Sustainable energy transition is generally understood as a concept of developing robust, effective and efficient energy sectors in a particular country or region without compromising the present and future soci.
Poor physical and economic infrastructures have proven to be one of the most challenging areas for effective introduction of socio-economic and political reforms into the Nigerian electricity industry.
How bad is Nigeria's energy grid?
With an average of 125 kWh per capita energy per head (Adedokun, 2016, Advisory Power Team, Office of the Vice President, Federal Government of Nigeria, 2015) and an estimated average occurrence of 23 system collapse over the past 31 years (Akinloye et al., 2016, Ogbuefi et al., 2018), the poor state of Nigerian grid is currently confounding.
Are socio-political and technical impediments affecting Nigeria's energy sector maturity?
Some of the socio-political and technical impediments on the path of Nigerian's drive for energy sector maturity has been x-rayed, and some crucial economic, socio-environmental and technological action steps towards overcoming these challenges in Nigeria, and by extension the entire SSA are discussed.
How abysmal is the electricity sector?
Going by this abysmal condition of the electricity sector, less than 50% of the population is being served by the grid (86% urban access and 41.1% rural access) and about 4% has access to clean energy for cooking in a country where there is about 49.6% urban population (Anon, 2016a).
Should Nigeria adopt modern clean-burning technologies?
It has been identified that until the reliability and cost-effectiveness of renewable energy technologies are well-proven, both quantitatively and qualitatively, the reliance of Nigeria and other SSA country on energy from conventional fuels for electricity and locomotion may remain unchanged, howbeit adopting modern clean-burning technologies.
What are the bottlenecks affecting Nigeria's power sector?
The high capital cost and slow recovery/return on investment, as well as the tough regulatory and technical requirements involved, are also some of the identified bottlenecks affecting Nigeria and the whole SSA region. Fig. 7. Stages of Nigerian power sector reforms and the involved policies and sectors.