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Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc - Politics - Nairaland

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Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by iwaeda(op): 2:30am On Mar 14
Many households and businesses across the country have been reeling from the effect of worsening electricity supply as a relentless heatwave intensifies hardship.

Findings by Saturday PUNCH show that residents of Kano, Kaduna, Sokoto, Enugu, Benue, Oyo, Akwa-Ibom, Taraba, Lagos and Ogun states have been grappling with prolonged blackouts in weeks, forcing many people to abandon reliance on public electricity and turn to generators and solar power.

Residents, who spoke to our correspondents, said the situation made it nearly impossible for them to carry out normal activities during the day.

Energy analysts warn that the worsening outages highlight deeper structural failures within the electricity sector, including gas supply shortages to power plants, weak transmission infrastructure and chronic underinvestment across the power value chain.

For millions of Nigerians struggling with rising living costs, the consequences are immediate as many grapple with business closures, food spoilage, rising energy costs and growing dependence on alternative power sources.

One hour power in Kano, none in Sokoto

In Kano, residents of Unguwa Uku and Hotoro Dan Marke told Saturday PUNCH that electricity supply had dropped drastically in the past month.

A resident, Ahmad Ibrahim, said households received electricity for barely one hour.

He noted that even the one hour came at night.

“We hardly get electricity for more than one hour. Sometimes it may last two hours, but most times it comes late at night,” he said.

Another resident, Habibu Abdullahi, said the persistent blackout forced many households to seek alternative energy solutions.

He explained that while some households switched to solar, others totally disconnected from the public electric source.

“I cannot even count the number of houses that have installed solar systems because of the outage. Many people have already lost hope in public electricity supply,” he said.

In Sokoto, residents reported an even severe situation.

Communities including Mabera, Tamaje, Old Airport, Sahara, Emir Yahya and Tudun Wada said electricity supply had fallen below one hour daily.

A resident of Mabera, Musa Abdullahi, said the blackout worsened hardship during the Ramadan period.

“Because of the heat and fasting, people now depend on neighbours who have solar power to buy ice blocks or cold water,” he said.

Residents also complained that even communities classified under the Band A electricity tariff category, which should receive at least 20 hours of electricity daily, were receiving far less.

Businesses count losses

In Enugu State, where many consumers recently migrated to the expensive Band A electricity tariff, residents said electricity supply remained far below expectations.

A resident of Emene, Chinedu Okafor, said households were paying significantly higher tariffs despite receiving between four and 10 hours of electricity daily.

“How can people pay the highest tariff when electricity comes for only four hours?” he asked.

A small business owner in Nsukka, Amaka Nwosu, said the rising cost of running generators had crippled productivity.

“The cost of running generators is killing our business. Production has slowed and expenses keep rising,” she said.

In Makurdi, Benue State, residents said prolonged outages had forced businesses to shut down.

A resident of Adeke area, Attah, said unreliable electricity supply destroyed his wife’s frozen food business.

“My wife sells frozen meats but the business collapsed because the electricity supply became too unreliable,” he said.

Also lamenting, Madam Debby, a resident of George Akume Road, decried the epileptic power supply in her area.

According to her, the area hardly enjoys power supply even when other areas in the capital city used to have steady power supply.

“Before now, our area had not been enjoying power supply, we only have power for like two hours hours in two or three days.

“But since January, I doubt if we have had power supply for three hours. And the population along this area keeps increasing because of the road.

“Several shops have closed down and the people relocated to other areas like high level, and Wadatta area. But I learned that most of the people who relocated are complaining of epileptic power supply in those areas now,” Madam Debby said.

In Akwa Ibom State, residents say electricity supply has remained erratic and inconsistent, with some communities receiving less than three hours of electricity daily.

Findings by Saturday PUNCH show that areas mostly affected include Aka Etinan, parts of Uyo metropolis, the Oron Road axis and Nwaniba Road corridor, where residents say unstable power supply has persisted for more than two years.

Although no public protests have been recorded over the situation, many residents have taken to social media platforms to express frustration over the prolonged outages.

A resident of Aka Etinan, Miss Ekaete Akpan, told Saturday PUNCH that the irregular power supply severely affected small businesses in the area.

“The electricity supply here in Aka Etinan is very inconsistent. Even when it comes, it hardly lasts up to three hours,” she said.

According to her, electricity is often supplied during early morning hours when most businesses are closed.

“Normally, they bring it around 3am and by 6 or 7am it is taken away again. After that you may not see electricity again until late in the night. It almost looks like the supply is timed,” Akpan said.

She added that the situation had become a major challenge for traders and small-scale entrepreneurs who rely heavily on electricity for their daily operations.

“It is really a serious issue here and it has affected many businesses,” she said.

Also in Oyo State, residents across several communities in the Ibadan metropolis said the worsening electricity supply had crippled economic activities.

A Saturday PUNCH visit to Moniya, Ojoo and Orogun communities in Akinyele Local Government Area, as well as Mokola, Sango and Oke-Itunu in Ibadan North Local Government Area, revealed widespread reliance on generators.

A resident, Kunle Ajala, said businesses struggled to survive due to erratic electricity supply.

“It has been almost a week since we had stable electricity here. Even when power comes, it may not last up to three hours,” he said.

Another resident who is a barber, Bisi Adeoye, said unreliable electricity had severely affected his business and livelihood.

“I depend on electricity for my business, which has not been moving well for some time now but despite the poor supply the electricity company still sends high bills,” he said.

A welder, Musbau Muritala, said many artisans in the area had been forced to suspend work and resort to riding commercial motorcycles to make ends meet.

“I cannot do anything without electricity. Sometimes power comes around midnight and disappears before morning,” he said.

In Kaduna State, residents said repeated outages had caused losses of perishable food items stored in refrigerators.

A resident of Sabo in Chikun Local Government Area of Kaduna State, Mrs Martina Aji, said the prolonged outage had caused losses of perishable food items in her refrigerator.

“Since last week, we have hardly had electricity. Food items, especially soup, have spoiled in my refrigerator,” she said.

Another resident, Jimmy Gaskiya, noted that the outages had forced many households to rely heavily on generators.

“Nothing seems to be working. The government should wake up to its responsibility and let the poor breathe,” he said.

In Taraba State, residents said electricity supply had fallen to between three and six hours daily.

A phone repair technician in Jalingo, Musa Ibrahim, said the outages had significantly reduced his income.

“Sometimes we get power for only three hours. It affects my work and earnings,” he said.

Similarly, a frozen food seller, Grace Yakubu, said repeated outages had led to spoilage of goods worth thousands of naira.

Despite the hardship, residents said no major protest had been organised, though many continue to express frustration over the prolonged outages.

Residents waste food, Tweep mocks minister

Saturday PUNCH gathered that some residents who stored food in their freezers poured it away due to the prolonged power outage.

A resident in the Obafemi Owode LGA of Ogun State, who asked not to be identified, said food worth about N100,000 which he stored in his freezer turned bad.

“I had to pour everything away because there was no power for three days. It was painful, but I had no option. And I am not alone. There are many people like me. Who will compensate us for this?” he queried.

Saturday PUNCH observes that social media is awash with content created by Nigerians to express frustration over the poor power supply.

On Twitter, a user shared an Artificial Intelligence-generated image of the Minister of Power, Adebayo Adelabu, mockingly crowned the Olokunkun of Okunkun Kingdom (the king of darkness kingdom).

Other posts include a picture of a battered Nigerian captioned as an official of a distribution company handing out bills to customers amid the blackout, and an image of a man hugging a transformer to depict the erratic power supply.

Structural crisis in power sector

Nigeria’s electricity crisis reflects deeper structural problems within the country’s power sector.

Although the country has an installed electricity generation capacity of over 12,000 megawatts, actual generation frequently falls below 4,000 megawatts, far below what is required to power a population of more than 220 million people.

Energy experts estimate that the country will need at least 30,000 megawatts of stable electricity to support its population and industrial growth.

Frequent grid collapses and transmission bottlenecks also limit the amount of electricity that can be delivered to consumers.

The country’s heavy reliance on petrol and diesel generators further highlights the scale of the crisis. Industry estimates suggest that over 80 million Nigerian households and businesses rely on generators, creating a backup power market worth more than $10bn annually.

Gas shortages cripple power generation

Electricity distribution companies have attributed the worsening outages partly to gas supply shortages affecting power generation plants.

The Kaduna Electricity Distribution Company confirmed that reduced gas supply had significantly affected electricity distribution across its franchise states.

The company supplies electricity to Kaduna, Katsina, Kebbi, Zamfara and Sokoto states.

In a message to customers, the company said the situation had forced it to increase load shedding.

“We are currently experiencing a reduction in power supply due to gas supply constraints affecting power generation,” the company said.

Industry insiders say several power generation companies are currently operating below capacity due to gas supply disruptions.

Aso Rock tests N17bn Villa solar project

Meanwhile, the Presidential Villa may have shelved its planned disconnection from the national electricity grid despite ongoing investments in solar power infrastructure.

Senior State House officials told Saturday PUNCH that the solar power facility recently installed at the Villa was still undergoing technical testing, making an immediate disconnection from the grid impossible.

The development comes about a month after the State House Permanent Secretary, Temitope Fashedemi, told the Senate Committee on Special Duties during the 2026 budget defence on February 11 that the Villa would fully transition away from the grid by March.

A senior official familiar with the project said the solar system had not yet reached full operational capacity.

“We are still in the testing phase. When the solar system becomes fully operational, then we will see the savings,” the official said.

The official pointed to the State House Medical Centre as evidence of the project’s viability, noting that the facility had operated almost entirely on solar energy since its installation was completed in May 2025.

He also revealed that the ongoing testing phase had uncovered possible billing discrepancies by the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company, with some transformers allegedly charging the Villa for electricity not supplied.

“We discovered that some transformers were not delivering power but were still being billed. That issue is being reviewed and the costs have been adjusted,” the official said.

The State House began a phased transition to solar power in late 2024 as part of efforts to reduce the rising cost of electricity and diesel used to power its generators.

At the time, officials said the solar project would eventually supply electricity to the State House complex in Abuja, the Presidential Wing, the State House Medical Centre and the former seat of power at Dodan Barracks in Lagos.

The first phase focused on the State House Medical Centre, where a 1.2-megawatt solar plant was constructed to provide uninterrupted power supply for medical equipment.

The Chairman of the Medical Advisory Committee at the centre, Dr Dike Obalum, had said the project was designed to shield critical equipment from the effects of unstable electricity supply.

Despite the shift to solar power, another official dismissed suggestion that the Villa’s energy transition reflected a loss of confidence in the national grid.

“To say we are leaving the grid because we don’t trust it is not correct. The main objective is to reduce the huge amount of money spent on diesel and generator maintenance,” the official said.

He also noted that many of the generators currently used at the Villa had been in place since the complex was constructed in the early 1990s.

Budget documents reviewed by Saturday PUNCH show that the State House headquarters allocated about N5.35bn between 2023 and 2026 for electricity bills, generator fuel and maintenance.

The sharpest increase occurred after the removal of fuel subsidy in 2023, when generator fuel costs surged dramatically.

Fuel allocations rose from N30.68m in 2023 and N37.96m in 2024 to N1.99bn each in the 2025 and 2026 budgets, representing an increase of more than 5,000 per cent in two years.

Electricity charges for the Villa were budgeted at N360.25m in 2023, N260.85m in 2024, and N311.09m annually for 2025 and 2026, while generator maintenance allocations rose to N17.28m in the 2025 and 2026 budgets.

In total, the 2026 budget earmarked about N2.32bn for generator fuel, electricity and maintenance at the State House.

To address the rising costs, the Federal Government approved N17bn for the solarisation of the Presidential Villa, with N10bn allocated in 2025 and N7bn in the 2026 Appropriation Bill.

Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, had earlier defended the initiative, arguing that the move aligns with global practices.

“The White House in Washington D.C. also uses solar power,” Onanuga said.

Before the solar project began, the State House had accumulated electricity debts nearing N1bn.

In February 2024, the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company listed the Presidential Villa among top government debtors with an outstanding bill of N923.87m, although the amount was later reconciled and reduced to N342.35m, which was subsequently settled.
https://punchng.com/power-crisis-blackout-wreaks-havoc/

Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by iwaeda(op): 3:20am On Mar 14
Noises everywhere in an estate meant to be serene. APC failed themselves, not Nigeria. grin grin grin angry grin
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by Hedonisco:
In spite of all these failures, from abysmal power supply to spiralling inflation, to unprecedented unemployment rate to debilitating insecurity and many more, one muntula and his slaves have the audacity to be shouting themselves hoarse about standing on a useless gbola's impotent mandate.

Nigerians will have to rise to the occasion in the coming months. It is an existential imperative.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by oz4real83(m):
The presidency have gone solar, evidence of lack of confidence in its promise and ability to provide power, who are you to still be expecting power from this govt that doesn't believe in itself?😡💔
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by DatNiggaDaz: 5:56am On Mar 14
grin grin

The data boiz Mods should move this to the FP so that they appreciate the fathom achievement of their fake certificate holder which they have been searching for years.

They should also bear in their sophisticated mind that the roasted electricity fraud told them never to grab and snatch ön his behalf if he fails to improve electricity iwhen he comes for another round of snatching and grabbing in 2027
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by helinues: 6:16am On Mar 14
And this clueless minister for power is aspiring to be a governor in one state.

As how now
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by Racoon(m): 6:20am On Mar 14
Amost all across Nigeria, the light or power issue is terrible.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by nairalanda1(m): 6:20am On Mar 14
iwaeda:
Noises everywhere in an estate meant to be serene. APC failed themselves, not Nigeria. grin grin grin angry grin
As if it was better under your beloved PDP.

Also PDP is responsible for the law that prevented the sector from charging cost reflective tarrifs.

Better stop laughing old man. And stop supporting corruption
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by nairalanda1(m): 6:22am On Mar 14
helinues:
And this clueless minister for power is aspiring to be a governor in one state.

As how now
You should stop deflecting old man

Your party refused to deregulate the sector and refused to allow the charging of cost reflective tarrifs because your party is more interested in getting elected

Tell your folks to make hard decisions for our future benefit. Not government of giveaway and subsidies
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by Fernandeswagger(m): 6:22am On Mar 14
This government is irresponsible.

It should be made to pay for it's irresponsibility. Everything shouldn't be about elections. In 2026 which country is still grappling with lack of electricity? Nobody should come and talk about how costly it will be to fix power. It's a matter of priority.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by nairalanda1(m): 6:24am On Mar 14
oz4real83:
The presidency have gone solar, evidence of lack of confidence in its promise and ability of provide power, who are you to still be expecting power from this govt that doesn't believe in itself?😡💔
Because the presidency doesn't want to pay a cost reflective tarrifs on power.

Solar is cheaper at six billion,.a cost reflective tarrifs would cost over 40 billion naira for the presidency

Nigerians want cheap power. Like Nigerians, like their leaders. It does cost money to supply power.

Meanwhile Ghana, ivory Coast and Kenya pay cost reflective power tarrifs and as a result are much better than us power wise

Let's drop the slogans and face reality. No one sells a brand new car for fifty naira.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by Kukutente23: 6:29am On Mar 14
Who remembers zombies claiming that their fridge is mortuary standard because uncle Bola has fixed light just last year cheesy grin
Lies can only travel so far
Another zombie claimed that she drove Lagos to Calabar in 15mins grin grin
Zombies sha
Our stealth agbadeau nairalanda1 has come to tell us why subsidy is the reason we don't have light
Someone sold tell him Egypt has subsidy and their light is far better than ours
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by nairalanda1(m): 6:38am On Mar 14
☝️that guy kukutente23 believes that one can buy a car at 200 naira

He doesn't know how great he sounds. But then again he believes that the Soviet Union had a good economic system. grin

He is also calling me tinubu supporter which means he thinks that Tinubu is industrialising Nigeria and getting us off oil. Which we know isn't true

I hope he knows he is sounding wise.

Subsidy on power must go, it doesn't matter who is in charge. And yes, APC must go.

The problem with APC is that they are not taking decisions for our benefit, they are taking decisions that would get them elected. That's the problem with Nigerian APC leaders. They want to come back. They don't want to take sections that would benefit us even if it means they get voted out. Same for the people in ADC and PDP and most other parties.

Even subsidy removal on petrol was taken because external events forced it's removal. Not because they wanted to.

Now you see why I cannot support any one of them

And yet because I support sane economic decisions, people label me APC supporter. Am sure in 2012 when I was supporting subsidy removal on petrol, they would have called me PDP supporter. Or by now AGIP.

It's because we are a poor country and in poor countries populist decisions are popular. I understand why, but the fact is doing the popular for sicty years is why we are in such a mess

No one would invest in a business where power is produced at 200 and sold at 61 naira and expect to see roi. Yet that is how to Tinubu runs the power sector. No wonder we have light 400 hours a day grin

Let the free market do their thing. Nigeria is a corrupt country , but I know that we have a working GSM sector because at the end of the day it was allowed to charge cost reflective tarrifs by Obasanjo

Cost reflective tarrifs. Realistic economic decisions. No to slogans..
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by helinues: 6:41am On Mar 14
nairalanda1:
You should stop deflecting old man

Your party refused to deregulate the sector and refused to allow the charging of cost reflective tarrifs because your party is more interested in getting elected

Tell your folks to make hard decisions for our future benefit. Not government of giveaway and subsidies
How is the jargons you wrote correlate with my comments?

Don't pass your boundaries this morning
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by fergie001(mod): 6:46am On Mar 14
APC can remove forgery from the Electoral Act, change National Anthem, change Police Act, but they can't change the law to better the power system in the country in the event, that the PDP stone-walled Power Sector reforms!?

Why you dey behave like this, early morning!
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by nairalanda1(m): 6:47am On Mar 14
helinues:
How is the jargons you wrote correlate with my comments?

Don't pass your boundaries this morning
Your party should stop looking for power and start looking for our benefit in the future.

Government by slogans don't work.

If the power sector doesn't have cost reflective tarrifs at all levels things won't get better. Your party and leader should face the reality.

So drop the deflecting. We can see through it
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by nairalanda1(m): 6:49am On Mar 14
fergie001:
APC can remove forgery from the Electoral Act, change National Anthem, change Police Act, but they can't change the law to better the power system in the country ba?.

Why you dey behave like this, early morning!
Because any changes to the laws would involve a cost reflective tarrif system and an end to subsidy on power.

APC wants to be elected again so they avoid reality for popularity
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by nairalanda1(m): 6:54am On Mar 14
For a better understanding of the power sector in Nigeria, Google for 'solving the liquidity crunch in the power sector ' by PwC.

Also read about how ivory coast solved it's power sector..and for those who shout corruption , the leader who implemented it was corrupt and a tribalist even.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by SmartPolician: 7:02am On Mar 14
nairalanda1:
As if it was better under your beloved PDP.

Also PDP is responsible for the law that prevented the sector from charging cost reflective tarrifs.

Better stop laughing old man. And stop supporting corruption
No government since 1999 built more power stations than OBJ and Jonathan. Most of the gas-fired power stations, which are the major sources of electricity in Nigeria today, were built by those two.

APC produced irresponsible leaders who are more interested in handing the task of power supply to governors that will never invest state kobo in generating, transmitting and distributing power. They are quick to run away from the responsibility without checking which governors are actually doing it.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by fergie001(mod): 7:02am On Mar 14
nairalanda1:
Because any changes to the laws would involve a cost reflective tarrif system and an end to subsidy on power.

APC wants to be elected again so they avoid reality for popularity
But they removed subsidy on petrol?
So because they want to get elected again, we should all die from heat stress?
Did their avoiding reality involved those things I mentioned earlier ...which one of those was popularly accepted?

What a beautiful government!
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by Hedonisco: 7:57am On Mar 14
nairalanda1:
As if it was better under your beloved PDP.

Also PDP is responsible for the law that prevented the sector from charging cost reflective tarrifs.

Better stop laughing old man. And stop supporting corruption
You sound quite oafish still talking about the PDP, while the useless APC had been in power, destroying Nigeria since 2015. Quit deceiving yourself and come out in the open to dance unclothed, while singing on gbola's mandate.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by killsmith(f): 8:00am On Mar 14
Oga has deliberately shut it down so that he can turn it back on and his praise singers will say he's fixed something.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by nairalanda1(m): 9:11am On Mar 14
Hedonisco:
You sound quite oafish still talking about the PDP, while the useless APC had been in power, destroying Nigeria since 2015. Quit deceiving yourself and come out in the open to dance unclothed, while singing on gbola's mandate.
You haven't read the rest of my comments on this thread, dear boy.

Plus, why does the mention of PDP hurt you so.? Why support people who are like the APC self? Better not trust a Nigerian politican.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by nairalanda1(m): 9:13am On Mar 14
fergie001:
But they removed subsidy on petrol?
So because they want to get elected again, we should all die from heat stress?
Did their avoiding reality involved those things I mentioned earlier ...which one of those was popularly accepted?

What a beautiful government!
1.They removed subsidy on petrol because they were in a state of no return by August 2022. IMF was frowning, and debt service was eating 90% of government revenue

2.Truely what a beautiful government...they won't face reality. The cold reality is, we need subsides to go so that we can have investors being incentivised to invest in power. Not doing that for decades is why we are suffering.

Your APC government doesn't want to take sane decisions , they want to take popular but wrong decisions.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by nairalanda1(m): 9:18am On Mar 14
SmartPolician:
No government since 1999 built more power stations than OBJ and Jonathan.
OBJ alone.GEJ didnt build anything. Also, the same government kept subsides on power...which hamstrung the power sector from growing even larger under their rule, and did nothing about transmission at all...


APC produced irresponsible leaders who are more interested in handing the task of power supply to governors that will never invest state kobo in generating, transmitting and distributing power. They are quick to run away from the responsibility without checking which governors are actually doing it.
APC maintians the same subsides on power, which drive away investors. Power was privatised to attract investors...but first the PDP then the APC maintained price controls and subsides, which drove off the really big hitter sane investors.

You can see the result...a liquidity crisis, no new investment in power stations (though AEDC is building a 350 MW station which should be ready in 2027, but that's not success, we should be building more).


This really isn't a competiton about who built more or what...this is about why Obasanjo, and company could not attract more investment to build powewr capacity to about 32000mw.

You are praising a government that built less than one sixth of what the country needs, while the APC supporters praise a government for cheap electricity which keeps the power sector in financial crisis (and they have no answer to that). At the end, unless a government is bold enough to bring in cost reflective tarrifs...we can end up building 32000 or more MW of power stations, only to see them become scrap because of lack of a cost reflective tarrif.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by SmartPolician: 9:37am On Mar 14
nairalanda1:
OBJ alone.GEJ didnt build anything. Also, the same government kept subsides on power...which hamstrung the power sector from growing even larger under their rule, and did nothing about transmission at all...




APC maintians the same subsides on power, which drive away investors. Power was privatised to attract investors...but first the PDP then the APC maintained price controls and subsides, which drove off the really big hitter sane investors.

You can see the result...a liquidity crisis, no new investment in power stations (though AEDC is building a 350 MW station which should be ready in 2027, but that's not success, we should be building more).


This really isn't a competiton about who built more or what...this is about why Obasanjo, and company could not attract more investment to build powewr capacity to about 32000mw.

You are praising a government that built less than one sixth of what the country needs, while the APC supporters praise a government for cheap electricity which keeps the power sector in financial crisis (and they have no answer to that). At the end, unless a government is bold enough to bring in cost reflective tarrifs...we can end up building 32000 or more MW of power stations, only to see them become scrap because of lack of a cost reflective tarrif.
Jonathan built or expanded many power stations that OBJ built: Alaoji, Geregu, Omotosho, Olorogunso, etc. Yes, if leaders do well, I will praise them because they deserve it. We call them corrupt, but there are better ones amongst them.

APC has been in power for nearly 12 years, development is no rocket science. If Buhari and Tinubu focused on power like PDP leaders, Nigeria's economy would be better positioned to drive massive industrial revolution. The duo would rather pass a bill to hand over that responsibility to state governors that will never do it.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by nairalanda1(m): 9:41am On Mar 14
SmartPolician:
Jonathan built or expanded many power stations that OBJ built: Alaoji, Geregu, Omotosho, Olorogunso, etc. Yes, if leaders do well, I will praise them because they deserve it. We call them corrupt, but there are better ones amongst them.

APC has been in power for nearly 12 years, development is no rocket science. If Buhari and Tinubu focused on power like PDP leaders, Nigeria's economy would be better positioned to drive massive industrial revolution. The duo would rather pass a bill to hand over that responsibility to state governors that will never do it.
Well, at the end, regardless, and I agree with you on APC, the real issue is still cost reflective tarrifs. If we had had cost reflective tarrifs since the 1970's, we would have been generating and transmitting as much as 80000mw by now.

And please don't praise any government. If APC Built power stations, they would still be useless to me, so long as they keep the cost reflective tarrif ban in place.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by Gbadugbakun(m): 9:41am On Mar 14
I read on Twitter where someone said a guy working with NEPA said they went to ask kwam 1 for his light debt. He's been owing since last year and they threatened to disconnect him

Baba called Adelabu and Adelabu ordered them to leave there and go another house

Kwam 1 said no be only his house de owe money.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by iwaeda(op): 10:35am On Mar 14
Nlfpmod, the power is bad. grin grin grin
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by nairalanda1(m): 11:30am On Mar 14
Gbadugbakun:
I read on Twitter where someone said a guy working with NEPA said they went to ask kwam 1 for his light debt. He's been owing since last year and they threatened to disconnect him

Baba called Adelabu and Adelabu ordered them to leave there and go another house

Kwam 1 said no be only his house de owe money.
And people like KWAM1 are part of the problem too.

There are a lot of people like him...rich and poor.
Re: Power Crisis: Blackout Wreaks Havoc by femi4: 11:41am On Mar 14
Minister of darkness..where art thou

They are quick to put you on plans..plan A, B etc yet no light

Quick to throw estimated bills around yet no meter
1 2 3 4 Reply

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