Why China’s Cutting Solar Subsidies Is Bad News for Nigeria’s Electricity

Nigeria’s push to expand clean energy across the country is facing a new threat, coming from thousands of kilometres away.

China, the world’s largest producer of solar panels, has announced cuts to subsidies it gives to its own solar manufacturers. That may sound like a domestic Chinese policy issue, but the knock-on effects will be felt directly in Nigeria, where nearly all solar panels and clean energy equipment are imported from China.

Why Does China’s Decision Affect Nigeria?

Chinese solar panels are cheap because the Chinese government has long subsidised its solar manufacturers, helping them produce at scale and sell globally at very low prices. That kept costs down for countries like Nigeria as they tried to expand solar power.

Now that China is pulling back some of those subsidies, Chinese manufacturers will face higher production costs. Those costs will likely be passed on to buyers, meaning the price of imported solar panels in Nigeria could rise.

In a country where millions of homes and businesses are still off the national grid, higher panel prices could slow the rollout of solar mini-grids and rooftop systems that many Nigerians depend on.

How Big Is Nigeria’s Renewable Energy Problem?

Nigeria currently has a massive electricity gap. The national grid regularly supplies less power than the country needs, forcing businesses to run expensive diesel generators and leaving homes in darkness for hours each day.

The government and private developers have been working to fill that gap using off-grid solar solutions, particularly in rural and semi-urban areas where the national grid may never reach. Projects funded by the Rural Electrification Agency, development banks, and foreign investors have been expanding solar access across states like Taraba, Kogi, Kwara, and Niger.

But these projects depend heavily on affordable solar equipment. If prices go up significantly, some projects may stall or become financially unviable.

What Can Nigeria Do?

Experts say Nigeria has a few options.

Diversify suppliers. Nigeria does not have to buy all its solar equipment from China. Countries like India, South Korea, and the United States also produce solar panels and equipment, though often at higher prices.

Invest locally. WTO Director General Ngozi Okonjo Iweala has urged Nigeria to stop simply importing clean energy technologies and instead build the capacity to manufacture them domestically. A local solar manufacturing industry would reduce dependence on imported panels and create jobs.

Lock in long-term contracts now. Before prices rise further, developers and the government could accelerate procurement at current prices to stock up on equipment for planned projects.

The Bigger Energy Picture

Nigeria’s clean energy transition is already running against the clock. With oil prices above $100 per barrel due to the Iran war, the cost of running diesel generators, which most Nigerian businesses rely on as backup power, has gone up sharply.

That makes affordable solar energy more important than ever. The timing of China’s subsidy cut could not be worse for a country desperately trying to keep the lights on.

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