Lagos, Nigeria – Nigeria’s commercial capital is set for its worst power crisis in years as a 25-day planned blackout kicks off, threatening to paralyze businesses, spike energy costs, and wipe out hundreds of billions in economic activity.
Why the Lights Are Going Out
 Maintenance Work: TCN fixing Omotosho–Ikeja West 330 kV line
Duration: July 28 – August 21 (8 am–5 pm daily)
Affected Areas:
- 
Entire Ikeja Electric coverage zone (most of Lagos) 
- 
Eko DisCo areas (Lagos Island, Agbara, parts of Ogun) 
The Staggering Economic Toll
 N13 trillion: Lagos’ monthly electricity spend (Official estimate)
Manufacturers: Forced to switch to diesel at 4x grid power cost
Hospitals/Hotels: Face N50M+/day extra generator expenses
DisCo Losses: Ikeja/Eko to forfeit N206B combined revenue
CEO of CPPE Warns:
“This isn’t just inconvenience – it’s a N500B body blow to Lagos’ economy. Businesses must choose between crippling energy costs or shutting down.”
Who Bears the Brunt?
 SMEs: 60% lack backup power capacity
Banks: ATM networks may fail
Tech Hubs: Cloud services at risk
Cold Chain: Spoilage threat to food/pharma
The Silver Lining?
 Grid Upgrade: First major maintenance in 8 years
Future Benefit: Could reduce 60% of current outages
TCN’s Pledge: “Short-term pain for long-term gain”
Why Lagos Can’t Afford This
- 
Hosts 40% of Nigeria’s GDP 
- 
Accounts for 65% of industrial output 
- 
Handles 80% of maritime trade 
Business Survival Tips:
- 
Negotiate bulk diesel deals now 
- 
Shift operations to night shifts where possible 
- 
Leverage solar hybrids if available 
 
									 
					