Audio By Carbonatix
Lagos is betting that Nigeria's chronic electricity shortages can be addressed outside the national grid, scaling up state-backed power generation and distribution after securing 400 megawatts of new supply, the state's energy commissioner said.
Africa’s largest city is pressing ahead under reforms that allow sub-national governments to regulate power as Nigeria’s grid struggles.
At least 22 other states are also setting up electricity markets to reduce reliance on the centralised system in Abuja, according to data from the power regulator.
"We are seeking to move beyond a single point of failure," Lagos Commissioner for Energy and Mineral Resources Biodun Ogunleye said at a conference organised by BusinessDay newspaper on Tuesday.
Nigeria's grid delivers about 3,000 MW on a good day, far short of the estimated demand of more than 30,000 MW under government power plans, forcing businesses and households to rely on diesel generators.
Lagos activated its electricity regulatory regime in June 2025 and transferred oversight of intrastate electricity matters from the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) to the Lagos State Electricity Regulatory Commission. By the end of the year, it had assumed full regulatory control of its electricity market, becoming the first Nigerian state to do so, officials said.
In a circular last year, NERC said state regulators would oversee intrastate electricity matters, while it would retain responsibility for interstate electricity transactions, national grid operations and industry standards.
Lagos has signed power purchase agreements with Fenchurch Power, Mainland Power, and Viathan Engineering Limited to supply up to 400 MW to public facilities over three years.
"These are not business-as-usual PPAs," Ogunleye said. "They represent a fundamental shift in how Lagos procures and pays for power."
Lagos has scrapped "take-or-pay" and "deemed energy" provisions, which required payments even when power was not delivered, and will instead pay only for metered electricity supplied, officials said.
Analysts said state-level power markets could improve reliability but would not remove constraints , including gas supply, foreign exchange exposure, affordability, transmission bottlenecks and weak technical capacity.
"Capital is available, but revenue assurance is a problem," said Bola Adigun, a partner at Deloitte Nigeria.
Latest Stories
-
Samuel Jinapor raises concerns over Abronye DC’s continued detention, warns against ‘culture of silence’
15 minutes -
GFA, Metro Mass Transit seal partnership to transform football transport and fan experience
28 minutes -
Tension mounts in Asante Mampong NPP over alleged voters register irregularities
28 minutes -
Economic activity strengthens in quarter one 2026, but business, consumer sentiments soften – BoG
29 minutes -
Health Ministry congratulates Mintah Akandoh on election as WHO Committee B Chairman
30 minutes -
Licensed mining firm cries foul over illegal occupation of concession at Wasa Dadieso
34 minutes -
Selective Outrage and the Struggle for Principle in Ghana’s Democracy
46 minutes -
Wa West records 37.9% reduction in poverty through interventions by MP Peter Toobu
49 minutes -
Ghana’s tax architecture more data and enforcement driven than any point in modern history – Tax report
53 minutes -
GCB Bank backs Timeline & Innovations LTD with heavy-duty fleet to boost Ghana’s “Big Push” agenda
53 minutes -
Photos: Tunisian Minister of Youth and Sports meets Rugby Africa President Herbert Mensah
1 hour -
“We’ll charge security officers for murder if anything happens to Abronye DC” – Haruna Mohammed
1 hour -
Afri-SET holds third regional workshop on Air quality sensors and data analysis for West Africa
1 hour -
BoG has not abandoned eCedi project – BoG Governor assures
1 hour -
We are not intervening in the market but building reserves – BoG Governor on cedi pressures
1 hour