The House of Representatives Ad hoc Committee investigating Nigeria’s power sector reforms and expenditure from 2007 to 2024 has summoned the
The managing directors of Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company and Jos Electricity Distribution Company have been summoned by the Hoyse of Representatives Ad hoc Committee investigating nigerias power sector reforms and expenditure from 2007 to 2025
The chief executives of the embattled DisCos were summoned due to persistent power crisis in the country.
For instance, consumers under the Ibadan DisCo have been on rationing and most times, complete blackout for over some years. The story from its Jos counterpart is not different.
This is coming on the heels of the collapse of the national electricity grid on Friday morning, plunging Africa’s most populous nation into darkness for the first time in 2026, raising questions about the country’s chronically unstable power infrastructure.
The national grid failed at approximately 11:40 a.m, Nigerian time, according to data gathered from the firm
Specifically, profile of the national distribution load as at 1 pm showed that all distribution companies (DisCos), including Abuja, Eko, Benin, Enugu, Ibadan, Jos, Kano, Kaduna, , Port Harcourt, and Yola, had 0 load.
The development was despite report by the operators of robust demand across major centres major urban centres, with Abuja Electricity Distribution Company receiving 639 megawatts and Ikeja Electric drawing 630 megawatts before the system went down.
The collapse marks a troubling continuation of reliability problems that plagued Nigeria’s power sector throughout 2024, when the grid failed nine times.
Those repeated outages disrupted businesses, hospitals, and households across the nation of more than 200 million people, most of whom already face daily power shortages even when the grid operates normally.
Al-Mustapha Ibrahim, Chairman of the committee, expressed his disappointment over absence of the Managing directors of the DisCos at a hearing to probe their operations on Thursday.
He expressed strong dissatisfaction during the hearing, stressing that the absence of the Discos’ chief executives undermined the purpose of the investigation.
According to him, the committee was constituted to address Nigeria’s persistent power challenges, which have continued to slow national development despite over a decade of power sector privatisation.
“We want them to tell Nigerians who they are, what they do, the investments they have made, and how they have utilised the various government interventions in the power sector,” Ibrahim said.
He noted that while generation and transmission issues have been interrogated in previous sessions, distribution companies remain critical stakeholders whose performance directly affects electricity supply to consumers.
The chairman recalled submissions from the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN), which revealed that Nigeria has never generated up to 13,300 megawatts of electricity at any time, with peak generation hovering around 10,000 megawatts, despite transmission capacity of about 7,000 megawatts.
“The big question is why Nigerians are still in darkness. Discos must explain why communities and individuals are still forced to buy transformers and other infrastructure that should ordinarily be their responsibility,” he said.
During the hearing, officials who appeared on behalf of the Discos could not provide convincing explanations for the absence of their Managing Directors, nor present letters formally notifying the committee of any delegation.
Members of the committee unanimously rejected the representation and insisted that only the Managing Directors could adequately address the issues raised.
Following deliberations, Olajide Mohammed (Oyo State) moved a motion for the meeting to be adjourned to 5th February, directing the Discos to reappear with their Managing Directors to defend their submissions and explain their investment records, infrastructure development, and utilisation of intervention funds.
The motion was amended by Hon. Abubakar Jajere (Yobe State), who called for the invitation of core investors in the Discos, citing what he described as a pattern of disregard for the committee’s summons.
“If the Discos continue to respond negatively, then we should invite their core investors. That way, accountability will be enforced,” Jajere said.
The chairman upheld the amended motion, warning that failure to comply with the committee’s directive would attract the full instrumentality of the House.
“If they continue to evade this investigation, it raises serious questions about their capacity, commitment, and ability to deliver effective power supply after 13 years of privatisation,” Ibrahim said.
The committee adjourned proceedings to 5th February, reaffirming its resolve to uncover the root causes of Nigeria’s electricity crisis and ensure accountability in the power sector.








