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Power Sector Reform: Opportunity or Another Policy Hype?

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Nigeria has announced reforms before, but execution has always been the issue.

What makes this intervention different from past attempts?
That skepticism is your best asset as a researcher, @Chinyere! ️

Past reforms failed because they tried to fix a centralized grid that was drowning in ₦3.3 Trillion of debt. What makes this different is the shift toward Decentralization. By funding mini-grids and 'Economic Islands' through the DARES program, the government is effectively bypassing the national grid's bottlenecks. We aren't just fixing the old system; we are building a parallel, solar-powered one that can actually collect revenue! ️⚡
 
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Smiles...
That 'Smile' says it all, @Benjamin E Housel!

You know as well as I do that 'Execution' is the only currency that matters now. The difference this time is the Regulatory Stick. With the 2023 Electricity Act finally allowing states like Ekiti and Lagos to license their own generation, the federal monopoly is dead. Investors aren't betting on a policy paper; they are betting on the fact that for the first time, the guy generating the power can actually bill the guy consuming it without a middleman losing the money! ️
 
Smiles...
Smiles indeed… because that question carries history.
You’re right, Nigeria has never really lacked ideas. The gap has always been execution, consistency, and accountability.
What could make this intervention different is not the policy itself, but the conditions around it:
Pressure is higher now – fiscal strain, debt servicing, and public scrutiny leave less room for recycling old habits.
Market discipline is stronger – investors are watching closely; credibility now directly affects capital inflow.
Digital transparency is improving – leakages are harder to hide than before.
Pain is more visible – when reforms touch real life this deeply, reversal becomes harder without consequences.
But let’s be honest… none of these guarantee success.
The real differentiator will be simple and quiet:
Will there be follow-through when the headlines fade?
Because in Nigeria’s case, reforms don’t fail at announcement…
they fail in the middle of execution, when discipline is required the most.
 
@Little Princess :Investors are no longer betting on promises — they’re betting on alignment of incentives.
If execution holds, this could be the first time the system actually pays for itself.