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Tuesday, 6 January 2026

Nigeria's Siemens deal or PPI Initiative.





Nigeria's Presidential Power Initiative (PPI)

It is a major project with German support to modernize its electricity grid in phases, aiming for 25GW capacity by improving generation, transmission, and distribution. 


Goal: Revitalize Nigeria's power sector by upgrading the national grid to 25GW, addressing infrastructure gaps.

Key Partners: FGN Power Company (Nigerian Gov't SPV) and Siemens AG, with German government backing.
Phases:

Phase 1: "Quick wins" to boost grid capacity to 7GW.

Phase 2: Expand transmission/distribution to evacuate 11GW.

Phase 3: Reach 25GW, including generation expansion.

Initiative Workstreams

The implementation of the PPI is classified into 5 work streams which are Transmission, Distribution, Meter Data Management System (MDMS), Power Technologies International (PTI) and Training.

PPI will upgrade, modernize, and invest in the existing Transmission Company of Nigeria’s sites as well as embark on new projects in the Nigeria Electricity Supply Industry.

Distribution Systems: PPI will facilitate construction of feeders, injection substations, distribution substations, and auto reclosers for 11 existing Distribution Companies (Discos).

National Metering Systems: PPI will integrate all the DisCos to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS) for prepayment transactions..

Power Simulation: PPI will facilitate the Power System Simulation for Nigeria (PSS4N) and System Development Studies which are the Power Technologies International (PTI) workstreams.

Training: PPI will conduct equipment and product training for Transmission Company of Nigeria and DisCos’ employees on all equipment and products installed.

Minister of Power, Chief Adebayo Adelabu, assured Nigerians that 2026 will be dedicated to consolidating gains made in the power sector in 2025 and delivering more reliable, accessible, and sustainable electricity nationwide.

The minister gave this assurance in his New Year message to Nigerians, noting that despite the challenges encountered last year, significant milestones were achieved, particularly in stabilising the national grid and recording of sectoral ‘historic landmarks’ in power generation and distribution.

According to him, sustained efforts under the Presidential Power Initiative (PPI), popularly known as the Siemens Deal, have played a critical role in strengthening the grid and reducing the frequency of grid collapses experienced in previous years. He expressed confidence that the ongoing Phase One

Saturday, 3 January 2026

Nigerian Exchange Delisting Dilemma: Symptom of Chronic ailment?




Share holders explain that it is indeed a troubling trend that should be addressed. A troubling narrative for Africa’s leading stock market . 

Since the dawn of 2020, there has been a rush in NSE delistings most are regulatory induced, the roster of the departed is long, with famed voluntary delistings that include 11 Plc (2021), Ardova Petroleum (2023), ARBICO Plc (2024), and MRS Oil itself (2025).  How about NGX reduce its regulatory demands that look like burden to struggling companies.

MRS Oil Nigeria Plc’s shares were exited from the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) on 28 July 2025, it was not an anomaly; it was latest symptom of a chronic ailment, marking yet another chapter.. The petroleum marketer was valued at ₦51.3 billion at exit, citing operational flexibility and cost savings as major motivations for delisting. Dozens of firms have given this and other reasons for fleeing the bourse over the past five years.


Raging inflation, forex volatility, and Naira devaluation has created inclement operating conditions which battered earnings and made public listings onerous, pushing many firms to elect private status or over-the-counter trading to escape pressures from compliance costs. 

Regulatory implementations in 2024 ushered 14 companies like Niger Insurance and RAK Unity Petroleum out of the NGX in 2024 for non-compliance.

Year 2025 has seen eight companies walk out of the Exchange’s door they are Notore Chemical Industries, Smart Products Nigeria, Capital Oil, Goldlink Insurance, Med-View Airline, Tourist Company of Nigeria, Union Homes Savings, Glaxo SmithKline, and Flour Mills of Nigeria all bade goodbye to the gongs. From energy to finance, only a few sectors have been spared.


While NGX has works to do to stem the tide and curb capital erosion, the companies must address persistent reporting failures or weak operations

NGX's market capitalisation hovered around ₦94 trillion as of late 2025, but the value could have been ₦1 trillion or 1.5 per cent higher over five years. Cumulative exit values stood at around ₦330 billion from 2025 alone while previous waves blew away ₦500 billion.

 The implication is dire as it signals waning investor confidence on one hand and limits capital-raising options for a cash-impecunious economy on the other.

A solution is urgently needed. And that solution must be multi formed. The NGX should review listing costs and compliance requirements to ensure they are not harsh; Market-making mechanisms should be improved to boost liquidity for mid-cap stocks; targeted tax incentives should be fashioned for publicly listed companies. 

Policies that facilitate forex access for foreign portfolio investors must also be formulated to increase the NGX’s attraction. This way, the core challenge of making public listing a strategically beneficial option rather than a regulatory burden will be collaboratively addressed, and the alarmingly deafening continued silence of the gong for departing companies will be muted.