Only 13m Nigerians Officially Registered To Use Electricity – TCN

National Grid
National Grid

Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) has said out of an estimated population of 230 million, only 13,112,134 Nigerians are officially registered to use electricity.

Gatekeepers News reports that the General Manager of Regulation and Compliance, Ali Bukar Ahmad made this known on Thursday at the National Institute of Physics webinar Series 2.0.

The webinar series was titled: “Policy, Regulatory and Technical Constraints in Achieving Energy Security in Nigeria: The Way Forward.”

Ahmad pointed out that among the total of over 13 million customers, 44.23% have been provided with meters, and from the entire Nigerian population estimated at 230 million, merely 2.52% are metered.

According to him, 60% of customers with meters are bypassing them, which adds to the country’s energy poverty issues.

Further explaining the data, Ahmad highlighted the nation’s lack of energy resources and its energy insecurity.

He started that energy security means having a consistent and affordable supply of energy, while energy poverty refers to the absence of a sufficient, quality, and uninterrupted energy supply, along with its associated services and products.

Ahmad said, “For a country to be truly independent politically and economically in the 21st century, is to have energy sovereignty and energy independence, and for the sovereignty and independence to be secured at all times and to be backed by the relevant geopolitics.

“In Nigeria, we have four types of energy poverty; the unserved, the underserved, the poor quality of supply and the served.

“Energy security in turn is the bedrock for the sustainable development and the attainment of it should leave no one, no citizen behind.”

The TCN GM pointed out that Nigeria’s energy vulnerability stems from several issues, including an over-reliance on gas, insufficient production capacity, and the unreliability and high cost of gas supply.

Ahmad said the signs of energy vulnerability include deteriorating and ineffective infrastructure, a lack of clear and accountable energy services, vandalism, and a shortage of political and financial resources to tackle these problems.

He explained that the way forward to ensure energy security in the country was to overcome all policy, regulatory, technical shortcomings and bottlenecks.

He, therefore, called for the commencement of immediate utilisation of all energy sources in all parts of the country, and for more electricity exports and imports corridors in the country to be opened.

The TCN general manager urged that all tiers of government should be involved in electricity supply.

He further encouraged the NIP to invest in research and documentation to help address the challenges of energy security in Nigeria.