Nigeria’s electricity distribution companies (DisCos) are grappling with deepening revenue collection challenges, having failed to recover over ₦202 billion in electricity bills within the first quarter of 2025, despite steady increases in billing and power consumption across the country.
The data, sourced from industry monitoring reports and regulatory disclosures, reveals that while DisCos billed hundreds of billions of naira to consumers over the period, a significant portion of this revenue remains uncollected. The inability to recover such a vast amount is putting the liquidity of the entire power supply value chain at serious risk.
The issue is not new. In Q4 2024, DisCos billed Nigerian consumers over ₦515.7 billion but only managed to collect ₦363.7 billion, resulting in a shortfall of over ₦152 billion, according to figures released by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC). In December alone, billing stood at ₦238.2 billion, while actual collections fell to ₦178 billion, leaving a monthly gap of ₦60 billion and a collection efficiency rate of just 74.7%.
Despite various interventions and reforms aimed at boosting efficiency in the sector, the collection crisis appears to be worsening. Sources indicate that by the end of March 2025, the unrecovered amount had ballooned to ₦202 billion, raising fresh concerns about the financial viability of DisCos and their ability to meet obligations to power generation companies (GenCos), gas suppliers, and other stakeholders.
Analysts point to systemic issues as the root causes of the crisis, including widespread electricity theft, inadequate metering coverage, aging infrastructure, and inconsistent billing practices. Aggregate Technical, Commercial, and Collection (ATC&C) losses in the sector continue to hover around 40–41%, well above the targets set by regulators.
“The persistently high level of uncollected bills reflects structural weaknesses in the sector,” said Emmanuel Akinyemi, an energy analyst at BrightCore Energy Advisory. “Without urgent reforms, DisCos will struggle to finance infrastructure improvements or meet their contractual obligations, which could jeopardize power supply nationwide.”
The financial gap has broader implications for Nigeria’s power supply industry, which remains heavily dependent on revenue from end-user tariffs. With DisCos failing to remit full payments to GenCos and gas providers, the reliability and sustainability of electricity delivery is increasingly under threat.
To address the crisis, industry stakeholders are calling for:
- Accelerated rollout of prepaid metering to improve billing accuracy and consumer trust
- Stricter enforcement of anti-theft regulations
- Improved customer engagement and resolution of billing disputes
- A gradual shift towards cost-reflective tariffs to ensure financial sustainability
As the Federal Government continues to pursue sector-wide reforms through the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI), the spotlight remains on DisCos to improve operational efficiency and shore up revenue collection mechanisms.
The coming months will prove critical in determining whether the sector can navigate its way out of the current fiscal constraints or risk further deterioration.