If Nigeria is to secure its position as the undisputed energy powerhouse of Africa, it must shift from a decade-long planning cycle to a 36-month execution window. This is the core message from seasoned energy expert Canice Emeka, who has outlined a strategic roadmap consisting of seven non-negotiable steps to revitalize the nation’s power sector and turn it into a multi-billion dollar export engine.

The strategy focuses on eliminating “estimated billing,” professionalizing distribution, and leveraging Nigeria’s potential as a regional energy hub.

The 36-Month Metering Challenge

One of the most significant bottlenecks in the current system is the “metering gap,” where over 65% of consumers are unmetered. This leads to estimated billing, which fuels systemic theft and consumer distrust. Emeka proposes a radical acceleration:

  • Current Timeline: 10 years

  • Proposed Timeline: 36 months

  • The Solution: Adopt vendor-financed models where meter providers install units at no upfront cost to Distribution Companies (DisCos). By utilizing performance-based contracts—where failing providers lose their licenses—Nigeria could achieve 85% metering by 2028.

Fiscal Discipline and Infrastructure Reinvestment

Emeka argues that no serious energy economy can afford universal subsidies. He advocates for:

  1. Cost-Reflective Tariffs: Eliminating subsidies for high-consumption groups (Bands A and B) and redirecting those savings toward power infrastructure.

  2. Reliability Over Subsidy: Observations suggest that consumers prefer a “Reliable Band A” tariff over the expensive “Diesel Hybrid-mix” necessitated by unreliable power.

  3. Targeted Lifelines: Maintaining subsidies only for the most vulnerable consumers to ensure social equity while the broader market stabilizes.

Nigeria as a West African Energy Hub

Beyond domestic stability, the expert sees a massive opportunity for foreign exchange earnings through a deliberate export strategy. By backing energy exports with sovereign guarantees and “take-or-pay” clauses, Nigeria could earn $3–5 billion annually by 2035. This would not only boost the economy but also strengthen regional integration within ECOWAS.

Summary: The 7-Step Roadmap

Step Objective
1. Professionalise Licences Ring-fence distribution areas to ensure expert management.
2. Rapid Metering Close the gap in 3 years using performance-based contracts.
3. Reflective Tariffs Remove broad subsidies to fund sustainable reliability.
4. Power Clusters Build 5–7 new embedded power clusters for industrial zones.
5. Digitalisation End-to-end digital tracking of the entire value chain.
6. Liquid Market Create a truly independent system operator and power market.
7. Export Hub Strategically position Nigeria as the provider for West Africa.
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Gift Ifeanyi is a passionate and talented young web developer with a flair for storytelling and a keen interest in business and entrepreneurship. She brings a fresh perspective and a tech-savvy approach to delivering daily news and insights on the ever-evolving world of startups, innovation, and business trends. With a commitment to excellence and a drive to inspire the next generation of entrepreneurs, Gift is dedicated to creating engaging and informative content that empowers readers to thrive in the dynamic business landscape.

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