja.

    Read also: Again, court orders IBEDC to restore electricity to Ijesa land

    According to him, Section 4 (3) of the MAP Regulation requires that all distribution licensees shall engage the services of a Meter Asset Provider(s) towards meeting the metering targets as specified by the Commission and in accordance with the provisions of the MAP Regulations 2018.

    The DisCos were expected to engage MAP(s) within 120 days of coming into effect of the Regulations.

    The deadline was fixed for July 31, 2018 but was extended to November 30, 2018 to engender more competition between potential MAPs thus providing better value for consumers. Several of the DisCos experienced slippage in the timeline stipulated by the Commission and this infraction is being handled in line with the enforcement regulations of the Commission.

    The Commission is currently reviewing the MAP procurement reports and successful Meter Asset Providers shall be announced after a meeting with the DisCos and preferred bidders scheduled to hold next week.

    The Commission wishes to reaffirm its commitment to expedite a closure of the current metering gap thus limiting the practice of estimated billing to very exceptional cases in line with the provisions of the MAP regulations.

  • Why NERC is unable to grow sector, by group

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) is unable to grow the power sector because of the commercial and technical problems in the supply value chain, a source at the Association of Nigerian Electricity Distributors (ANED) has said.

    The source, who preferred anonymity, said the sector has not been able to perform optimally because NERC has refused to resolve the fundamental problems plaguing it.

    In an interview with The Nation on phone, the source said the 11 power distribution companies (DisCos) are not getting the right value for the electricity they are distributing to consumers, adding that the issue is retarding growth.

    The source said: “Traditionally, the power distribution firms are supposed to distribute the quantum of electricity coming from their counterparts in the generation arm – the power generation companies GenCos) – to the final consumers at a price that is beneficial to them and the market.

    ‘’However, the reverse is the case as the tariffs are not commensurate with the price of electricity in the market. Imagine a situation where a buyer buys a product at N50 and sell it at 50kobo. Where is the profit for the buyer?

    The source said the DisCos would continue to grapple with liquidity problems until a review of the tariffs is done by NERC.

    The source accused NERC of being inactive when it was supposed to act. “As a matter of fact, a review of the tariffs is expected to take place every six months. However, there was nothing like that in the past six years. The Multi-Year-Tariff-Order (MYTO) is not being implemented in line with the Nigerian Power Sector Reforms Act. Therefore, how can the DisCos get the right price for the product they are supplying their customers?

    ‘’The sector is fundamentally unable to close the gap in the tariffs it is passes to the consumers. This, the source added, has resulted in the inability of the DisCos to meet their obligations by subsidising electricity.

    The source urged stakeholders to come together and address the problems, adding that the sector would not grow until this was done. He said the Federal Government had intervened by giving N750billion to the sector, which would not do much due to the plethora of problems besetting the sector.

    The source said the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Company (NBET), Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN), the GenCos and the DisCos had some problems, which ranged from paucity of funds to dilapidated infrastructure, among others.

    Another problem that is inhibiting the growth of the DisCos and the sector, according to the source, is poor exchange rates. He said the DisCos bought some equipment at N160 per dollar some years ago, but that this had gone up to N360 per dollar.

    ‘’This makes it difficult for the operators to get enough dollars to buy equipment for maintenance. These problems have become  constraints to revenue generation for Discos,’’ he added.

  • Why NERC is unable to grow sector, by group

    The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) is unable to grow the power sector because of the commercial and technical problems in the supply value chain, a source at the Association of Nigerian Electricity Distributors (ANED) has said.

    The source, who preferred anonymity, said the sector has not been able to perform optimally because NERC has refused to resolve the fundamental problems plaguing it.

    In an interview with The Nation on phone, the source said the 11 power distribution companies (DisCos) are not getting the right value for the electricity they are distributing to consumers, adding that the issue is retarding growth.

    The source said: “Traditionally, the power distribution firms are supposed to distribute the quantum of electricity coming from their counterparts in the generation arm – the power generation companies GenCos) – to the final consumers at a price that is beneficial to them and the market.

    ‘’However, the reverse is the case as the tariffs are not commensurate with the price of electricity in the market. Imagine a situation where a buyer buys a product at N50 and sell it at 50kobo. Where is the profit for the buyer?

    The source said the DisCos would continue to grapple with liquidity problems until a review of the tariffs is done by NERC.

    The source accused NERC of being inactive when it was supposed to act. “As a matter of fact, a review of the tariffs is expected to take place every six months. However, there was nothing like that in the past six years. The Multi-Year-Tariff-Order (MYTO) is not being implemented in line with the Nigerian Power Sector Reforms Act. Therefore, how can the DisCos get the right price for the product they are supplying their customers?

    ‘’The sector is fundamentally unable to close the gap in the tariffs it is passes to the consumers. This, the source added, has resulted in the inability of the DisCos to meet their obligations by subsidising electricity.

    The source urged stakeholders to come together and address the problems, adding that the sector would not grow until this was done. He said the Federal Government had intervened by giving N750billion to the sector, which would not do much due to the plethora of problems besetting the sector.

    The source said the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Company (NBET), Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN), the GenCos and the DisCos had some problems, which ranged from paucity of funds to dilapidated infrastructure, among others.

    Another problem that is inhibiting the growth of the DisCos and the sector, according to the source, is poor exchange rates. He said the DisCos bought some equipment at N160 per dollar some years ago, but that this had gone up to N360 per dollar.

    ‘’This makes it difficult for the operators to get enough dollars to buy equipment for maintenance. These problems have become  constraints to revenue generation for Discos,’’ he added.

  • ‘Youths can reverse power problems’

    The Executive Chairman of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Prof James Momoh, has said challenges in the energy sector could be averted with a conscientious investment by Nigerian youths in the sector.

    He said the sector needed graduates equipped with mathematics, physics, ready to be innovative and creative in providing solutions.

    Delivering his lecture titled The Nigerian power supply question: challenges and solutions at the launch of Foluseke Abidemi Somolu Foundation,  at the University of Lagos (UNILAG) last Thursday, Momoh explained that  there was need to encourage young people to show interest  in Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) education to  improve the quality of life of citizens.

    Prof Momoh said: “If we don’t equip them to take over from the ones in the system that are getting older, then there would be a challenge. We need as Nigerians to get involved and to be the owners. We cannot depend on foreign investors because they will go back to their countries. We can only trust their knowledge to transfer to us and not depend on them. We need to learn how things work now.

    “We are looking for problem solvers that will look at critical technologies to modernise the entire grid.  It is this group of scholars or engineers of the future that we must produce. Our children’s brains must be engaged in looking for new solutions. Old solutions are not working; guess work is not working. We need innovations that will help our children to do independent power, locally produce power; able to manage it for the improvement of power generation.”

    Momoh promised to sponsor students who would do their thesis around finding innovative solutions to the power sector on scholarship.

    He stressed that the challenges which cut across the supply chain provide opportunities for business formulation and self-employment.

    He added that the commission was proposing a new curriculum for engineering students that would be encompassing to meet the economics, law aspect, leadership, management and innovative skills requirement of the power sector.

    The Foluseke Abidemi Somolu Foundation was established to immortalise the late Somolu and achieve his desires to improve the power sector using cutting edge technologies and professionalism for the development of the country.

    To support education, the Foundation will award prizes to electrical engineering undergraduate and post graduate students. It will reward excellence of practising electrical power engineers in the public and private sectors.

    It would also award research grants to doctoral students, sponsor electrical engineering publications, seminars and standard developments and hosting annual symposia and workshops.

    Born in 1946, Somolu served in various capacities to improve power generation.  He was a member of the Nigerian Society of Engineers; and a Senior Special Assistant on Power Sector Reforms during  the administrations of Olusegun Obasanjo and the Late Musa Yar’Adua.

    In partnership with Momoh, a former Head of Electrical Engineering Department at the Howard University, United State of America, Somolu coordinated the selection of qualified Nigerian secondary school pupils for the Howard University Electrical Engineering Summer School Programme. Through this, many students benefited from the Howard University Scholarship awards in Power Engineering from 1993.

    He was an alumnus of the University of Lagos. He died on August 24, 2015.

    Wife of the deceased who chairs the board of the Foundation, Dr Olatokunbo Somolu, said she was saddened by his death because he would have contributed a lot to the power industry as he had devoted his life to the industry. However she said she was consoled that he lived a fulfilled life.

    She added that aside his three books and numerous publications, he still wanted to write more but was hindered by ill health.

    “He was ill, perhaps we saw it coming but we were all in denial. I was saddened because I believe he would have helped the electricity sector. I really wished he lived to disseminate information to younger ones. I know wherever he is today he would be happy to know that his dreams lives on.

    With the Foundation, Dr Somolu said she was convinced that her late husband’s colleagues would seek ways to immortalise his legacies as   he was always sorted out for his perspective on electricity supply and other related issues.   She commended their effort to continue the dreams of her late husband.

  • Benin Industrial Park: Investors angle for lots

    …as Park gets electricity license

    Coming on the heels of the approval by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) of an electricity license for the Benin Industrial Park (BIP), investors are falling over themselves to snap up juicy lots at the park, located at Iyanomo, near Benin City.

    The BIP is a big-ticket project by the Governor Godwin Obaseki-led administration in Edo State aimed at driving the state government’s industrialization agenda and hosting manufacturing, agro-allied, textile and automobile industries.

    Governor Obaseki, at the commissioning of the new 1X60MVA, 132/33KV power transformer in Okpella, Estako East Local Government, disclosed that a Chinese company will be mobilising not less than 20 engineers to the proposed site of the Benin Industrial Park to commence preliminary work.

    According to him, “The approval of the license has further prompted a partnership with a Chinese Company that has shown interest to partner with us to develop our industrial park. They are sending 20 engineers to the state next month.”

    The visit by the Chinese Engineers follows several other business concerns that have expressed interest in setting up at the site, checks at the state’s Investment Promotion Office, show.

    Read Also: Gunmen attack trader at ATM stand in Benin

    “We have noticed impressive enquiries on the status of the project and the opportunities for investment. I think what is pulling the interest is the assurance that we now have a license for power generation at the site. As you well know, power is one of the major considerations for investment. With the governor’s investment-friendly posture, the assurance of electricity clears the coast for potential investors,” an official at the Investment Promotion Office said.

    Mr. Osamudiamen Efosa, who resides in Iyanomo, said that there has been an increase in traffic of people coming to the site of the industrial park with the news that a power license has been approved, noting that the state government’s commitment to the project is remarkable.”

    According to him, “Aside from the usual set of people we often see here, we are seeing a new crop of people who have been coming to make enquiries on the status of the project and they are often delighted to see a field office at the site.