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West Africa: Nigeria Cuts Power Supply to Niger By 42 Percent to 46mw

Nigeria has cut electricity sale to Junta-ruled Niger Republic to 46 megawatts from 80 megawatts.

Vanguard gathered yesterday that the cut represent a 42 per cent reduction in power supply to the country.

Niger’s Energy Minister, Haoua Amadou, said the measure has led the country’s electricity production to fall by 30 to 50 per cent, forcing state-owned power company, Nigelec, to impose planned power cuts that could last several days, especially in the capital, Niamey.

Nigeria suspended much of its electricity exports to the West African nation as part of regional sanctions against the junta that toppled civilian president, Mohamed Bazoum, in July 2023.

“Nigeria has since resumed delivering electricity but only providing 46 megawatts, instead of the usual 80 megawatts,” Amadou said.

The cut came as Nigeria currently battles low power generation and supply due to low gas supply and low investments in infrastructure.

The country currently generates a little above 5000mw, barely enough for its over 200 million populace.

Experts say it requires at least 30,000mw to reach sufficiency.

Nigeria primarily generates electricity from thermal and hydroelectric sources, with natural gas being the dominant fuel for its over 29 thermal plants.

On Monday, power generation companies, GenCos, had threatened to shut down over N4trillion legacy debt.

The power generation companies warned that they could no longer guarantee a steady electricity supply due to the worsening liquidity crisis in the electricity market, with outstanding debts now exceeding N4trillion, comprising N2trillion for power supplied in 2024 and N1.9trillion in legacy debts.