Idowu Patrick
Renowned Nigerian artist Paul Okoye, widely known as Rudeboy, has raised the alarm about the enormous monthly expenses he incurs due to the purchase of diesel.
The musician expressed his concern on Instagram, stating that he spends over N3 million per month on diesel, owing mostly to the insufficient electrical supply that plagues many households in Africa’s most populous country.
Rudeboy’s lamentation shed light on the dire economic conditions in Nigeria, where he reminisced about purchasing his first car for a modest N120,000.
He wrote, “Bought my first car for N120,000 years back, and I was very proud of that… now I spend N3 million on diesel in just a month… Total madness. Only God knows what a common man is going through.”
Nigeria grapples with one of the lowest levels of access to electricity worldwide, with an alarming 92 million out of the country’s 200 million population lacking reliable power, as indicated by the Energy Progress Report 2022, a collaborative effort by Tracking SDG 7, the International Energy Agency, International Renewable Energy Agency, United Nations Statistics Division, the World Bank, and the World Health Organization.
This disheartening situation in Nigeria is further underscored by the fact that the country is trailed by other nations with significant access deficits, including the Democratic Republic of Congo with 72 million, Ethiopia with 56 million, and Pakistan with 54 million people lacking access to electricity.
The Energy Progress Report 2022, covering the year 2020, points out that Nigeria’s poor access to electricity persists because electrification efforts have not kept pace with the country’s rapidly growing population. This stands in stark contrast to Kenya and Uganda, where electrification has made significant progress, thanks to annualized increases of over three percentage points between 2010 and 2020. The divide in progress highlights the pressing need for Nigeria to address its energy challenges and improve the lives of its citizens.