Tuesday, March 10, 2026
FB X LI YT
YT
The Yoruba Times
Unfolding the Stories of Yoruba, Nigeria and the world in general: Your Trusted Source at The Yoruba Times
Breaking
🇳🇬⚖️ BREAKING: Shariah Council Fires Back at US Lawmakers — “No Power Can Stop Muslims From Practicing Shariah in Nigeria!” BREAKING: Fulani Chiefs Allegedly Funded Yelwata Massacre That Killed Over 200 — Witness Testifies in Court BREAKING: Northern Christian Leaders Drop ‘CAN’ Title, Revive Original ‘NCA’ Name from 1964 to Strengthen Regional Identity 🇺🇸 US Confirms: ISWAP, Boko Haram & Fulani Militants Coordinating to Establish Islamic Caliphate in Nigeria BREAKING: U.S. Congress Issues 11-Point Ultimatum to Nigeria Over Alleged Christian Genocide – Demands Repeal of Sharia, Beef Export Ban, Sanctions BREAKING: US Moves to Block Nigeria’s Beef Exports Over Herdsmen Terrorism — Ghana, SA, Ivory Coast, Senegal Affected BREAKING: Afenifere USA Honours Yoruba Scholar Barakat Fasasi with N1 Million Prize for Groundbreaking Research on Ibadan’s Plank Sellers History BREAKING: “They Can Kill Tinubu Anytime!” — El-Rufai’s Phone Tapping Confession Exposes Presidential Security Nightmare
BUSINESS

Poor Power Supply Costs Nigeria $29bn Annually –AfDB

Adedoja Adesoji
July 15, 2023 3 min read

The African Development Bank (AfDB) has said that Nigeria loses $29 billion due to poor power supply annually while manufacturers in the country spend as much as N10.1 trillion on energy.

AfDB President, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina made this disclosure on Thursday as he raised concern over the epileptic power supply in the country while calling for an industrial revolution and manufacturing digitalisation.

Adesina said this while delivering a keynote lecture with the title, “The Day the Lion Roared! Making Nigeria a Global Industrial and Economic Giant” at the Business Day CEO Forum in Lagos.

“It has been estimated by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) that Nigeria loses $29 billion annually due to lack of and unreliable power supply or 5.8% of its GDP. Also, Nigerians spend $14 billion per year on generators and fuel,” Adesina said.

“Lack of electricity is killing Nigerian industries. According to the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, industries spent N93.1 billion on alternative energy in 2018.

“No business can survive in Nigeria without generators. A recent survey of manufacturers in Nigeria shows they lose N10.1 trillion annually due to power failure”, he added.

On the power sector, Adesina said that unless the country decisively tackled its energy deficiency and reliability, its industries would remain uncompetitive.

The former Nigerian minister for agriculture also spoke about the level of Nigeria’s underdevelopment, saying it was quite worrisome and something drastic needed to be done to address it.

“For now, Nigeria is developing too slowly and well below its potential. The challenge is for the lion to roar. Then, we will have the making of an economic giant

“Nigeria should have a greater ambition for its manufacturing sector by shifting to integrating into global and regional value chains, rapidly moving up the value chains in areas of comparative advantage, driving greater specialization and competitiveness.

“A well-developed and policy-enabled manufacturing sector, with export orientation will spur greater innovation, industrial policy for export market development and structural transformation of the economy. Instead of being consumed with conserving foreign exchange, the focus would shift to expanding foreign exchange through greater export value diversification.

“Industrial manufacturing can earn Nigeria ten times what it earns from reliance on oil. Let’s change our perspective away from simply import substitution, to high-valued export-oriented manufacturing,” Adeshina said.

According to him, one of the major challenges facing the manufacturing industry in Nigeria was the very high cost and unreliability of supply of electricity.

“The source of Nigeria’s greatest wealth would come from having strong manufacturing capacity for competitiveness in regional trade and integration into global value chains.

“With the right policies, investment frameworks, infrastructure, logistics and financing framework and powered by a highly trained, dynamic and youthful workforce, Nigeria must fully unleash the power of manufacturing”, Adesina concluded.