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Nigeria's solar boom faces cost and policy barriers

DW English · May 11, 2026, 2:00 PM

Key takeaways

  • Nigeria's rising solar imports signal a search for alternatives to unreliable grid power and high fuel costs.
  • That's considered a rarity in a country where chronic electricity shortages are commonplace.
  • Music producer Somik Chris Ikesom told DW that since switching to solar power, he no longer needs to rely on backup generators around 80% of the time.

Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.

Nigeria's rising solar imports signal a search for alternatives to unreliable grid power and high fuel costs. But adoption is being held back by steep upfront prices, limited financing and policy uncertainty.

https://p.dw.com/p/5Db3HNigeria is Africa's second-largest importer of solar panels, behind South Africa Image: Alfred Odiba/DWAdvertisement Inside a music studio in Owerri, the capital of Nigeria's southeastern Imo State, there is no generator noise, no lingering fuel smell, and no flickering lights. That's considered a rarity in a country where chronic electricity shortages are commonplace.

Music producer Somik Chris Ikesom told DW that since switching to solar power, he no longer needs to rely on backup generators around 80% of the time. He described his experience with the public power supply as "whenever it comes, we use."

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