Tegbe Confirmed: 100-Day Pledge to Crush Grid Crises
Elijah TobsBy Elijah Tobs
News
May 6, 2026 • 8:15 PM
4m4 min read
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Source: Pexels
The Core Insight
The Nigerian Senate unanimously confirmed Olasunkanmi Tegbe as Minister of Power, demanding urgent fixes for grid collapses, liquidity woes, and weak infrastructure. Tegbe pledged 100-day improvements, a transparency dashboard, tackling vandalism, a 'generator cabal,' market-reflective tariffs, nationwide metering, and rural mini-grids/solar solutions amid senator scrutiny on systemic failures.
As the founder and primary investigative voice at Kodawire, Elijah Tobs brings over 15 years of experience in dissecting complex geopolitical and financial systems. His work is centered on the ethical governance of emerging technologies, the shifting architectures of global finance, and the future of pedagogy in a digital-first world. A staunch advocate for high-fidelity journalism, he established Kodawire to be a sanctuary for deep-dive intelligence. Moving away from the ephemeral nature of modern headlines, Kodawire delivers permanent, verified insights that challenge the status quo and empower the global reader.
Senate Confirms Olasunkanmi Tegbe as Minister of Power, Charges Him with 100-Day Reforms and Transparency Dashboard
Senate plenary confirming new Power Minister (Credit: Markus Winkler via Pexels)
The Senate on Wednesday confirmed Mr. Olasunkanmi Tegbe as Minister of Power, charging him to immediately confront Nigeria’s deepening electricity crisis, particularly the persistent collapse of the national grid, liquidity constraints and weak transmission infrastructure.
The confirmation followed a rigorous screening at plenary presided over by Senate President Godswill Akpabio, during which lawmakers extracted firm commitments from the nominee on timelines, transparency and concrete reforms aimed at stabilising the power sector.
Senators across party lines stressed that the time for rhetoric had passed, insisting on measurable outcomes to reverse years of inefficiency in the sector.
Senators Highlight Key Challenges
Senators outlining critical power sector hurdles (Credit: Ramaz Bluashvili via Pexels)
Leading the debate, Senator Mohammed Tahir Monguno (Borno North) described Tegbe’s nomination as “a square peg in a square hole,” but warned of the enormity of challenges, including recurring grid collapses impeding industrialisation.
“Grid collapse has become a recurring decimal, affecting our quest for development. Transmission has also failed to effectively evacuate power generated by GENCOS,”
Monguno noted insurgent attacks in the North-east had crippled transmission infrastructure, forcing Maiduguri to rely on alternative power sources.
Senate Minority Leader Senator Abba Moro (Benue South) raised the sector’s N6 trillion liquidity crisis, which has discouraged investment. Senator Orji Uzor Kalu (Abia North) criticised fragmentation of generation, transmission and distribution, arguing it created inefficiencies. Senator Ekong Samson (Akwa Ibom South) highlighted that over 70 per cent of rural dwellers lacked electricity access. Deputy Senate President Barau Jibrin described the power sector as the biggest constraint to economic competitiveness.
Tegbe's Commitments and Responses
Minister Tegbe pledging reforms to Senate (Credit: Pixabay via Pexels)
Tegbe acknowledged systemic challenges, including poor coordination, weak enforcement of standards and inadequate gas supply.
“Grid collapse is not an accident; it is a symptom of a system problem,”
He pledged to enforce strict operational discipline, improve frequency management, and deliver visible improvements within 100 days, including stabilising the grid and a public performance dashboard.
“If you don’t see results in three months, you won’t see them in six months. Nigerians must hold us accountable,”
Tegbe identified a “generator cabal” profiting from inefficiencies and pledged to confront such interests. On vandalism, described as a national security threat, he committed to collaboration with the National Security Adviser and service chiefs.
Addressing liquidity, Tegbe said the financial model was unsustainable and pledged market-reflective tariffs while protecting vulnerable consumers.
“Market-reflective tariffs are necessary, but electricity must remain affordable. We will strike a balance between sustainability and social protection,”
He promised coordination across the value chain, emphasis on gas supply to GENCOS, accelerated nationwide metering, building on one million meters rolled out last year, and scaling mini-grids and renewables like solar for rural electrification.
“Decentralised energy solutions will play a key role in ensuring that no community is left behind,”
In closing, Tegbe reiterated commitment to discipline, transparency and collaboration for tangible results.
Despite tough scrutiny, lawmakers expressed confidence in Tegbe’s competence and vision, confirming his nomination unanimously.
The Senate unanimously confirmed Mr. Olasunkanmi Tegbe as Minister of Power.
Senators highlighted recurring grid collapses, liquidity constraints, weak transmission infrastructure, insurgent attacks, N6 trillion liquidity crisis, fragmentation of the value chain, rural electricity access issues, and economic competitiveness constraints.
Tegbe pledged visible improvements within 100 days, including stabilising the grid, a public performance dashboard, strict operational discipline, confronting vested interests, market-reflective tariffs with protections, nationwide metering, and decentralised energy solutions.
Tegbe described grid collapse as 'not an accident; it is a symptom of a system problem.'
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Editorial Team • Question of the Day
"Will Tegbe's 100-day reforms end Nigeria's power woes?"