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Nigeria electricity market: What NERC’s Q3 2025 payment data reveals

Ijaseun David
2 Min Read

Nigeria’s electricity generation companies received $7.12 million and N3.19 billion from bilateral customers in the third quarter of 2025, but weak payments from international buyers continued to weigh on market liquidity, according to the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC).

Bilateral Customer Remittance – Q3 2025

The regulator said international bilateral customers paid just 38.09% of invoices issued during the quarter, deepening concerns about settlement risks in cross-border power sales and the financial stability of the electricity market.

International Power Payments and Foreign Settlement Risk

NERC disclosed that three international bilateral customers paid $7.12 million out of a total $18.69 million invoiced by the Market Operator in Q3 2025.

Payments were led by Mainstream–NIGELEC with $5.7 million, while Transcorp–SBEE (Ughelli) remitted $1.42 million. The shortfall reflects a pattern of delayed settlements that continues to strain power producers.

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NERC also confirmed that international customers paid an additional $7.84 million toward arrears from previous quarters.

Domestic Customers Show Stronger Payment Discipline

By contrast, domestic bilateral customers paid N3.19 billion out of N3.64 billion invoiced, translating to a strong 87.61% remittance rate.

They also paid N1.30 billion toward outstanding invoices from earlier quarters, highlighting a sharper contrast between domestic and foreign payment behaviour.

Ajaokuta Steel Remains a Chronic Defaulter

NERC flagged Ajaokuta Steel Company Limited and its host community for failing to make any payment in Q3 2025.

The company owes N1.03 billion to Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading (NBET) Plc and N0.10 billion to the Market Operator. NERC said it has requested intervention from federal authorities to address the issue.

Why Liquidity Still Matters

Poor remittance weakens cash flow across the electricity value chain, limiting generation capacity and investment. While Nigeria issued its first Power Sector Bond under the Presidential Power Sector Debt Reduction Programme in 2025, NERC warned that payment discipline remains critical to long-term stability.

Read also Tinubu appoints Musiliu Oseni as NERC Chairman, reconstitutes power regulator board

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Ijaseun David is a multimedia journalist with a decade of experience. He covers energy, oil and gas, the environment, climate, and automobiles, reporting on policy, industry trends, and sustainability issues. His work helps readers stay informed about the key developments in these sectors.
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