Electricity is the backbone of every modern economy. Yet in Nigeria, millions of homes and businesses still live with daily power interruptions.
The reason is not accidental failure — it is structural.
Image Credit: Pixabay
INTRODUCTION:
It is 8:30 pm in many homes across Nigeria. Children are trying to finish their homework. A small business owner is rushing to complete customer orders. Suddenly, the light goes off.
Someone shouts from another room: "NEPA has taken the light!"
What is “NEPA”: it's an acronym for National Electric Power Authority. However, there's no organisation called NEPA today because the sector has been restructured or decentralized. Before the restructuring, NEPA was changed to Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN). What we have today is eighteen companies saddled with the responsibility of power generation, transmission and distribution. The 18 successor companies include six Generation Companies (GENCOs), eleven Distribution Companies (DISCOs), and one Transmission Company (TCN).
Anytime an outage occurs, the familiar sound of generators fills the neighborhood. This experience is so common that many Nigerians no longer see it as unusual. Yet the important question remains:
Why has reliable electricity remained so difficult to achieve in Nigeria despite decades of investment and reforms? The answer is simple but uncomfortable: Nigeria’s electricity problem is structural, not accidental.
THE PROBLEM NIGERIANS EXPERIENCE:
Many people believe the problem is simply low power generation. Whenever the national grid collapses or power supply drops, the public explanation is usually that generation has fallen.
But even when generation increases, many Nigerians still do not experience stable electricity. This shows the problem is deeper than power generation alone.
The real issue lies in the structure of the entire electricity system.
THE ENGINEERING REALITY (How Power Actually Travels):
Electricity does not move directly from a power station to your home. It passes through three major stages:
1️Generation:
Electricity is produced in power plants using gas, water, or other energy sources.
2️Transmission:
High-voltage lines carry electricity across long distances through the national grid.
3️Distribution:
Local distribution companies deliver electricity to homes, shops, schools, and businesses.
If any one of these three stages fails, the entire system becomes unstable.
Nigeria’s electricity challenge lies in weaknesses across all three stages.
Image Credit: Pixabay
CHALLENGES:
- Generation Capacity Is Limited: Nigeria has a population of over 200 million people, yet available electricity generation is often below 5,000 megawatts.
For comparison, some single cities in developed countries consume more power than this. This means supply is far below national demand. - Transmission Infrastructure Is Weak: Even when power plants generate electricity, the national grid sometimes cannot carry all the power produced. Transmission lines, transformers, and substations are often outdated or overloaded. When this happens, power plants may be forced to reduce generation, even when they have capacity to produce more electricity.
- Distribution Networks Are Poorly Developed: Many communities experience frequent outages not because electricity is unavailable, but because distribution equipment cannot handle the load.
Common problems include:
Overloaded transformers,
weak distribution lines, poor network maintenance and
illegal connections.
These issues lead to voltage fluctuations, equipment damage, and frequent outages.
WHY THE PROBLEM FEELS PERMANENT:
Because the electricity system is interconnected, fixing only one part does not solve the entire problem. For example: Increasing generation without improving transmission will still cause power losses. Improving transmission without fixing distribution will still leave homes without reliable supply. This is why the electricity challenge has persisted for decades. It is not just an engineering issue — it is a system design and infrastructure problem.
PRACTICAL REALITY FOR HOMES AND BUSINESSES:
Because of these structural weaknesses, many Nigerians have developed private power solutions, including:
- Petrol generators
- Diesel generators
- Solar power systems
- Inverter battery systems
These alternatives help households and businesses survive, but they also increase the cost of living and doing business. A further disadvantage is the effect of fossil fuels on the environment. In many cases, Nigerians spend more money producing their own electricity than they would pay for reliable public power.
Image Credit: Pixabay
KEY TAKEAWAY:
Nigeria’s electricity problem is not simply about producing more power. The real challenge lies in the entire structure of the electricity system — generation, transmission, and distribution. Until these three components are strengthened together, reliable electricity will remain difficult to achieve. Understanding this reality helps individuals, businesses, and policymakers make better decisions about energy solutions.
So, is it going to be gloomy forever? The answer is no! There's a solution! Everything you need to know will be exposed in this space; stay tuned for the next step.
#nigeria #electricity #energy
#engineering #infrastructure
#power #africa #technology
✍️ Let's talk:
In your area, what is the most common electricity problem you experience?
- Frequent outages?
- Low voltage?
- Transformer failure?
- Total absence of grid power?
Share your experience in the comments.
✍️ About the Author:
As an Engineering Technologist trained in Electrical Engineering, I have spent years observing Nigeria’s electricity challenges from both technical and practical perspectives. I write practical articles on electricity generation and utilisation, focusing on real-world power challenges in Nigeria and similar environments.