The President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Muhammadu Buhari (Retd.), has said that Nigeria needs over $400bn to fund its critical energy needs.
Buhari said that $300bn would be needed for electricity generation, transmission and distribution infrastructure while $116bn would fund buildings, industry and transport facilities in a statement quoted by Bloomberg.
The report also said Buhari did not include a timeframe for the spending plan but said Nigeria would need support from developed nations to bridge the funding gap, an amount Buhari said exceeds Nigeria’s energy budget for the next 30 years.
Buhari, who addressed the United Nations General Assembly on Thursday, is under pressure to show how Nigeria would ultimately transition away from fossil fuels, the report said.
With the funding needs almost matching the size of Nigeria’s gross domestic product in 2020, his statement amounted to one of indefinite goals, unachievable to him without massive outside assistance, the report added.
Buhari was quoted as saying, “The government plans to provide electricity to five million households and 20 million people using solar energy solutions, as a first step toward closing Nigeria’s energy access deficit by 2030.”
The International Monetary Fund placed Nigeria’s infrastructure stock at 25 per cent of its GDP, while the Nigerian Investment Promotion Council estimated that the country would need over $2.8tn in infrastructure investment over the next 30 years to hit the international benchmark of 70 per cent of GDP.
– Punch