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Between Hope and History: What Nigerians Expect from Tegbe as Power Minister
Between Hope and History: What Nigerians Expect from Tegbe as Power Minister
By: Michael Olukayode
For decades, electricity has remained Nigeria’s most enduring national embarrassment. From military administrations to democratic governments, promises of stable power supply have come and gone with little to show beyond recurring darkness, collapsing grids, abandoned projects and rising public frustration.
Now, with the appointment of Joseph Olasunkanmi Tegbe as Minister of Power, expectations are once again rising. Yet unlike in previous eras, Nigerians are no longer impressed by ambitious declarations. They are demanding results.
The question confronting Tegbe is not whether he understands the scale of the crisis. It is whether he can succeed where many before him failed.
Nigeria’s electricity sector is littered with the ruins of grand promises.
From the Olusegun Obasanjo administration’s multi-billion dollar National Integrated Power Projects (NIPP), to the Goodluck Jonathan-era privatisation of generation and distribution companies, successive governments repeatedly promised that stable electricity was around the corner. Under former President Muhammadu Buhari, Nigerians were told that the Siemens-backed Presidential Power Initiative would revolutionise transmission and distribution. The current administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu also pledged sweeping reforms, improved generation and a more efficient market-driven electricity sector.
Yet millions of Nigerians still rely on generators as their primary source of power.
The irony remains painful: Africa’s largest economy continues to generate barely between 4,000 and 5,000 megawatts for over 200 million people, despite an installed capacity exceeding 13,000MW.
Entire industries have collapsed under the burden of self-generated electricity. Small businesses spend more on diesel than on salaries. Manufacturers complain of rising operational costs. Students study under torchlights. Hospitals struggle to preserve vaccines and operate life-saving equipment. For many Nigerians, electricity is not merely an infrastructure issue; it is the dividing line between poverty and productivity.
That is why Tegbe’s appointment comes with enormous pressure.
Unlike many previous political appointees in the sector, Tegbe comes into office with the image of a technocrat rather than a career politician. A chartered accountant and management consultant, he built his reputation in the private sector through years of corporate advisory work, investment strategy and institutional restructuring. He previously served as the Director-General and Global Liaison for the Nigeria-China Strategic Partnership, where he was credited with helping to deepen investment engagement between Nigeria and Chinese investors in infrastructure, manufacturing and industrial development initiatives.
Before that appointment, Tegbe had a long corporate career spanning consulting, finance and business transformation. He worked with multinational consulting firm Deloitte and later became a senior business strategist with extensive experience in public-private partnerships, governance systems and economic planning. Supporters argue that this background gives him a better understanding of the financial and structural complexities that have crippled Nigeria’s power sector for years.
His defenders also point to his record in economic coordination and institutional reforms, arguing that the electricity crisis is no longer just a technical problem but a management and governance challenge requiring strategic execution, investor confidence and policy discipline.
At his Senate screening, Tegbe outlined a reform agenda focused on improving gas supply, strengthening grid reliability, accelerating metering, enforcing accountability among distribution companies and restoring financial discipline across the sector.
Those priorities are significant because Nigeria’s electricity crisis is no longer just about generation. The problems are systemic.
Generation companies complain of unpaid debts and inadequate gas supply. Distribution companies struggle with huge financial losses, weak infrastructure, electricity theft and poor revenue collection. Transmission infrastructure remains fragile and outdated, leading to frequent system collapses and stranded power capacity.
The national grid itself has become symbolic of institutional weakness. Grid collapses have repeatedly plunged large sections of the country into darkness, disrupting businesses and exposing the fragility of the system. Regulatory reports continue to show wide gaps between installed generation capacity and actual available electricity supply.
For many Nigerians, these recurring failures have destroyed public confidence.
Citizens openly question whether government officials genuinely intend to solve the crisis or merely manage it politically. Some blame corruption and weak regulation; others argue that decades of policy inconsistency and poor implementation are the real culprits.
That skepticism explains why Tegbe’s promises are being greeted with cautious optimism rather than celebration.
Still, his supporters believe he enters office with certain advantages. His experience in corporate restructuring and investment negotiations may prove useful in a sector desperate for efficiency, investor confidence and credible execution. But technical knowledge alone will not solve Nigeria’s electricity crisis.
What the sector requires most is political courage.
Any meaningful reform will involve difficult decisions: enforcing payment discipline, restructuring failing distribution companies, addressing subsidy distortions, improving tariff transparency, tackling electricity theft and compelling stronger private sector accountability. These reforms are politically sensitive because electricity affects every household and business in the country.
The minister must also confront the deeper institutional problem that has undermined previous reforms — weak governance.
Over the years, billions of dollars have reportedly been invested in power infrastructure with minimal impact on supply. Projects are often launched with fanfare only to disappear into bureaucratic delays, contractual disputes or funding crises. Nigerians have grown weary of ceremonial commissioning without measurable outcomes.
That is why measurable targets will matter more than speeches.
If Tegbe hopes to build public trust, Nigerians will expect clear timelines, transparent reporting and visible improvements in supply stability. Citizens want fewer excuses and more accountability. They want to know why power plants cannot get gas despite Nigeria’s enormous natural gas reserves. They want to know why transmission bottlenecks continue years after repeated intervention programmes. They want to know why estimated billing still persists despite promises of mass metering.
Most importantly, they want leadership that acknowledges that electricity is central to national development.
No serious industrial economy can thrive in darkness.
Countries that transformed their economies invested heavily in stable electricity infrastructure. Without reliable power, Nigeria’s ambitions for industrialisation, digital innovation, manufacturing growth and foreign investment will remain severely constrained.
The challenge before Tegbe therefore goes beyond fixing transformers or stabilising the grid. His real assignment is to restore credibility to a sector where public trust has nearly collapsed.
There are signs that structural reforms may finally be gaining momentum. The Electricity Act 2023 has opened the door for states to develop independent electricity markets, reducing overdependence on the fragile national grid. Several states are already moving toward decentralised power arrangements.
But Nigerians have heard reform language before.
What they seek now is evidence.
The success or failure of Tegbe’s tenure may ultimately depend on one simple question: can his administration deliver stable and predictable improvement, even if gradual?
If he succeeds, he could become the minister who finally begins the long-delayed transformation of Nigeria’s electricity sector.
If he fails, he risks joining a long list of officials whose promises disappeared into the darkness Nigerians know too well.
Between Hope and History: What Nigerians Expect from Tegbe as Power Minister
News
Tinubu Signs New NIMC Law, Gives Nigeria Single Digital Identity Framework
Tinubu Signs New NIMC Law, Gives Nigeria Single Digital Identity Framework
…Commission Named Root Authority for National Digital Infrastructure as FG Targets Secure Digital Economy
By: Michael Mike
President Bola Tinubu has signed the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) Act, 2026 into law, repealing the 2007 legislation and ushering in a new legal framework aimed at creating a secure, interoperable and inclusive digital identity ecosystem for Nigeria.
The landmark legislation significantly expands the powers of the National Identity Management Commission by designating it as the Root Certification Authority for Nigeria’s National Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) and Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), effectively placing the Commission at the centre of the country’s digital identity, authentication and electronic trust architecture.
The new law also reinforces the National Identification Number (NIN) as Nigeria’s foundational identity credential under the principle of “One Person, One Identity,” while empowering NIMC to facilitate secure and seamless data exchange among government institutions, financial organisations and private-sector entities.
The reforms are expected to strengthen digital governance, improve public service delivery, enhance cybersecurity and support the federal government’s ambition of building a one-trillion-dollar economy through technology-driven growth.
In a statement on Friday, NIMC described the legislation as the most significant overhaul of Nigeria’s identity management framework since the Commission was established nearly two decades ago.
According to the Commission, the rapid expansion of digital services, e-governance, electronic commerce, data protection requirements and evolving cyber threats made it imperative to replace the old law with a more robust and future-oriented legal framework aligned with international best practices.
Under the new Act, NIMC will be responsible for establishing and maintaining Nigeria’s National Public Key Infrastructure and Digital Public Infrastructure, providing trusted authentication systems, digital signatures, digital certificates, encryption services and identity verification frameworks designed to improve confidence in digital transactions and online services.
The legislation also introduces stronger safeguards for personal data and privacy in alignment with the Nigeria Data Protection Act and global standards, while prescribing stringent penalties for multiple registrations, identity theft, impersonation and other identity-related offences.
In a major inclusion initiative, the law introduces an innovative identifier system for vulnerable persons and mandates special measures to facilitate the enrolment of underserved populations, including individuals without permanent residences.
The Act further recognises both physical and digital identity credentials, all securely linked to an individual’s National Identification Number, thereby expanding opportunities for digital transactions and service delivery.
NIMC said the implementation of the new framework would enable faster and more secure identity verification, greater financial and digital inclusion, improved interoperability across government and private-sector platforms, and enhanced ease of doing business.
The Commission expressed gratitude to President Tinubu for what it described as his visionary leadership in signing the legislation, noting that the reform would strengthen the protection of citizens’ data, improve cybersecurity, expand access to essential services and provide a robust foundation for Nigeria’s digital economy and long-term national development.
It also commended the leadership and members of the National Assembly, the Ministry of Interior, development partners and stakeholders whose contributions facilitated the passage of the legislation.
NIMC said it would subsequently issue regulations and guidelines necessary for the full implementation of the Act while engaging government institutions, the private sector and development partners to ensure a seamless transition to the new legal framework.
Tinubu Signs New NIMC Law, Gives Nigeria Single Digital Identity Framework
News
Nigeria Reopening States to Foreign Investors as Regions Regain Economic Powers, Says Ajomale-McWord
Nigeria Reopening States to Foreign Investors as Regions Regain Economic Powers, Says Ajomale-McWord
…Customs backs subnational trade diplomacy, says reforms will position country as regional commerce hub
By: Michael Mike
Nigeria is gradually returning to an era of stronger regional economies and greater state autonomy, creating unprecedented opportunities for direct foreign investment and economic partnerships with subnational governments, Founder of Global AfriDiplomats, Deji Ajomale-McWord, declared on Friday.
He said recent reforms in electricity, taxation and local government finances are reversing decades of over-centralisation and empowering states to emerge as independent engines of economic growth, industrialisation and international commerce.
Speaking at the Trade Commissioners’ Summit attended by diplomats, development partners, state officials and business leaders, Ajomale-McWord urged foreign governments, diplomatic missions and international investors to broaden their engagement beyond Abuja and establish direct partnerships with Nigerian states and regions.
According to him, Nigeria’s highly centralised governance structure was rooted in the Unification Decree, Decree No. 34 of May 24, 1966, which abolished the country’s regional system and concentrated legislative powers at the federal level.
Although the military administration that enacted the decree was short-lived, he noted that its legacy still dominates governance structures, with the Constitution assigning 68 items to the Exclusive Legislative List and only 12 to the Concurrent Legislative List, thereby limiting the capacity of states to legislate on strategic sectors such as security, electricity and regional integration.
He argued that the arrangement also fostered a culture in which many Nigerians looked almost exclusively to the Federal Government for solutions, even in areas where state governments have constitutional responsibilities.
Ajomale-McWord recalled how the former Western Region’s cocoa industry, popularly known as “Brown Gold”, and the Northern Region’s famous groundnut pyramids once made the regions powerful centres of economic production and prosperity.
He, however, maintained that recent policy and legal reforms indicate that Nigeria is steadily returning to a development model in which states and regions become stronger economic drivers.
Among the reforms he highlighted were the National Regional Development Policy (2026-2030), the establishment of additional regional development commissions, the Electricity Act 2023, the proposed Electricity Amendment Bill 2025, tax reforms that improve state revenues and the Supreme Court’s landmark judgment granting financial autonomy to the country’s 774 local government councils.
Describing reliable electricity as indispensable to industrialisation, he said new legal provisions empowering states to generate, transmit and distribute electricity would significantly improve their ability to attract industries and investments.
“Our states are open. Our regions are open,” he declared, adding that commissioners from different states were presenting investment opportunities and development priorities in their jurisdictions to the international community.
He described the initiative as the beginning of sustained engagement between Nigeria’s subnational governments and global partners.
“This is a marathon, not a sprint. We will continue this dialogue and strengthen collaboration in advancing development across Nigerian states,” he said.
Meanwhile, the Nigeria Customs Service threw its weight behind the push for subnational trade diplomacy, saying stronger collaboration among customs administrations, state governments, trade commissioners and development partners was essential to unlocking Nigeria’s economic potential.
Delivering a goodwill message on behalf of the Comptroller-General of Customs, Bashir Adewale Adeniyi, represented by Nuhu Mustapha, the Service described trade as a critical driver of national development, industrialisation, job creation and regional integration.
The Service reaffirmed its commitment to facilitating legitimate trade while safeguarding national interests through reforms aimed at simplifying customs procedures, reducing transaction costs and improving the ease of doing business.
It also highlighted its digital transformation initiatives, including the deployment of the Unified Customs Management System, known as B’Odogwu, implementation of Advance Rulings, the Authorised Economic Operator Programme and the National Single Window initiative.
The Customs Service said it would continue to align its operations with international best practices and the objectives of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), positioning Nigeria to become a leading hub for regional and global commerce.
It further urged stakeholders to forge stronger partnerships that would enhance export competitiveness, facilitate cross-border trade and promote inclusive economic development across Nigeria’s states and regions.
Nigeria Reopening States to Foreign Investors as Regions Regain Economic Powers, Says Ajomale-McWord
News
NHRC Raises Alarm Over Rising Drug Abuse, Demands Human Rights-Based Response
NHRC Raises Alarm Over Rising Drug Abuse, Demands Human Rights-Based Response
By: Michael Mike
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has expressed grave concern over the rising incidence of drug abuse and illicit drug trafficking in Nigeria, warning that the growing menace poses serious threats to public health, national security, human dignity and sustainable development.
The Executive Secretary of the Commission, Tony Ojukwu, made the remarks in a message marking the 2026 International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, describing substance abuse, particularly among young Nigerians, as an alarming crisis requiring urgent and coordinated intervention from all sectors of society.
According to Ojukwu, while the fight against drug abuse and illicit trafficking remains imperative, responses must be firmly rooted in human rights principles and the rule of law. He stressed that efforts to tackle the menace should be guided by the provisions of the 1999 Constitution, which guarantees citizens’ rights to life, dignity, liberty and fair hearing, as well as the provisions of the Mental Health Act 2021 and the National Health Act 2022.
He further noted that Nigeria’s response must also align with its international obligations under instruments such as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights and the UN Drug Control Conventions.
The NHRC boss emphasised that individuals battling drug dependence should not be subjected to stigma, discrimination or degrading treatment. Rather, he said they should be guaranteed access to quality healthcare services, rehabilitation programmes, psychosocial support and opportunities for social reintegration.
Ojukwu observed that drug abuse has become a catalyst for numerous human rights violations, including domestic violence, criminality, human trafficking, exploitation and growing insecurity across communities, thereby undermining the enjoyment of fundamental rights and freedoms.
He stated that the Commission has consistently championed a public health approach to drug use and harm reduction in Nigeria, organising national legislative forums and other engagements aimed at stimulating public discourse and shaping evidence-based policies on drug use and addiction management.
The Executive Secretary called on the National Assembly to incorporate human rights safeguards into the proposed national policy on drug-use quantification thresholds. He urged lawmakers to clearly distinguish between individuals who use controlled substances for medicinal or therapeutic purposes and those engaged in drug trafficking and peddling, warning that people seeking treatment should not be criminalised.
He also called on government institutions, civil society groups, families, educational establishments, faith-based organisations and community leaders to intensify public awareness campaigns aimed at preventing drug abuse, especially among children and young people who are increasingly vulnerable to substance dependence.
Ojukwu further urged law enforcement agencies to strengthen the fight against illicit drug trafficking while ensuring full compliance with national and international human rights standards in the execution of their duties.
Reaffirming the Commission’s commitment to addressing the crisis, he said the NHRC would continue collaborating with relevant stakeholders to promote policies and programmes that tackle the underlying drivers of drug abuse, including poverty, unemployment, social exclusion and inadequate access to education and mental health services.
He called on Nigerians to collectively work towards building a society free from drug abuse, where the rights, dignity and well-being of every individual are protected and upheld.
NHRC Raises Alarm Over Rising Drug Abuse, Demands Human Rights-Based Response
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