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Energy Transition and Diversification: Unlocking Nigeria’s Potential for SDG Delivery by 2030

Awuchi Chibueze G, Georgewill Glory M, Ugwuanyim Chisom R, Izi Raphael A, Mazico Henry I

Abstract

Nigeria’s persistent energy defect which is characterized by limited grid reach, unreliable electricity, and heavy reliance on fossil fuels has been a major barrier to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030. This paper argues that energy diversification of shifting from a predominantly oil-gas-based power system toward a balanced mix of large- scale renewables, distributed solar, mini-grids, cleaner cooking fuels, and energy efficiency measures is a pragmatic strategy for accelerating SDG attainment. Using recent data from the World Bank, International Energy Agency, and Nigeria’s Energy Transition Plan (ETP), we analyze current electrification status (~61% access), policy frameworks (NREEEP, ETP), and systemic barriers including financing constraints, regulatory fragmentation, grid limitations, and skills shortages. We propose a staged implementation pathway (2025–2030) focusing on rapidly scaling off-grid renewables, mobilizing blended finance, strengthening local supply chains, and improving institutional coordination. Evidence suggests that diversified energy solutions can deliver cost-effective progress on SDG 7 (affordable, reliable, sustainable energy) while simultaneously advancing SDG 1 (poverty reduction), SDG 3 (health), SDG 4 (education), SDG 8 (decent work), and climate action goals. We conclude that a coherent mix of regulatory reform, concessional finance, and inclusive planning could enable Nigeria to achieve near-universal access and a significantly higher renewable share by 2030.

Keywords

Energy diversification SDG 7 mini-grids Nigeria energy transition renewable

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