The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has formally transferred regulatory authority over Abia State’s electricity market to the Abia State Electricity Regulatory Authority (ASERA), in alignment with the provisions of the Electricity Act 2023. This handover marks a significant milestone in Nigeria’s ongoing power sector reform, which aims to decentralise regulation and empower states to manage electricity markets within their jurisdictions.
Under the new arrangement, ASERA will assume responsibility for the licensing, tariff regulation, and oversight of electricity operations that are wholly contained within Abia State. This includes distribution, generation, and transmission networks that do not extend beyond state borders. In accordance with the Electricity Act and the Nigerian Constitution, NERC retains regulatory control over interstate and cross-border electricity transactions.
Aba Power Limited Electric, the main distribution company operating in the state, will now be supervised by ASERA for all its intrastate functions. To comply with the regulatory transition, Aba Power and any other distribution entities serving the state are required to establish independent subsidiary companies, which will operate under new licenses issued by ASERA. These subsidiaries must be structurally and financially separated from their parent companies and complete all necessary regulatory formalities within a specified timeline. The restructuring process includes asset registration, staff reassignment, and the establishment of new corporate governance structures.
The new regulatory framework grants ASERA full authority to issue operational licenses, determine end-user electricity tariffs, and regulate emerging market segments such as mini-grids and embedded generation systems within Abia. The agency is also expected to establish its own pricing methodologies, subsidy mechanisms, and performance standards tailored to local conditions and policy priorities.
In practical terms, the handover allows the state to design electricity pricing and service delivery models that reflect the specific needs of its communities. It opens the door for more targeted investment in the state’s power infrastructure and enables faster responses to service challenges that previously required federal approval.
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While intrastate regulation now falls under ASERA’s purview, activities involving the national grid or interconnection with other states remain under the jurisdiction of NERC. Such operations will require coordination between both regulators to ensure system stability and compliance with national grid codes.
The transfer of oversight to ASERA is part of a broader process initiated by NERC to decentralise electricity regulation across the country. Similar transitions are at various stages in several states, including Enugu, Lagos, Oyo, and Edo. The overarching goal is to create more agile, competitive, and accountable electricity markets at the state level, while maintaining coherence in areas of national and regional importance.
By establishing ASERA as the primary regulatory body for Abia State’s power market, the state government is now positioned to directly shape the future of electricity delivery within its territory. The success of this model is expected to influence the pace and structure of similar regulatory shifts in other states across Nigeria, reinforcing the broader vision of a more decentralised and responsive national electricity sector.