A PwC report says Nigeria’s electricity reform is entering a decisive phase as states assume greater control under the Electricity Act 2023, amid persistent structural challenges.
Nigeria’s power sector is undergoing one of its most far-reaching transformations in decades, as the implementation of the Electricity Act 2023 shifts the industry from a centrally controlled system to a decentralised, multi-tier electricity market.
The report draws from a high-level stakeholder engagement held during the firm’s annual power and utilities roundtable.
The meeting brought together key actors across the electricity value chain, including representatives of federal and state governments, distribution companies, off-grid developers, and project financiers.
Participants included the former Minister of Power, Adebayo Adelabu; Lagos State Commissioner for Energy and Mineral Resources, Biodun Ogunleye; the Chief Executive Officer of Eko Electricity Distribution Company Plc, Rekhiat Momoh; the Managing Director of the Rural Electrification Agency (REA), Abba Aliyu; and a senior executive of Afreximbank, Peter Olowononi.
The 26-page report highlights early signs of change in how Nigeria’s electricity market is evolving under the new law—particularly in project development, institutional coordination, and investor risk assessment.
Signed into law in June 2023, the Electricity Act repealed the 2005 legislation, ending the federal government’s monopoly and empowering states, companies, and individuals to generate, transmit, and distribute electricity. The law is designed to promote private investment, expand renewable energy, and close infrastructure gaps.
Two years on, PwC says the sector is in transition—marked by increasing state participation, cautious investor interest, and lingering structural weaknesses that could determine the reform’s success.
A defining feature of the reform is the transfer of regulatory authority to states, enabling them to license operators, set tariffs, and oversee electricity markets within their jurisdictions.
According to the report, more than 15 states are at various stages of activating their electricity markets, with some already establishing regulatory commissions and embedding power planning into broader economic strategies.
However, progress remains uneven.
While states such as Lagos are adopting structured, phased approaches, others lag in regulatory capacity, technical expertise, and financial readiness—raising the risk of fragmented markets with differing standards and outcomes.
Experts warn that without stronger coordination, overlaps between federal and state roles—especially on tariffs, subsidies, and technical standards—could create uncertainty and slow progress.
Despite policy shifts, electricity distribution companies (DisCos) continue to face deep financial and operational challenges, threatening the sustainability of the reform.
Industry losses—driven by technical inefficiencies, energy theft, and poor revenue collection—average 34–35 per cent, with only about 70 per cent of billed revenue recovered.
Mounting debts, including obligations owed by government agencies and consumers, have further weakened liquidity, while legacy loans and high interest rates constrain access to fresh capital.
Ageing infrastructure, overloaded transformers, weak feeders, and obsolete equipment, continue to undermine service delivery.
A persistent metering gap also erodes revenue and public trust, as millions of consumers remain on estimated billing. Although initiatives such as the Presidential Metering Initiative aim to close this gap, progress has been slow.
Recent tariff adjustments have improved revenues and reduced subsidy burdens, but prices remain only partially cost-reflective, sustaining liquidity pressures and raising affordability concerns for consumers.
The sector has recorded modest improvements, including increased revenues and fewer grid collapses. Nigeria has also synchronised with the West African Power Pool, opening opportunities for regional electricity trade.
However, these gains mask deeper constraints.
Despite an installed capacity exceeding 13,000 megawatts, actual available generation remains significantly lower due to gas supply constraints, transmission bottlenecks, and distribution inefficiencies.
As a result, electricity supply continues to fall short of demand, limiting the broader economic impact of the reform.
The report identifies growing momentum in renewable energy and off-grid electrification, driven increasingly by state governments.
States are integrating electricity access into development plans and budgets, while projects are becoming more commercially oriented—linking power supply to critical infrastructure such as healthcare and water systems.
This shift is improving accountability and sustainability, particularly in underserved areas, although progress varies widely across states.
According to REA Managing Director Abba Aliyu, states are becoming more proactive—presenting demand data, identifying priority projects, and proposing context-specific delivery models.
“One visible signal of this shift is the integration of electrification targets into state planning and budgeting processes,” the report noted.
This marks a departure from earlier, federally driven interventions that often lacked sustained state ownership.
Contrary to common perceptions, the report notes that capital is available for the sector, but investors remain cautious.

