Thursday, December 4, 2025 - Minister of Power, Adebayo Adelabu, has sais the country hopes to generate electricity for the entire West African region in the coming years.
Speaking on Tuesday at the West Africa Energy Cooperation
Summit hosted by Energy Net, in Ghana, the minister said regional energy
security is tied to Nigeria's success, noting that the country holds the
largest gas reserves in the region and must play a central role in sustaining
the West African power market.
The minister acknowledged Nigeria's electricity challenges,
saying, "If Nigeria can be fixed, the entire West African region can be
fixed."
"Achieving energy security requires not only increased
supply but universal access for West African citizens," he added.
According to Premium Times, the energy summit brought
together government officials, innovators, policymakers, and industry leaders
to discuss building a sustainable energy future for West Africa and the
continent.
The minister emphasised the need for seamless transmission
lines to enable cross-border electricity flow from Nigeria to ECOWAS member
states.
"The name of the game must now be cooperation,
collaboration, and partnership. In this regard, Nigeria is committed to its
responsibility within the West African energy space. We have a major role to
play. This responsibility has led us, first of all, to fix our domestic supply
and ensure that we meet the expectations placed on us in West Africa," Mr
Adelabu said.
"Beyond Nigeria's size and population of over 200
million people, we are also privileged to have huge deposits of natural gas
that can generate power for the entire West African region."
Listing two major pathways for expanding regional
electricity supply, Mr Adelabu said the first is the construction of the West
African Gas Pipeline.
He said the pipeline is currently in Ghana and is extending
to Morocco in North Africa, with its final destination being Europe, due to
energy supply contracts Nigeria has with some European countries.
He added that some European partners are willing to
collaborate on financing the pipeline's construction.
"The second option is to ensure seamless power
transmission from Nigeria across all the countries of West Africa from Area 1,
which includes Nigeria, Togo, Benin, and the Niger Republic, to Areas 2 and 3,
which include the remaining countries of the subregion," the minister
said.
He praised recent progress by the West African Power Pool,
noting that all 15 regional transmission lines were synchronised for the first
time for more than four hours, an improvement from the previous record of seven
minutes in 2007.
"We are excited by the recent activities of the West
African Power Pool, which had been dormant for some time. We successfully
synchronised the transmission lines across all 15 West African countries
recently. For over four hours, the transmission remained stable with no risk of
collapse, achieving synchronisation across the entire region for the first
time. The last attempt, in 2007, lasted only seven minutes before the system
collapsed. Eighteen years later, we sustained it for over four hours."
"In the coming months, we will move to the second level
of testing, lasting three to four days. Once that is achieved, we can
transition to permanent synchronization of transmission lines in West Africa.
This will allow us to leverage the comparative advantages of countries like
Nigeria and Ghana in power generation and transmit electricity efficiently
across the region at the lowest cost, ensuring reliable access for all West
Africans," Mr Adelabu said.
The power minister said reforms in Nigeria's power sector
since privatisation in 2013 have resulted in improved distribution
infrastructure, reduced metering gaps and better system liquidity. However, he
noted that more work is needed to build a power industry capable of supporting
industrial growth at home and supplying energy across the region.
"We are not yet where we aim to be. Much remains to be
done. But the transformation is ongoing, and we will not stop until we achieve
a power sector capable of driving full industrialisation in Nigeria and
supporting the broader West African region.
"Once this is achieved, the entire West African
subregion will be assured of energy security, reliable energy supply, and
progress toward universal access," he said.
Earlier, the minister disclosed that Nigeria's installed
generation capacity had increased from 13,000 MW to over 14,000 MW within two
years, powered mainly by hydro and thermal plants, with plans to add
large-scale solar generation, particularly in the north.
"Nigeria now has excess generation capacity, producing
only about 6,000 megawatts while capable of generating an additional 8,000
megawatts."
He said much of that surplus remains stranded, even as the
country exports only about 600 megawatts to Togo, Niger and the Benin Republic.
Mr Adelabu said the country's vast solar potential could
further strengthen energy security, complementing thermal plants concentrated
in the Niger Delta and hydropower facilities in the North-central zone.
The minister described the transmission segment as
historically weak, burdened by inefficiencies and ageing infrastructure across
Nigeria's 923,000-square-kilometre landmass.
Mr Adelabu also noted that the Transmission Company of
Nigeria had been unbundled into two entities, the Transmission Service Provider
and the Nigerian Independent System Operator, to improve efficiency.
These reforms, he said, have reduced grid collapses from
"more than a dozen last year to only one so far this year, which was
restored within two hours."

0 Comments