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Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsAso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? (7808 Views)

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Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by ibrandtv(op): 9:55am On Feb 12
When the lights go out across Nigeria, they don’t just flicker — they disappear.

From Lagos to Kano, businesses shut down mid-transaction. Hospitals scramble for generators. Students read under rechargeable lamps.

Entire neighbourhoods sink into darkness without warning.
And now, in the middle of this national blackout culture, the Federal Government has decided that Aso Rock — the seat of power — will permanently disconnect from the national grid and run on solar energy.

By March 2026, the Presidential Villa is expected to go fully off-grid.

On paper, it sounds progressive. Renewable energy. Sustainability. Cost-cutting. Modern governance.

But beneath the polished press statements lies a question many Nigerians are whispering — and some are shouting: Is this visionary leadership… or quiet abandonment?
https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/12/aso-rock-solar-project-is-the-nigerian-government-betraying-nigerians/

Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Jakarta:
You go fear, seat of power self no trust him electricity generation company. If minister of power is using a power bank, what where you expecting?
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by BrickandLace(f): 11:15am On Feb 12
They're preparing for a nationwide blackout.
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by SeeWahala: 11:22am On Feb 12
He said if he does not give us 24 hrs electricity 🔌 that we should spit on him during the next campaign season 😉

It's like he wants to give only himself light and then claim he has fulfilled his campaign promises 😏
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by KIDfurniture(m): 12:21pm On Feb 12
Millions of Nigerians can’t even afford portable solar generator lol. The purchasing power must come to zero before the end of this year. Nigerians won’t be able to afford anything
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Ezewuzie01: 12:21pm On Feb 12
SeeWahala:
He said if he does not give us 24 hrs electricity 🔌 that we should spit on him during the next campaign season 😉

It's like he wants to give only himself light and then claim he has fulfilled his campaign promises 😏
And Peter Obi said that any day he leaves APGA, let him die. So who is fooling who?
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by PROPHETmichael: 12:22pm On Feb 12
SeeWahala:
He said if he does not give us 24 hrs electricity 🔌 that we should spit on him during the next campaign season 😉

It's like he wants to give only himself light and then claim he has fulfilled his campaign promises 😏
Now dem never leave you? They have left you behind
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by GloriousGbola: 12:24pm On Feb 12
Is it better for ASO rock to be like nigerian army that is always owing AEDC?

is it better for ASO rock to be drawing power from an already over stretched AEDC that is unable to meet obligations for its customer base?

https://www.channelstv.com/2024/02/20/to-avoid-disconnection-tinubu-orders-payment-of-aso-rocks-electricity-bill/

President Bola Tinubu has ordered the payment of Aso Rock’s electricity bill to avoid disconnection in the nation’s seat of power.

In an advertorial titled ‘Notice of disconnection’ published on Monday, the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) said the presidential villa owes an electricity bill of N923.87 million.

It issued a 10-day notice to the presidential villa and 86 government ministries, departments, and agencies (MDAs) to pay the N47.1 billion electricity debt they owe or risk disconnection.

The Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga disclosed in a statement on Tuesday, said the outstanding debt will be sorted out before the end of the week.

READ ALSO: FG, States Legally Empowered To Control Prices Of Commodities, Services – Falana

He said Tinubu intervened after the reconciliation of account between the management of the State House and the AEDC.

“President Bola Tinubu has directed immediate settlement of outstanding electricity bill due to the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company,” the statement read.

“The President’s directive follows the reconciliation of accounts between the State House Management and AEDC.

“Contrary to the AEDC’s initial claim of N923million debt in paid advertorial in newspapers, the State House outstanding bill is N342, 352, 217.46, according to a letter by the management of AEDC to the State House Permanent Secretary dated February 14, 2024.

“Having reconciled the position to the satisfaction of both parties, the Chief of Staff to the President, Rt Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila, has given assurance that the debt will be paid to AEDC before the end of this week.”

According to Onanuga, the Chief of Staff urged other MDAs to reconcile their accounts with AEDC and pay their electricity bills.
on top of that AEDC was doing 300% wayo billing
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by TechBaron:
In 2012, when I returned from NYSC, I noticed my cousin would go days without eating properly. When I asked her why, she said her church was fasting and praying for Nigeria.

I laughed and told her she was wasting her time. Nigeria wasn’t designed to work.

In this country;
When there’s no electricity, someone is cashing out. When there’s fuel scarcity, someone is smiling to the bank. When the roads collapse, contracts are being written, funds disbursed without any execution.

I once heard an NCDC staff say he hoped COVID would continue — because of the “benefits” flowing in.

Why would top Military Generals want insurgency and banditry to end?

There are powerful forces working tirelessly behind the scenes to ensure nothing truly functions, because to them, "A broken system is profitable".

The elites understand this game. They loot without restraint, build comfort around themselves, and detach completely from the suffering of ordinary citizens. They don’t experience the darkness, the queues, the bad roads, the hunger.

So tell me — how do you expect people who profit from dysfunction to fix the system?
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by KillahPriest: 12:25pm On Feb 12
If una like, no go collect LAPO install solar. Shebi dem don play una OYO for this light matter ? Una go hear WHIIIIN grin
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Nobody: 12:26pm On Feb 12
They have always betrayed Nigerians.


We don't matter, we are not even worth pawns.

Senators and ministers are the pawns
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by NewHe: 12:36pm On Feb 12
Not a new stuff why this sensational reportage is what baffles ma!
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by DeltaBachelor(m): 12:37pm On Feb 12
It is quite obvious they are. Such a shame !
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Image123(m):
We should all be happy that billions should no more be budgeted for electricity bills but here we are. Some people think they are fanning themselves in darkness in Aso Rock, waiting for nepa to bring transformer.

Really, this is not quality opposition. Complaining, agitating and threatening about everything is not opposition or productive.
Why not suggest good alternatives or accountability. For example, ask NICELY that this 47billion saved, can we/state house use it for specific projects in all the 36 states plus FCT? For instance, 47billion naira is about 1 million dollars each when divided by 37(36 states and FCT). You can lobby the FG to provide this for 3 to 5 years. Ask AI or something if you're lazy.
This is better than just wailing like people possessed with witchcraft.

Below are practical, standard government projects that are broadly beneficial, scalable, and realistically deliverable at an approximate budget of $1 million USD (assuming moderate local construction/labor costs,
I’ve focused on projects with high social return on investment (SROI) and tangible community impact.


---

1. Primary Healthcare Centre (PHC) Upgrade or New Build

Budget Range: $800,000–$1,000,000
Impact: 15,000–30,000 residents

What it covers:

6–10 consultation rooms

Basic lab and pharmacy

Maternity ward

Solar backup power

Borehole water system

Medical equipment


Why it helps everyone:

Reduces preventable deaths

Improves maternal/child health

Decreases hospital overload


Healthcare has one of the highest economic multipliers in developing regions.


---

2. Solar Mini-Grid for a Community

Budget Range: $900,000–$1,000,000
Impact: 300–500 households + businesses

Includes:

250–400 kW solar plant

Battery storage

Distribution lines

Smart meters


Benefits:

Reliable electricity

Supports small businesses

Reduces diesel dependency

Enables ICT, education, refrigeration


This is especially transformative in semi-urban or rural areas.


---

3. Modern Public Primary School (10–12 Classrooms)

Budget Range: $900,000–$1,000,000
Impact: 500–800 students

Includes:

Classrooms

ICT lab

Library

Staff room

Toilets and water system

Playground


---

4. Community Water Treatment & Distribution System

Budget Range: $700,000–$1,000,000
Impact: 10,000–25,000 people

Includes:

Boreholes or intake system

Treatment plant

Storage tanks

Distribution pipelines


Benefits:

Reduces waterborne diseases

Improves hygiene

Supports local agriculture


Access to clean water drastically lowers healthcare costs.


---

5. Vocational & Skills Training Centre

Budget Range: $750,000–$1,000,000
Impact: 1,000+ trainees annually

Trades:

Electrical installation

Plumbing

ICT

Carpentry

Solar installation

Tailoring


This reduces unemployment and builds local industry capacity.


---

6. Small Agricultural Processing Facility

Budget Range: $800,000–$1,000,000

Examples:

Rice milling plant

Tomato processing factory

Cold storage & packaging center


Benefits:

Reduces post-harvest loss

Increases farmer income

Creates local jobs

Reduces imports


Agricultural value addition has strong multiplier effects.


---

7. Waste Recycling & Sanitation Facility

Budget Range: $900,000–$1,000,000

Includes:

Waste sorting plant

Recycling equipment

Composting unit

Waste collection trucks


Benefits:

Cleaner cities

Job creation

Environmental sustainability



---

8. Public Digital Innovation Hub

Budget Range: $700,000–$1,000,000

Includes:

High-speed internet

Co-working spaces

Training labs

Startup incubation

Cybersecurity lab


This aligns with future-ready skills and digital economy growth.


---

9. Road Rehabilitation (5–10 km paved road)

Budget Range: $800,000–$1,000,000

Improves:

Market access

Emergency response

Trade and transport


Road access often has one of the highest economic returns.


---

10. Regional Emergency Response Center

Budget Range: $800,000–$1,000,000

Includes:

Ambulances

Firefighting truck

Response station

Communication system


Improves disaster preparedness and public safety.
1. Solar Hybrid Mini-Grid for a Semi-Urban Community

Budget: $900,000–$1,000,000
Scale: 300–600 households + SMEs

Components: 300–400 kW solar plant Battery storage (lithium) Low-voltage distribution network Smart prepaid meters Hybrid diesel backup (optional) Why It Works in Nigeria: Addresses unreliable grid supply Supports welders, cold rooms, ICT centres, schools Reduces diesel generator dependence Can operate under NERC mini-grid regulation

High political visibility + strong economic multiplier.

2. Fully Equipped Primary Healthcare Centre (PHC) + Maternity

Budget: $850,000–$1,000,000

Includes: 8–10 consultation rooms Labour ward + delivery theatre Pharmacy & lab Solar backup system Borehole + water treatment Staff quarters (optional) Nigerian Context: Many PHCs lack equipment and power Reduces maternal mortality Cuts pressure on teaching hospitals Supports NHIA insurance rollout

Healthcare remains one of the most socially defensible investments.

3. Modular Water Treatment & Reticulation System

Budget: $700,000–$1,000,000
Serves: 10,000–20,000 residents

Components: Boreholes or surface water intake Filtration & chlorination system Elevated storage tank Distribution pipes Nigerian Relevance: Reduces cholera outbreaks Supports rural and peri-urban areas Improves school attendance

Clean water significantly lowers public health expenditure.

4. Agricultural Processing & Storage Hub

Budget: $800,000–$1,000,000

Choose crop by region:

Rice (North) Cassava (South-West/South-East) Tomato processing (North-West) Palm oil processing (South-South) Includes: Processing line Cold storage Packaging unit Small logistics vehicles Benefits: Reduces post-harvest loss (Nigeria loses billions annually) Increases farmer income Creates 50–150 direct jobs

Strong economic impact in rural states.

5. Technical & Vocational Training Centre

Budget: $750,000–$1,000,000

Focus Areas: Solar installation Electrical works Plumbing Welding & fabrication ICT & cybersecurity basics Why Important: Youth unemployment remains high Supports MSME growth Reduces dependency on white-collar jobs

Aligns with Nigeria’s skills gap challenge.

6. Urban Flood Drainage Rehabilitation Project

Budget: $800,000–$1,000,000

Scope: Reconstruct 3–5 km drainage channels Install culverts Clear blocked waterways Nigerian Context: Flooding affects Lagos, Port Harcourt, Ibadan, etc. Protects homes and small businesses Reduces economic loss

Very visible, practical intervention.

7. Public Digital Innovation & ICT Hub

Budget: $700,000–$1,000,000

Includes: High-speed fiber connection Training labs Startup incubation space Public e-library training lab Relevance: Supports tech ecosystem (Nigeria has strong startup activity) Enables remote work Reduces digital divide

Future-oriented investment.

8. Road Rehabilitation (5–8 km Asphalt)

Budget: $900,000–$1,000,000

Impact: Connects farming communities to markets Reduces vehicle damage costs Improves emergency access

Transport access remains a major economic bottleneck.

9. Waste Recycling & Composting Facility

Budget: $850,000–$1,000,000

Components: Sorting plant Compost production unit Waste collection trucks Plastic recycling machines Benefits: Cleaner urban centers Job creation Reduces landfill burden

Good environmental governance project.

10. Community Security & Emergency Response Centre

Budget: $800,000–$1,000,000

Includes: Command center CCTV network Patrol vehicles Communication systems Relevance: Supports state-level security initiatives Reduces crime in urban zones Enhances public confidence If the Goal Is Maximum National Impact
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Major11(m): 12:43pm On Feb 12
Honestly Nigerians are in deep trouble after promising us 24hrs of electricity but what we have now is darkness.we shall meet at the pooling unit.
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by FatimaAbubakar(f): 12:45pm On Feb 12
Fake presidiot Bobola Tinumgbuka
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Princedapace(m): 12:49pm On Feb 12
Image123:
We should all be happy that billions should no more be budgeted for electricity bills but here we are. Some people think they are fanning themselves in darkness in Aso Rock, waiting for nepa to bring transformer.
We should be happy? Are u kidding me? Govt was elected to fix electricity which is core to business growth and here they are unable to fix it and have used tax payers money to give them selves 24/7 electricity ranging in 17billion and u said we should be happy? So, what now happens to millions of nIgerians who cant afford over 10m to install proper solar? From business to homes, how do we cope? Or we are condemned to sleep in darkness and and in heat? Mehnnnn
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Pootle: 12:53pm On Feb 12
all i will say is pay your bills, remember when water corporation in lagos will cut people water rather than paying up thy will go spoil the pipe somewhere else
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Emeskhalifa(m): 1:00pm On Feb 12
GloriousGbola:
Is it better for ASO rock to be like nigerian army that is always owing AEDC?

is it better for ASO rock to be drawing power from an already over stretched AEDC that is unable to meet obligations for its customer base?

https://www.channelstv.com/2024/02/20/to-avoid-disconnection-tinubu-orders-payment-of-aso-rocks-electricity-bill/



on top of that AEDC was doing 300% wayo billing
So what's stopping the government from fixing light issue?

66yrs after independence ordinary light we can't have, doesn't that give you a little shame to even still show support to these people?
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Image123(m): 1:01pm On Feb 12
Princedapace:
We should be happy? Are u kidding me? Govt was elected to fix electricity which is core to business growth and here they are unable to fix it and have used tax payers money to give them selves 24/7 electricity ranging in 17billion and u said we should be happy? So, what now happens to millions of nIgerians who cant afford over 10m to install proper solar? From business to homes, how do we cope? Or we are condemned to sleep in darkness and and in heat? Mehnnnn
You really assume that they were not experiencing 24/7 electricity before? Ignorance is becoming deadly in this country oh.
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Garrimallam01: 1:02pm On Feb 12
ibrandtv:
https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/12/aso-rock-solar-project-is-the-nigerian-government-betraying-nigerians/
Remembe them, if didn't give you 24 hrs power supply after two years, vote Mr out! We are waiting for that day. Nigerians are not fools.
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by ufotunang: 1:03pm On Feb 12
SeeWahala:
He said if he does not give us 24 hrs electricity 🔌 that we should spit on him during the next campaign season 😉

It's like he wants to give only himself light and then claim he has fulfilled his campaign promises 😏
.. and he will still deceive Nigerians in his 2027 election campaign that he has provided Nigerians constant electricity light supply ..it's a pity
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by ufotunang: 1:06pm On Feb 12
Emeskhalifa:
So what's stopping the government from fixing light issue?

66yrs after independence ordinary light we can't have, doesn't that give you a little shame to even still show support to these people?
.. and tomorrow they will say Nigeria is the giant of Africa... giant of Africa that cannot have constant electricity light supply
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by LordReed(m): 1:14pm On Feb 12
ibrandtv:
https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/12/aso-rock-solar-project-is-the-nigerian-government-betraying-nigerians/
It is a mixed message. On one hand we should be totally using renewable energy more because we are in the tropics and the sunshine here would produce lots of energy for us. Nigeria should be at the forefront of solar technology.

On the other hand, disconnecting from the grid shows the government has no confidence in it's own abilities to fix the power issue.
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by EmmyMaestro(m): 1:15pm On Feb 12
After that, maybe they will open shop for charging phones in front of Aso rock for people to come and pay and charge in case there is no light is Abuja
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Sirleo05: 1:16pm On Feb 12
Our own version of democratic is,
Gov of the gov
Gov for the gov and
Gov with the gov
Them don leave us go.
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by AMI3(m): 1:19pm On Feb 12
Ezewuzie01:
And Peter Obi said that any day he leaves APGA, let him die. So who is fooling who?
If Peter Obi said that it is personal not national. Mr president said that if he doesn't give us electricity we should not vote him that is national statement and we voted him hoping that he will do it now he is denying us light and he planning to go and install solar light in Aso rock.

Is that not wickedness is that what we voted him for?

Use your brain
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Ofunaofu: 1:22pm On Feb 12
The Tinubu regime is a threat to Nigeria's existence.
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Princedapace(m): 1:24pm On Feb 12
Image123:
You really assume that they were not experiencing 24/7 electricity before? Ignorance is becoming deadly in this country oh.
U are the funniest human on earth. The topic here is fixing electricity for Nigerians, period. Abandoning it while not fixing our electricity is the deal. What dey Bleep is wrong with u all who try to support politicians here? Is it truly true that some of u are paid?
Our sit of power using Solar where they spent 17b of tax payers money is evil. Nigerians sleep in darkness, doing this is pathetic. And yes, them dey take light for Aso rock that is why they spend heavily on fuel and gas. Look at this one, even national hospital dey use gas and fuel for alternative electricity becus they dont experience 24/7 electricity there from our national grid.
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Image123(m): 1:28pm On Feb 12
Princedapace:
U are the funniest human on earth. The topic here is fixing electricity for Nigerians, period. Abandoning it while not fixing our electricity is the deal. What dey Bleep is wrong with u all who try to support politicians here? Is it truly true that some of u are paid?
Our sit of power using Solar where they spent 17b of tax payers money is evil. Nigerians sleep in darkness, doing this is pathetic. And yes, them dey take light for Aso rock that is why they spend heavily on fuel and gas. Look at this one, even national hospital dey use gas and fuel for alternative electricity becus they dont experience 24/7 electricity there from our national grid.
They were budgeting reportedly about ₦47 billion per year for electricity.
Someone said let's get solar for 10billion to stop spending 47billion yearly. And you are hear complaining that i am paid. In your mind now, you are abandoned and jilted. They are with you in the struggle when they budget 47billion yearly.
Okay. So gas fuel and generators is not electricity in the school you went. Oh my days.
Re: Aso Rock Solar Project: Is The Nigerian Government Betraying Nigerians? by Confirm4real(m): 1:52pm On Feb 12
Same set of people want to continue in 2027 una never see anything yet cheesy
1 2 Reply

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