Electricity subsidy hits ₦1.98trn: NERC

Amid its struggles to pay the over ₦4 trillion debt owed to power generation companies, the Federal Government incurred a total of ₦1.98 trillion in electricity subsidy obligations in 12 months, from October 2024 to September 2025.

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Amid its struggles to pay the over ₦4 trillion debt owed to power generation companies, the Federal Government incurred a total of ₦1.98 trillion in electricity subsidy obligations in 12 months, from October 2024 to September 2025.

This was according to the quarterly reports released by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC). In the fourth quarter of 2024, covering October to December, the electricity subsidy incurred by the government was ₦471.69 billion. It was ₦536.4 billion in the first quarter of 2025 and ₦514.35 billion in the second quarter of last year.

The latest report from NERC released on Tuesday showed that the Federal Government incurred a power subsidy burden of ₦458.75 billion in the third quarter of 2025 as electricity tariffs remained below cost-reflective levels, making a total of ₦1.98 trillion in the 12-month period, from October 2024 to September 2025.

NERC stated in its reports that in the absence of cost-reflective tariffs, the government undertook to cover the resultant gap between the cost-reflective and allowed tariff in the form of tariff subsidies.

The subsidy burden remains high despite the Band A tariff adjustments of April 2024. Recall that the Minister of Power, Adebayo Adelabu, has repeatedly pointed out that the electricity subsidy was no longer sustainable, proposing a subsidy arrangement that would cover only the poor.

Experts also maintained that the government should find a way out of the burden of electricity subsidy.

NERC stated that the subsidy is applied at source through the DisCos’ payment obligations to the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Plc. It stated that for ease of administration, the subsidy is only applied to the generation cost payable by DisCos to NBET at source in the form of a DisCo’s Remittance Obligation.

According to the regulator, the DRO represents the total GenCo invoice that is billed to the DisCos by NBET based on what the allowed DisCo tariffs can cover. NERC added that DisCos are still required to fully meet other market invoices.

“DisCos are expected to remit 100 per cent of the invoices received from the MO for transmission and administrative service costs.” It disclosed that the subsidy obligation in Q3 amounted to N458.75bn, though it represented a decline from the previous quarter.

“Due to the absence of cost-reflective tariffs across all DisCos, the government incurred a subsidy obligation of N458.75bn; this represents a N55.59bn reduction in FGN subsidy compared to 2025/Q2 (N514.35bn),” it said.

The commission said the subsidy accounted for over half of total generation invoices, stating, “The subsidy obligation of the government decreased in naira terms and accounted for 58.63 per cent of the total GenCo invoice, which is a 0.97 pp decrease compared to 2025/Q2 when the subsidy accounted for 59.60 per cent of the total GenCo invoice.”

The PUNCH