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By Ogungbayi Adeyemi S. | adeyemi@ddnewsonline.com
Editor, DDNews |

When Minister-Designate for Power Joseph Olasunkanmi Tegbe told the Nigerian Senate there was “no quick fix” to Nigeria’s electricity crisis, the statement broke sharply from decades of political messaging on the sector. For a country where bold promises on power reform have consistently outpaced tangible results, Tegbe’s candor may mark the start of a more grounded leadership approach — one focused on execution over headlines.

The comment matters because Nigeria’s power sector has spent years locked in a cycle of overpromising and under-delivering. Successive governments have rolled out ambitious reform plans, set aggressive timelines, and issued repeated assurances of 24-hour electricity. Yet the realities on the ground remain largely unchanged: liquidity constraints continue to choke operators, market confidence stays weak, transmission infrastructure remains vulnerable, collection inefficiencies persist, and infrastructure deficits limit supply.

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Over time, the sector’s deeper casualty has not only been electricity access for millions of Nigerians, but also institutional credibility. Each missed target and stalled project has further eroded public trust in the government’s ability to deliver lasting reform.

Tegbe’s framing suggests an acknowledgment of that history and a departure from the cycle of spectacle. By rejecting the familiar rhetoric of instant solutions, the Minister-Designate appears to be signaling that his tenure, if confirmed, will prioritize measurable steps, structural fixes, and operational stability over sweeping declarations.

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Whether that posture translates into improved supply and market confidence will depend on implementation. For now, his remarks have reset expectations — offering a rare moment of realism in a sector where credibility has been the first and most consistent loss.

DDNewsOnline – Lagos
‎By Ogungbayi Adeyemi S(Beedee)
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