The 2023 presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Atiku Abubakar, has raised concern about Nigeria’s continuous struggle with epileptic power supply and frequent national grid collapse.

The former Vice President also condemned the blackout in the South East, North West, and North Eastern parts of the country for the past three weeks.

He said the ministry and departments responsible for addressing the blackout must quickly intervene to restore electricity to the distressed regions.

Posting on his official X.com handle on Saturday, Atiku said his policy document, ‘my covenant with Nigerians’, has the most proactive plan for resolving Nigeria’s perennial power outage.


He wrote: “In particular reference is the situations in both the Southeast and the entire states of the Northwest and Northeast that have been in complete blackouts in the past three weeks.

“Every government department responsible for addressing the problem must be quick in its intervention and restore electricity back to the distressed geopolitical zones.

“Meanwhile, I still believe that my solution, as encapsulated in my Policy Document, ‘My Covenant with Nigerians’, remains the most proactive plan to lead our country out of perennial darkness.”

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Atiku also called for the decentralization of electricity to states, stressing that there is a need to grant states the power to generate, transmit, and distribute electricity for themselves.

He also called for the capacity for the complementary transmission and distribution infrastructure to transport the supplementary energy produced.

“There is an urgent need to remove the entire electricity value chain from the exclusive list and grant states the power to generate, transmit, and distribute electricity for themselves.

“I firmly believe that an industrial dispute with the Federal Government in the nation’s capital should not affect industrial activities in any of the states or cities of the country.

“Even as we focus on investments in additional generation, there’s a compelling need for capacity for the complementary transmission and distribution infrastructure to transport the supplementary energy produced.

“Considering that energy opportunities exist in different parts of the country, our strategy should be a viable mix of renewable (hydro, solar, wind and biofuels) and non-renewable (coal, gas).

“I wish to restate my earlier recommendation to encourage private investors to invest in developing multiple green-field mini-grid transmission systems to be looped into the super-grid in the medium to long term,” he added.