Nigeria’s domestic solar manufacturing sector has undergone a dramatic transformation in just two years, with installed capacity surging from 120 megawatts to 300 megawatts—a 150 per cent increase that positions the country as West Africa’s dominant renewable energy producer. This acceleration, driven by government policies under President Bola Tinubu, signals a structural shift from import dependence to regional export leadership, with locally made solar panels already shipping to Ghana.
The Rural Electrification Agency (REA) disclosed the milestone during an April 22, 2026 webinar hosted by the African Association of Energy Journalists and Publishers (AJERAP). Solar cell and component imports reached 837 megawatts last year—more than the cumulative 375 megawatts imported across all previous years combined—demonstrating that manufacturers are now assembling domestically rather than importing finished products. This shift reflects deliberate policy momentum designed to attract private capital and build investor confidence.
Approximately $425 million flowed into the sector during 2025 to establish eight renewable energy manufacturing plants across Nigeria. This capital injection, combined with commitments secured at the Nigeria Renewable Energy Innovation Forum (NREIF) 2025, is constructing an integrated ecosystem spanning manufacturing, deployment, and financing. The investment reflects growing institutional confidence in Nigeria’s regulatory environment, particularly the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission’s 2026 Mini-Grid Regulations, which increased allowable mini-grid capacity from 1MW to 5MW, and up to 10MW for interconnected systems.
The pipeline extends far beyond current capacity. With 3.7 gigawatts in development, Nigeria is building the scale required for long-term sustainability and regional competitiveness. REA’s large-scale programmes—the Energising Education Programme and the Distributed Access through Renewable Energy Scale-Up (DARES) initiative—now provide predictable demand that sustains domestic manufacturing. The DARES programme alone represents a $750 million investment expected to unlock an additional $1.1 billion in private capital, whilst targeting electricity access for 17.5 million Nigerians through 1,350 mini-grids.
Nigeria’s emergence as a manufacturing hub extends beyond domestic consumption. Locally produced solar panels are now being exported from Lagos to Accra, Ghana, marking Nigeria’s transition from renewable energy consumer to regional supplier. This export activity validates the policy framework and demonstrates commercial viability at scale.
The model is gaining continental traction. Mozambique, Benin Republic, Burkina Faso, Niger, Chad, Mauritania, and Mauritius are engaging with the REA to replicate Nigeria’s electrification approach. The next phase of NREIF 2.0 will focus on regional integration, positioning Nigeria as a central hub for renewable energy manufacturing, innovation, and trade across Africa.
For investors, the trajectory is clear: Nigeria’s domestic solar manufacturing sector has moved from nascent ambition to operational reality. With $425 million deployed, 3.7 gigawatts queued for development, and export channels opening across West Africa, the sector offers scalable opportunities in manufacturing, mini-grid deployment, and cross-border electricity trade. The policy environment remains supportive, private capital is flowing, and regional demand is rising. This is no longer a pilot phase—it is a market in formation.
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