When Light Becomes a Privilege: Nigeria’s Deepening Electricity Divide
Nigeria’s electricity crisis has evolved beyond infrastructure failure into a system of unequal access, where a small percentage of consumers enjoy stable power while the majority endure prolonged outages. As rising fuel costs limit alternatives like generators, the country’s tiered electricity structure continues to widen the gap, turning a basic necessity into a marker of privilege.
Electricity in Nigeria has quietly shifted from being a shared public good to something that feels negotiated, rationed, and unevenly distributed. It is no longer just about whether power is available, but about who gets it, when they get it, and at what cost. Across the country, daily life now bends around outages, fuel costs, and uncertainty, turning something as basic as light into a marker of privilege.
For months, many households have lived through long stretches without electricity. In some areas, power appears briefly, often at odd hours, before disappearing again. This pattern has lingered since late 2025, when even festive periods were marked by widespread blackouts. At the centre of the crisis is a struggling power sector weighed down by debt running into trillions of naira. Generation companies, owed massive sums over the years, are unable to maintain operations or secure enough gas to keep plants running. As a result, several facilities have gone offline, shrinking an already fragile supply.
For those who can afford alternatives, generators have become essential. But even that option is under pressure. Rising fuel prices, driven partly by global oil tensions, have pushed the cost of running generators beyond the reach of many. What remains is a growing number of Nigerians forced to endure darkness, heat, and disruption to everyday routines.
Yet this experience is not universal. A segment of electricity users, classified under the highest service band, continues to receive relatively stable power. These consumers are guaranteed extended daily supply under a tariff structure introduced by regulators, creating a clear divide between those with consistent access and those without. While a majority struggle with irregular or non-existent supply, a smaller group maintains near-normal electricity usage.
This divide raises uncomfortable questions about fairness. Electricity, by its nature, underpins basic living, from education to business to healthcare. When access becomes tiered, it stops functioning as a shared utility and begins to resemble a service reserved for those who can afford it. The structure reinforces inequality, not just in access, but in opportunity.
Even within the so-called privileged group, the situation is not without strain. The cost of maintaining steady power is significantly higher, placing a financial burden on users who are essentially paying for reliability that should be standard. Instead of a system that distributes cost and access evenly, the current framework concentrates both advantage and expense within a smaller segment.
What is perhaps most concerning is how normal this arrangement has become. Power shortages are no longer treated as an emergency but as an expected part of life. Policy responses tend to manage the imbalance rather than resolve it, leaving the underlying issues untouched. Over time, the gap widens, and expectations adjust downward for those on the margins.
In effect, the electricity crisis is no longer just about infrastructure failure. It reflects a broader shift in how public services are delivered and who they are designed to serve. When consistent power becomes something only a fraction of the population can rely on, it signals more than a technical problem. It points to a system where access is uneven by design, and where the basic conditions for daily life are no longer guaranteed for everyone.
Source: TrendyBeatz