Joseph Tegbe, Nigeria’s new Minister of Power has assured Nigerians that the direction for his administration is clear and focused on delivering reliable and affordable electricity for households and businesses across the country.
Tegbe who was sworn in as the minister of power of Monday, said that the challenges that have kept the power sector below its potential were decades in the making, and will not be fully reversed in weeks or months.
He said, “Let me reiterate the commitment made before the Senate, I will not promise what I cannot deliver, but I promise visible improvement as you have been seeing, and I will continue to communicate honestly with you every step of the way. You will see the progress as it happens.
“The destination is clear, reliable and affordable electricity for every Nigerian home, business, and industry, around the clock. That journey is a long one. But under President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, we are firmly headed in the right direction. We will keep moving. We will keep delivering. And the improvements will keep coming.”
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Tegbe explained that since the confirmation of his appointment by the Senate , he has begun work to improve power supply. He said that with this period, a structured power sector reform strategy has been drawn up, anchored on execution discipline, clear milestones, and public accountability.
“We have held substantive engagements with all critical sector agencies; the Ministry of Power, Transmission Company of Nigeria, the Niger Delta Power Holding Company, the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission, the Rural Electrification Agency, the Nigerian Independent System Operator, the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Company, and FGN Power Company, among other players. They have been very supportive, aligned, and ready to deliver.
“We have also held productive discussions with International Development Organizations and funding agencies/ partners; whom have expressed willingness to provide liquidity support to the sector; a significant vote of confidence in the direction of our reforms.
“Preliminary results are already visible. The 450-Megawatt Alaoji Open Cycle Power Plant in Abia State, which had been shut down for three years, has been revived by NDPHC, with up to 375 Megawatts now available for dispatch to the national grid.
” TCN has energized new transmission assets at Katampe in Abuja, and at substations in Ayede and Abeokuta, strengthening grid capacity across multiple regions. When a 100MVA transformer failed unexpectedly in Abuja, TCN and AEDC teams worked through the night and fully restored supply within 24 hours.
He commended the decision of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), in directing the Distribution Companies to compensate Band A customers for supply shortfalls recorded earlier this year.
This he said, is a firm signal that consumers will be protected and that operators will be held accountable.
“All of these happened, not by accident but because of the renewed commitment of our people. I wish to take this opportunity to commend, sincerely and unreservedly, the Management and Staff of the Federal Ministry of Power and all its agencies for their renewed dedication, professionalism, and cooperative spirit over the past month.
“I equally commend our private sector partners who have shown genuine willingness to work with us toward common goals. I assure all of them: under this leadership, productivity and excellence will always be acknowledged and rewarded.
To Nigerians, we seek your understanding,” he added.
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