Keeping the lights on or off : tracking the progress of access to electricity for sustainable development in Nigeria

Alabi, Oluwafisayo and Abubakar, Aisha and Werkmeister, Astrid and Sule, Suki Dauda (2023) Keeping the lights on or off : tracking the progress of access to electricity for sustainable development in Nigeria. GeoJournal, 88 (2). pp. 1535-1558. ISSN 0343-2521 (https://doi.org/10.1007/s10708-022-10689-2)

[thumbnail of Alabi-etal-GeoJournal-2022-Keeping-the-lights-on-or-off-tracking-the-progress]
Preview
Text. Filename: Alabi_etal_GeoJournal_2022_Keeping_the_lights_on_or_off_tracking_the_progress.pdf
Final Published Version
License: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 logo

Download (7MB)| Preview

Abstract

This paper is focussed on employing satellite night lights (SNLs) to investigate access to electricity across the geographical regions in Nigeria. Specifically, we explore how SNLs interact with human and socioeconomic development indicators (population, poverty, and household consumption) to demonstrate the implications of slow and/or delayed progress in closing the electricity access gap in Nigeria. Our findings suggest that minimal progress has been made and there remains significant evidence of disproportionate spread of electricity across the country with most of the electricity visibility concentrated in the Southern regions, state capitals and industrial centres. Crucially, policy challenges and trade offs emerge. On one hand, is the need to address the long-standing issue of stranded and underutilised assets around power generation, transmission, and distribution and how these balance (or not) against additional and new capacity to enable sufficient, reliable and sustained electricity supply. On the other hand, is the challenge of ensuring that closing the access to electricity gap in Nigeria is done in a way that is just, fair, and equitable, with no part of society becoming worse-off or excluded.