In 2019, Ola Drinks opened its doorways to residents of Ketu and since then it has grow to be a well-liked assembly place for locals in the neighborhood.
However lower than a yr after the nation’s worst cost-of-doing-business disaster that compelled many small companies to shut store, Toyin Oladimeji, chief government officer of Ola Drinks, whose enterprise employs seven individuals, says her enterprise is dealing with one other existential disaster.
“The sunshine state of affairs has worsened in our space and I run on generator for my enterprise,” she notes, saying that the state of affairs is hurting her enterprise.
“I’ve three mills and sometimes purchase 10 to fifteen litres of gasoline each day, which prices about N13,500 to energy my two deep freezers,” she says, stating that her rising vitality price has doubled amid declining gross sales.
For Femi Ademola, a 44-year-old welder at Agbole-Akute, Ogun State, who has been in operation for over a decade, getting 5 hours of each day electrical energy can solely be a miracle.
“I run on diesel for at the very least eight hours each day as a result of there may be hardly any mild right here,” he says, referring to Agbole, a suburb sharing boundary between Lagos and Ogun State the place his enterprise operates.
“Diesel costs have surged by over 50 p.c since 2023 and I purchase nothing lower than 10 litres for my enterprise each day,” he explains, saying that it has been very difficult for his enterprise since 2023.
He attributes the problem to the rising price of electrical energy, which, in accordance with him, accounts for 35 p.c of his present operational price.
Learn additionally: Operating on Empty: Electrical energy sector reform and Nigeria’s nationwide safety crucial
Adenike Fagbemi, founding father of BrandTell Nigeria Restricted, a digital advertising and marketing firm on the outskirts of Ikorodu, says she normally places on the generator each day for at the very least 5 straight hours owing to the poor energy provide the place her enterprise operates.
“However now I swap it on solely when the necessity arises and put it off afterward because the sharp surge in gasoline costs,” Fagbemi notes.
“The state of affairs has made our working setting much less conducive as we’ve got to work with out placing on air-conditioning when there is no such thing as a energy provide,” she provides.
Oladimeji, Ademola and Fagbemi are amongst Nigeria’s 39 million small enterprise operators grappling with Nigeria’s unrelenting energy outages which continues to hurt their earnings.
Poor energy provide in Africa’s most populous nation, Nigeria, is hurting companies and producers, elevating their manufacturing prices and lowering their aggressive benefit, in accordance with consultants.
Vitality is a key ingredient of the manufacturing course of. Nevertheless, Nigeria’s incapacity to produce and distribute adequate electrical energy has left companies on the mercy of different vitality sources, with many utilizing mills that devour diesel and gasoline.
Factories not unnoticed
Nigeria’s poor energy provide is just not solely affecting small enterprises but in addition hitting medium and enormous producers onerous because the nation’s over 4,000 megawatts stay inadequate to produce its 200 million individuals and factories, consultants say.
A 2022 Vitality Progress Report launched by Monitoring SDG 7 states that Nigeria has the bottom entry to electrical energy globally, with about 92 million individuals out of its 200 million individuals missing entry to energy.
Learn additionally: Operating on Empty: Residential energy customers bear brunt as large customers shun grid
Based on the Producers Affiliation of Nigeria (MAN), dependable vitality provide stays the one approach to unlock the nation’s industrial potential and drive progress by way of the manufacturing sector.
“By addressing vitality safety, we are able to unlock the total potential of our industries, cut back the price of vitality in manufacturing and create extra alternatives for Nigerians whereas contributing to the nation’s socio-economic prosperity,” Francis Meshioye, MAN’s president says.
“Sadly, the vitality panorama in Nigeria is fraught with challenges equivalent to insufficient energy provide, unreliable vitality infrastructure, and excessive electrical energy tariffs,” he says.
“These challenges not solely hamper the expansion of industries but in addition undermine our skill to draw investments and create jobs,” he provides.
Counting the prices
Poor energy provide prices Nigeria’s companies $29 billion yearly, in accordance with the World Financial institution.
A BusinessDay evaluation of Nigeria’s 17 largest corporations by market capitalisation reveals that their mixed vitality prices ballooned by 77 p.c to N1.4 trillion in 2024, up from N838.3 billion in 2023.
Segun Ajayi-Kadir, MAN’s director common, says spending on different vitality sources jumped to N1.11 trillion in 2024 from N781.68 billion in 2023, reflecting a 42.3 p.c improve.

