Home / International Affairs / Headline: REGIONAL DEBT CRISIS! Togo, Niger, and Benin Owe Nigeria N25bn as Electricity Remittances Plunge3

Headline: REGIONAL DEBT CRISIS! Togo, Niger, and Benin Owe Nigeria N25bn as Electricity Remittances Plunge3

ABUJA, Nigeria — Nigeria’s role as the “power hub” of West Africa is facing a severe financial strain.4 According to NERC’s Q3 2025 report, international customers paid only 38.09% of the electricity bills invoiced to them during the quarter, leaving a massive unpaid balance that threatens the liquidity of Nigerian Generation Companies (GenCos).

The Debt Breakdown

The total debt of N25.36 billion (calculated at a prevailing exchange rate of N1,425/$) is a combination of fresh invoices from the third quarter of 2025 and “legacy debts” carried over from previous years.5

Customer CategoryInvoiced (Q3 2025)Paid (Q3 2025)Remittance Rate
International (Bilateral)$18.69 Million$7.12 Million38.09%
Domestic (Bilateral)N3.64 BillionN3.19 Billion87.61%

The Debtors:

  • CEET (Compagnie Énergie Électrique du Togo)6
  • SBEE (Société Béninoise d’Énergie Électrique) of Benin7
  • NIGELEC (Société Nigérienne d’Électricité) of Niger Republic8

Domestic vs. International Performance

The report highlights a stark contrast in payment discipline. While local Nigerian bilateral customers (industrial users) settled nearly 88% of their bills, international neighbors failed to meet even half of their obligations.9

Additionally, NERC flagged Ajaokuta Steel Company Limited as a “special customer” that continues a long-standing trend of non-payment, failing to remit a single kobo toward its N1.03 billion invoice for the quarter.10

Fiscal Pressure & The N100 Trillion Goal

This rising regional debt is creating a “liquidity crunch” for Nigerian power firms.11

  • Operational Strain: GenCos rely on these payments to maintain equipment and purchase gas.12
  • National Policy: With President Tinubu pushing for a N100 trillion market cap, the government is under pressure to eliminate “leaks” in revenue.
  • Diplomatic Channels: NERC has officially communicated the need for “government intervention” to recover these funds, suggesting that diplomatic pressure or supply cuts may be the next steps if the debt remains unpaid.13
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