The Federal Government has finalized the implementation framework for the ₦4 trillion Presidential Power Sector Debt Reduction Plan, a landmark intervention aimed at restoring financial stability and investor confidence in Nigeria’s electricity industry.
The plan, approved by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and endorsed by the Federal Executive Council in August 2025, authorizes the issuance of government-backed bonds to offset verified debts owed to generation companies (GenCos) and gas suppliers—a move described as the largest financial intervention in the power sector in over a decade.
High-Level Talks Reach Agreement
The breakthrough followed a high-level meeting held on October 7, 2025, in Abuja, involving:
- Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun
- Minister of Power, Chief Bayo Adelabu
- Special Adviser to the President on Energy, Mrs Olu Verheijen
- Senior executives from Nigeria’s GenCos
The meeting reviewed payment modalities and produced a consensus on a negotiation framework for final settlement agreements. These agreements will balance the government’s fiscal responsibilities with the financial challenges faced by power generation firms.
Aimed at Ending Decade-Long Liquidity Crisis
According to a statement from Senan Murray, Head of Media and Communications in the Office of the Special Adviser on Energy, the initiative is designed to resolve long-standing arrears that have undermined investment, weakened GenCos’ balance sheets, and hampered reliable power supply across the country.
“For the first time in years, we are seeing a credible and systematic effort by government to tackle the root liquidity challenges in the power sector.”
said Tony Elumelu, Chairman of Heirs Holdings and Transcorp Power.
“We commend President Tinubu and his economic team for this bold and transformative step.”
Echoing the sentiment, Kola Adesina, Group Managing Director of Sahara Group, described the move as “significant in every respect,” adding that it “renews confidence in the reform process and signals that government is serious about building a sustainable power sector.”
Focus Shifts from Crisis to Sustainable Delivery
Speaking on the broader impact, Mrs Verheijen emphasized that the Tinubu administration is focused on building long-term investor confidence through structural reforms.
“By closing metering gaps, aligning tariffs with efficient costs, improving subsidy targeting to support the poor and vulnerable, and restoring regulatory trust, we are shifting from crisis response to sustained delivery,” she said.
“This is how we build the confidence needed to attract large-scale private capital.”
She added that the reforms also include modernizing the national grid, scaling embedded generation, and improving distribution infrastructure

