Nigeria secured $242.9 million in new international financing for its flagship off-grid solar program last week, a cash injection that accelerates one of sub-Saharan Africa’s most ambitious rural electrification drives as the country battles an electricity deficit that has shackled economic growth for decades.
The World Bank disclosed the funding package in a June 10 implementation report, confirming that negotiations over the additional financing for the Distributed Access through Renewable Energy Scale-up project, known as DARES, concluded with the Federal Government of Nigeria on June 4.
Japan’s state development lender, the Japan International Cooperation Agency, will contribute ¥29.969 billion, roughly $193.8 million, in joint and parallel co-financing. The United States will separately channel $49.1 million in grant money through the Department of Justice via a standalone trust fund, earmarked exclusively for wiring public institutions.
The fresh commitments land as DARES hits an operational stride. More than $430 million of total program funds are now fully committed, and the project has extended electricity services, new or upgraded, to 5.3 million Nigerians, the Bank said.
That figure remains a fraction of the 16.2 million target set for the project’s December 2028 close, but it represents a near-50 percent jump from the 3.6 million reported just months earlier, driven largely by a surge in stand-alone solar home system deployments under the program’s second component.
Contractor roll-outs have pushed solar home unit deployments to 1.046 million from roughly 709,500 in March, putting the program within reach of the 2.75 million unit target that sits at the heart of the initiative’s household electrification mandate.
Renewable energy capacity enabled by the project stood at 41.25 megawatts as of June 9, still a sliver of the 465 MW the program is designed to unlock before closing.
The U.S. contribution carries a specific political dimension. The funds flow through the Department of Justice, suggesting their origin in asset recovery or forfeiture proceeds, and the bilateral agreement between Washington and Abuja designates them for public institution electrification, a priority Nigeria has struggled to finance domestically as the naira has shed more than half its value against the dollar since a 2023 managed float battered household incomes and import-dependent supply chains alike.
Nigeria’s electricity market regulator, the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission, issued a new mini-grid framework in April 2026 and granted a derogation raising the capacity ceiling for DARES-eligible projects to 10 megawatts from the previous lower threshold.
The Bank says those moves satisfied four performance-based conditions embedded in the project design, triggering the release of up to $200 million in previously locked World Bank funding. The DARES program now carries three IDA credit facilities totaling $750 million in its financial architecture.
Despite operational momentum, the Bank’s risk register remains colored a deep amber. Political and governance risks are rated High, unchanged since approval, as is the macroeconomic category, a reflection of Nigeria’s volatile currency environment and the ongoing turbulence from fuel subsidy reforms.
The fiduciary risk rating also holds at Substantial. Only institutional capacity dropped a notch, from Substantial to Moderate, a modest concession to the Rural Electrification Agency’s gradually strengthening administrative apparatus.
Two of three performance-based conditions remain only partially satisfied. The National Electrification Strategy and Implementation Plan, which sets the policy architecture for long-term investment in distributed power, was prepared by the Federal Ministry of Power and the Rural Electrification Agency but still awaits presidential sign-off.
A new business plan for the Rural Electrification Agency has been adopted, though the agency is still finalizing the key performance indicators against which its expanded mandate will be measured.
Nigeria has roughly 90 million people without reliable electricity access, placing it among the world’s largest concentrations of energy poverty.
At its current pace, DARES is reaching new beneficiaries fast enough to potentially exceed original projections. The question now is whether the regulatory, institutional and macroeconomic headwinds can be managed well enough to convert fresh capital into energised communities before the December 2028 deadline, and whether a presidential signature on the national electrification strategy arrives in time to give investors the policy certainty the program has long promised but not yet fully delivered.
Join BusinessDay whatsapp Channel, to stay up to date
Open In Whatsapp
