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Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsWhy No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year (9466 Views)

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Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Moderator101(op): 12:41pm On Feb 07
By Jonathan Nda-Isaiah

NEPA promised us no more blackouts by 1986. We’re in 2026. Two national grid collapses in the first week of January alone. If you’re not laughing at the absurdity, you’re probably crying in the dark right now because there’s no light to read this column.

I saw that old newspaper headline recently, “NEPA: No more blackouts: 1986 deadline looms”, and I didn’t know whether to laugh or weep. Forty years later, we’re still having the same conversation. Forty years of promises. Forty years of “the government is working on it.” Forty years of darkness.

The question every Nigerian asks is simple: why have we not solved our electricity problem since independence in 1960?

Military regimes came and went, nothing. Civilian administrations rolled in with fresh promises, but nothing. We privatised the sector in 2013, but still nothing. President Muhammadu Buhari signed the Siemens agreement with great fanfare; you guessed it, nothing moved. We passed the Electricity Act, allowing states to generate their own power, and predictably, not one single state has built a functional power plant.

Sixty-six years after independence, we’re stuck below 6,000 megawatts for over 200 million people.

Let me give you some context that will make you angry. Nigeria celebrated like we’d won the World Cup when power generation peaked at 5,543 megawatts in 2025. Maximum daily energy output hit 125,159MWh and government officials were practically doing victory laps. The minister of power held a press conference. NERC released congratulatory statements. Social media influencers praised the administration.

But here’s what they didn’t tell you in those press releases: South Africa, with just 60 million people, generates approximately 58,000MW. That’s more than ten times what we produce for a population four times smaller. Egypt, with 104 million citizens, produces around 59,000MW.

Ghana, yes, Ghana! whose entire population barely exceeds 33 million people, generates about 5,000MW. Let that sink in. Ghana, with 33 million people, generates almost the same power as Nigeria, with 200 million.

We’re celebrating mediocrity while the rest of the continent leaves us in the dust. Or should I say, leaves us in the dark?

The World Bank has thrown money at this problem like a desperate gambler at a losing table. Research shows Nigeria secured approximately 10 World Bank loans worth $4.36 billion over the past decade, specifically to address power sector challenges. Four point three six billion dollars. Gone. Vanished into the black hole of Nigerian corruption and incompetence.

Where did all that money go? I’ll tell you where it didn’t go into your prepaid meter. It didn’t go into fixing the national grid that collapses more often than a knock-off Chinese generator.

Now, after privatisation failed spectacularly, some clever people suggested that states should generate their own power. President Buhari signed the Electricity Act in 2023, giving states the legal framework to build their own power plants. Finally, we thought, let governors compete. Let Babajide Sanwo- Olu show Charles Soludo what Lagos can do. Let Uba Sani Kaduna prove northern states can deliver.

Two years later, nothing. Not one state has built a functional power plant. And before you start abusing governors on social media, let me give you some numbers that will shock you.

Building a 300 megawatt power plant costs between $270 million and $5 billion, depending on the technology.

Let me break that down:
A coal plant (300MW) costs around $400 million, which is roughly N400 billion at current exchange rates.
A solar plant (300MW) costs approximately $500 million – about N500 billion.

A hydroelectric plant (300MW) ranges from $1.65 billion to $2.5 billion; we’re talking N1.6 trillion to N2.5 trillion here. Large-scale infrastructure projects can exceed $5.8 billion when you factor in dams, turbines, and transmission lines.

Now tell me, which state in Nigeria has N400 billion to N2.5 trillion lying around for power generation? Lagos state’s entire 2024 budget was around N2.2 trillion, and that covers everything from roads to schools to healthcare to security. Rivers state, one of our richest, had a budget of about N800 billion.

So when you hear politicians promising that a serious government will deliver 24-hour power supply in one year, please laugh. I was listening to a radio call-in programme last week, and one caller confidently declared that “any serious government can give Nigeria 24-hour power in one year.”

I nearly drove off the road laughing.

Let me be blunt: No Nigerian politician alive today can give us 24-hour power supply in one year. Nobody. Not Bola Tinubu. Not Atiku Abubakar, not Peter Obi. Not Sanwo-Olu. Not Soludo. Not any of these people we’re arguing about on social media. I’m not being cynical. I’m being realistic. The mathematics simply don’t add up.

To provide 24-hour power for 200 million people, Nigeria needs at least 40,000 to 50,000 megawatts of installed capacity. We currently have less than 13,000MW installed capacity, and we can barely generate 5,000MW on a good day. We need to increase generation by nearly ten times.

Even if, and this is a massive if, the federal government found the $50 billion to $80 billion needed for generation, you still have the problem of transmission. Our national grid is so decrepit that it collapses when generation exceeds 5,000MW. The grid wasn’t built for modern Nigeria. It’s like trying to run a supercomputer on your grandfather’s electrical wiring from 1975.

Fixing the transmission requires another estimated $10 billion to $15 billion. Then there’s the distribution, the network of wires, transformers, and substations that bring power to your house. That needs another $20 billion to $30 billion investment. We’re looking at $80 billion to $125 billion total to fix this problem properly. Nigeria’s entire 2026 budget was around N54 trillion, so we’d need three to five times our annual budget just to fix electricity.

Can it be done? Yes. Countries have done it. China added more power generation capacity in the 1990s and 2000s than Nigeria’s entire installed capacity today. India added tens of thousands of megawatts. Even Vietnam and Bangladesh have surged ahead, while we remained stuck.

But it requires something Nigerian politicians have consistently lacked: long-term thinking, honest leadership, and the willingness to make difficult decisions. It requires ending the culture of corruption in the power sector, where contracts are awarded to cronies who can’t deliver. It requires forcing DisCos to actually invest instead of just collecting bills. It requires political will to prosecute officials who have embezzled billions meant for power projects.

Most importantly, it requires patience from Nigerians. This is a 10 to 15-year project minimum if done right. Not one year. Not even four years. Any politician promising you 24-hour power in one election cycle is either lying or delusional.

So where do we go from here?

First, Nigerians need to stop believing the lies. When politicians promise 24-hour power in one year, laugh at them. Publicly. Loudly. Make them explain the mathematics.

Second, we need incremental targets that are achievable. Aim for 15,000MW by 2030. Then 25,000MW by 2035. Set realistic milestones and hold people accountable when they miss them.

Third, states must get creative. If you can’t afford a 300MW plant alone, pool resources. Let south-west states jointly build a plant. Let south-east states collaborate.

Stop waiting for Abuja to solve everything.

Fourth, prosecute officials who have stolen power sector funds. Not the usual Nigerian “committee to investigate” nonsense that goes nowhere. Real prosecutions with jail time.

Fifth, incentivise private investment properly. Give tax breaks to companies that build captive power plants. Make it easy for manufacturers to generate and sell excess power to the grid.

The 1986 deadline came and went. So did 1990, 2000, 2010, 2020. We’re still in darkness. The question is whether 2040 will be any different. It will only be different if we stop accepting empty promises and start demanding honest leadership with realistic plans.

Until then, keep your generators fueled. Because NEPA, sorry, PHCN, sorry, “the DisCos”, aren’t fixing anything anytime soon.
Source: https://www.thecable.ng/why-no-nigerian-leader-can-fix-power-in-one-year/

Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Moderator101(op): 12:41pm On Feb 07
I know long write-ups aren’t everyone’s thing, so here are 10 clear, summarised points from the news article.

With elections around the corner, pay close attention to points 4, 6 and 10.

1. Nigeria’s electricity crisis is decades old and unresolved — promises of ending blackouts date back to 1986, yet grid collapses still occur regularly in 2026.

2. Every political era has failed — military rule, civilian governments, privatisation (2013), the Siemens deal, and the Electricity Act have all delivered little to nothing.

3. Power generation remains disastrously low — Nigeria produces under 6,000MW for over 200 million people, despite 66 years of independence.

4. Government celebrates mediocrity — record generation of 5,543MW in 2025 was treated as a major achievement despite being globally insignificant.

5. Peer countries expose Nigeria’s failure — South Africa and Egypt generate ~58,000MW each; Ghana, with 33 million people, produces nearly as much power as Nigeria.

6. Billions in funding have been wasted — over $4.36 billion in World Bank loans for power reforms vanished without fixing generation, transmission, or distribution.

7. State-level power generation is financially unrealistic— building a 300MW plant costs $400 million to over $2.5 billion, far beyond most state budgets.

8. 24-hour power in one year is a political fantasy — Nigeria needs 40,000–50,000MW, nearly ten times current output, making such promises mathematically impossible.

9. The real fix is extremely expensive and long-term — repairing generation, transmission, and distribution requires $80–125 billion and at least 10–15 years.

10. Progress demands honesty, accountability, and realism — Nigerians must reject false promises, demand prosecutions for corruption, support incremental targets, and enable private investment.
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Karlovich: 12:47pm On Feb 07
embarassed They will come out and be claiming giant of Africa while living in perpetual darkness, after paying electricity bills monthly they will pay out of their pockets to provide electricity for themselves either through generators or installing solar-powered devices.

The politicians will rather misuse both funds generated internally and the ones borrowed for their personal use while telling the masses to pray for the country and be patient, spits.
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Gajagojo:
State level power generation is not unrealistic

What is important is to have a plan
It can be done in some states like Lagos, and several states in the Niger Delta

There is no requirement to put up the capital up front by government

Dangote did not put down 20billion to build his refinery
He borrowed most of it

What is important is to create an environment where investors believe they can get their money back

That typically would be a payback period of 12 years in this industry

If the deal is right capita will come

Electricity cannot be fixed by government
Just like the telephone system could not

We need private investors
Government should look at how to mobilize and concentrate diaspora funds
Nigerians send $20 billion home yearly maybe more

If they can invest 5 % of that in power it would be a game changer

The way forward is state or regional power generation and distribution

If Lagos state forgets about 4th Mainland bridge and focuses on power it will make sense
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Moderator101(op): 12:52pm On Feb 07
Karlovich:
They will come out and be claiming giant of Africa while living in perpetual darkness
Giant of Mediocrity. The quote below really pained me. sad

Nigeria celebrated like we’d won the World Cup when power generation peaked at 5,543 megawatts in 2025. Maximum daily energy output hit 125,159MWh and government officials were practically doing victory laps. The minister of power held a press conference. NERC released congratulatory statements. Social media influencers praised the administration. But here’s what they didn’t tell you in those press releases: South Africa, with just 60 million people, generates approximately 58,000MW. That’s more than ten times what we produce for a population four times smaller. Egypt, with 104 million citizens, produces around 59,000MW.
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by chatinent: 1:11pm On Feb 07
The forest kept shrinking, yet the trees continued voting for the axe, because the axe cleverly convinced them that, since its handle was made of wood, it was one of them.

The forest will reduce in toto until it becomes so difficult to keep defending the axe.

Nigeria could be fixed in less than six months, if the genuine will to do so existed. However, how can one expect those who rigged their way into power to dismantle the very system that benefited them? Why would those who paid fortunes to secure their positions seek to repair what they purchased? The profound truth is that until public office is made less attractive for personal gain, and until established corrupt figures face the ultimate consequence—not merely a prison sentence, but execution—corruption will be never cease to exist. And like an old grandmother forced to learn to walk again, Nigeria will continue to struggle and falter.

A fish rots from the head down. The head is extremely corrupt, what do you expect the body to be?


The painful reality it that the top contenders are still very corrupt...like from the frying plan to the burning furnace.

I vote for the public execution of established corrupt people...starting from the godfathers.

Without these radical changes, the nation’s painful journey toward functionality will remain endless.

Dear students or writers alike, you can view my signature or my profile for more of me.

Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Telltruth123: 1:13pm On Feb 07
And they always promise to fix it during campaign
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by TenQ: 1:14pm On Feb 07
Moderator101:
Source: https://www.thecable.ng/why-no-nigerian-leader-can-fix-power-in-one-year/
Give me 18 months and I will deliver at least 10GW electrical power to Nigerians.

The problem is when politicians and businesses men are put in charge of national assets
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by DeltaBachelor(m): 1:15pm On Feb 07
It is simply as a result of corruption in high places
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by plessis: 1:15pm On Feb 07
Damage control.
Did you promise to give Nigerians constant electricity in 4years or not?
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Tenses: 1:16pm On Feb 07
I stopped reading when you said money is the issue why we can't have constant power supply.

You are a very ignorant fellow.


Listen to experts. Generation of power is not the problem but transmission/distribution of power is the problem.

More than 1/3 power generated goes to waste. Go and verify.
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by AbuTwins: 1:16pm On Feb 07
No one can fix it in 4 years sef!

Except you have the expertise at hand plus the trillions of dollars needed!

The Privitization done by GEJ was poorly done to unqualified companies. Companies without financial backings and top-notch expertise in the energy sector! We need to go back to move forward!
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Cj4charles(m): 1:16pm On Feb 07
Are you indirectly calling the man that promised such before coming into power lamba king
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by damosade(m): 1:16pm On Feb 07
We will continue to make mockery of ourselves until someting is done on corruption that has eaten deep into our fabrics. So , if you can ot achieve something in a year , does it mean we can have a blue print of what we supposed to achive in power prior 10 years ago?.
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by GloriousGbola: 1:17pm On Feb 07
Moderator101:
I know long write-ups aren’t everyone’s thing, so here are 10 clear, summarised points from the news article.

With elections around the corner, pay close attention to points 4, 6 and 10.

1. Nigeria’s electricity crisis is decades old and unresolved — promises of ending blackouts date back to 1986, yet grid collapses still occur regularly in 2026.

2. Every political era has failed — military rule, civilian governments, privatisation (2013), the Siemens deal, and the Electricity Act have all delivered little to nothing.

3. Power generation remains disastrously low — Nigeria produces under 6,000MW for over 200 million people, despite 66 years of independence.

4. Government celebrates mediocrity — record generation of 5,543MW in 2025 was treated as a major achievement despite being globally insignificant.

5. Peer countries expose Nigeria’s failure — South Africa and Egypt generate ~58,000MW each; Ghana, with 33 million people, produces nearly as much power as Nigeria.

6. Billions in funding have been wasted — over $4.36 billion in World Bank loans for power reforms vanished without fixing generation, transmission, or distribution.

7. State-level power generation is financially unrealistic— building a 300MW plant costs $400 million to over $2.5 billion, far beyond most state budgets.

8. 24-hour power in one year is a political fantasy — Nigeria needs 40,000–50,000MW, nearly ten times current output, making such promises mathematically impossible.

9. The real fix is extremely expensive and long-term — repairing generation, transmission, and distribution requires $80–125 billion and at least 10–15 years.

10. Progress demands honesty, accountability, and realism — Nigerians must reject false promises, demand prosecutions for corruption, support incremental targets, and enable private investment.
the power problem can be solved if we as nigerians are willing to bite the bullet and start paying actual cost of power. no one is going to invest in power when it is still being subsidized. that is the reality. nigeria can no longer afford to subsidise power

there is also the issue of corrupt legacy nepa staff all through the system who have the govt is paying for power mindset and who will continue to sabotage metering initiatives for their own gain
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by epainos: 1:17pm On Feb 07
Nigeria has too many problems, but we need to get something right NOW. Direct transmitting votes from voting points to the main server. We need to be able to kick out useless leaders. This is the trigger for accountability.

When we have the power to vote who we want, then, the next we need to get is the president who will use tech to fight corruption. This is the goal we need and everything will start working in Nigeria..

So, please, we need to fight the senators and get this thing done NOW.

Nigeria has billions of naira we can afford to get a dedicated server for direct transmission. All the useless lies that we aren't ready aren't accepted. The money, man-power, & skill are available to get it done.

If we can get this right, we will make them come for compulsory debate before every election. You want to pull Buhari and Tunubu style to not get involved in any debate, you are gone. You will tell us exactly how you will rule. You will convince us with facts, figures, and experience that we should hand you over 4 years in Aso Rock. We give you 4 years, and you fail to achieve them like Buhari and Tinubu, you sef won't bother to reconnect cos you know you are gone. You and all your network. All of una know...it is over for you all. So, you sef will think twice beflre accepting political posts. Then, we will see people like Ngozi Okonjo- Iweala, Akjnwunmi Adeeshina, Osibanjo, and other brains come out to contest.

Without this done...sorry. I don't have time to waste discussing Nigeria's problems like this. Let's discuss getting direct transmission to the server right this time. Period..
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by jordyspices: 1:18pm On Feb 07
Government of scam na only power what of road health care and education all in a mess
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Tenses: 1:20pm On Feb 07
AbuTwins:
No one can fix it in 4 years sef!

Except you have the expertise at hand plus the trillions of dollars needed!

The Privitization done by GEJ was poorly done to unqualified companies. Companies without financial backings and top-notch expertise in the energy sector! We need to go back to move forward!
All these talk is to exonerate that fraud of a president that made a claim he clearly has no capacity to deliver.
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by anonimi: 1:20pm On Feb 07
DeltaBachelor:
It is simply as a result of corruption in high places
What corruption are you talking about after Tinubu declared that he has ended it?

The Lagos magician was emulated by his power minister who said that 75% of Nigerians have adequate electricity since 2015, as promised by Fashola and Buhari.
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by benardtotti(m): 1:20pm On Feb 07
Gajagojo:
State level power generation is not unrealistic

What is important is to have a plan
It can be done in some states like Lagos, and several states in the Niger Delta

There is no requirement to put up the capital up front by government

Dangote did not put down 20billion to build his refinery
He borrowed most of it

What is important is to create an environment where investors believe they can get their money pack

That typically would be a payback period of 12 years in this industry

If the deal is right capita will come

Electricity cannot be fixed by government
Just like the telephone system could not

We need private investors
Government should look at how to mobilize and concentrate diaspora funds
Nigerians send $20 billion home yearly maybe more

If they can invest 5 % of that in power it would be a game changer

The way forward is state or regional power generation and distribution

If Lagos state forgets about 4th Mainland bridge and focuses on power it will make sense
Private investment will not come unless you pay cost reflective tariff, dangote poured money into that refinery because
1. He got support fr9m fg
2. He was assured subsidy will go completely so prices can be reflective.

I have said it before ,everything tinubu has done so far is what any serious leader would do to set Nigeria on the path of development, it's not popular but needs to be done , if investors see that these policies will still be alive for the next decade ,many of them will rush to invest in critical sectors in Nigeria.
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Tenses: 1:22pm On Feb 07
GloriousGbola:
the power problem can be solved if we as nigerians are willing to bite the bullet and start paying actual cost of power. no one is going to invest in power when it is still being subsidized. that is the reality. nigeria can no longer afford to subsidise power

there is also the issue of corrupt legacy nepa staff all through the system who have the govt is paying for power mindset and who will continue to sabotage metering initiatives for their own gain
Then what is your government waiting for. Band A pay the actual cost for the power they consume. Is the power constant?
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by nairalanda1(m): 1:22pm On Feb 07
grin

The man is right. He said everything except cost reflective tarrifs which he won't include because people wouldn't agree with him again because Nigerians want a government that would guarantee that bread will cost ten kobo per loaf and rent would be 100 naira annually grin

But he is right. Very right

I have realized this for over ten years since GEJ admin. Unlike most people, I was reading around the problem then. And I woke up .But Nigerians don't want to hear. They want miracles today. That's why fashola was able to decieve people and tinubu came with his own story too. Miracles.

Like I said we need ten to fifteen years , spending at least 15 trillion naira each year , before we fix the problem . That plus cost reflective tarrifs so that people would invest because no one would pour money into business without seeing ROI and all this band nonsense won't allow that to happen
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Pootle: 1:23pm On Feb 07
nigerians are naturally wicked they dont want to pay the price of whatever they enjoy, when prepaid stated see how people became conservative of electricity used
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by dettolgel: 1:24pm On Feb 07
I thought Fashola of APC said it wasn't rocket science that any serious government can fix it in 6 months?
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by elevated2: 1:24pm On Feb 07
During the first six months of General Buhari, power supply was great without him doing nothing. What was the secret then?
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by LabStores: 1:25pm On Feb 07
Nonsense assumption and defence.
You are very ignorant of many facts, e.g,
MONEY OR FUND
TRANSMISSION
&
GENERATION


A very serious, disciplined and determined government will definitely fix power in one year.

IT IS VERY VERY POSSIBLE.
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Jokerman(m): 1:25pm On Feb 07
Corruption and lack of will.

Nothing less, nothing more
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by anonimi: 1:26pm On Feb 07
AbuTwins:
No one can fix it in 4 years sef!

Except you have the expertise at hand plus the trillions of dollars needed!

The Privitization done by GEJ was poorly done to unqualified companies. Companies without financial backings and top-notch expertise in the energy sector! We need to go back to move forward!
If PDP’s power sector privatisation was poorly done, why have brilliant APC leaders looters failed to rework it?

Was that not how PDP’s Jonathan reworked the Lagos-Ibadan road construction that had been concessioned by Obasanjo to Bi-Courteney in 2014 huh
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by richiemcgold:
I doubt if those people in government are aware that if we can fix electricity problems in this country, at least 50% of our problems as a nation is automatically solved.
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by MrUnitedstatesA: 1:26pm On Feb 07
Karlovich:
embarassed They will come out and be claiming giant of Africa while living in perpetual darkness, after paying electricity bills monthly they will pay out of their pockets to provide electricity for themselves either through generators or installing solar-powered devices.

The politicians will rather misuse both funds generated internally and the ones borrowed for their personal use while telling the masses to pray for the country and be patient, spits.
Those lying patriots will always avoid threads like this
https://www.nairaland.com/8614041/african-countries-ranked-infrastructure-access

Because it exposes the worthlessness of their useless government. Which kind of country produces and exports so much oil but the people have no electricity or infrastructure to enjoy? Look at how far other Africans are opening the gap between us and them but we are here stark on stupid titles like giant of Africa. Most populous shythole. Nonsense.
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by Omalicious1: 1:26pm On Feb 07
Moderator101:
Source: https://www.thecable.ng/why-no-nigerian-leader-can-fix-power-in-one-year/
Until we deal with corruption in the power sector and we have leaders that will have the will-power to not just know what is right but to do what is right no matter whose Ass is gored, then we will still be dancing makossa with darkness
Re: Why No Nigerian Leader Can Fix Power In One Year by ScamDemicEra: 1:28pm On Feb 07
.... power shortage/outage has been decreed for Nigeria from above !!!

the sons of wickedness below just keep budgeting huge money for power and sharing the money among themselves !!!
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Reply

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