logo
Benin, Togo owe Nigeria over $11 million for electricity in Q1 2025

Benin, Togo owe Nigeria over $11 million for electricity in Q1 2025

Nigeria claims it is owed over $11 million by Benin and Togo for electricity supplied in the first quarter of 2025, according to the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC).
Nigeria is owed over $11 million by Benin and Togo for Q1 2025 electricity supplied, according to the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC).
Only $5.8 million of $17.24 million billed to six international customers was recovered, with Niger Republic fully settling its invoice.
The non-payment issue not only affects international trade but also involves domestic entities, underscoring systemic financial challenges.
Despite receiving steady power through bilateral agreements with Nigerian generation companies, the two countries paid only a fraction of their outstanding invoices. Specifically, Togo made no payments, while Benin partially settled its debt, resulting in a combined debt of over $11 million.
In Q1 2025, Nigeria invoiced six international electricity customers $17.24 million, but only recovered $5.8 million, approximately 34%.
Niger Republic was the sole country to fully settle its invoice, paying $3.03 million in full. The significant shortfall, particularly from Benin and Togo, has raised concerns about the viability of Nigeria's cross-border electricity trade.
Punch ng reports that domestically, some industrial customers paid their electricity bills in full, while many others defaulted or made partial payments, leaving outstanding invoices worth hundreds of millions of naira.
Nigeria's regulator questions payment default
NERC highlighted the non-payment issue among major government-owned entities, describing it as a long-standing problem requiring urgent reform.
According to NERC, the poor payment culture of these countries threatens the financial stability of Nigeria's power market. The report noted that the persistent failure to meet payment obligations undermines confidence in bilateral power deals.
Experts warn that without strong enforcement, local and cross-border defaults could deter future investments in Nigeria's power sector, exacerbating liquidity challenges for generation and transmission companies.
As energy demand rises in the region, Nigeria's role as a power exporter faces pressure to ensure payment terms are honored.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

I tried 3 AI-powered scam detectors to help keep me safe online — and there's a clear winner
I tried 3 AI-powered scam detectors to help keep me safe online — and there's a clear winner

Tom's Guide

time2 hours ago

  • Tom's Guide

I tried 3 AI-powered scam detectors to help keep me safe online — and there's a clear winner

Regardless of whether it's some fine Russian women dying to meet me or a rogue document for me to read from a mysterious online bank, it seems that every day I'm inundated with scam emails, texts and phone calls. The bad news is that by using the fruits of artificial intelligence, the scams are getting increasingly sophisticated and believable with accurate design elements (rather than fuzzy images), realistic sounding English (not grammatically incorrect wording) and an overall look that is at a glance, credible. Gone are the easy to see-through Nigerian Prince scams, fake lottery winnings and offers to cash a six figure check, replaced by calls purporting to be from the IRS, texts about unpaid tolls as well as no shortage of tech support and crypto currency come-ons. Scammers are becoming a little too convincing and people worldwide are falling for them – hook, line and online sinker – according to the Netherlands-based Global Anti-Scam Alliance (GASA). The organization's latest 'Global State of Scams Report,' revealed that 2 billion scam victims worldwide lost over $1 trillion dollars to an ever-increasing variety of scams – a little less than 1 percent of the World Bank's global $106 trillion economic output. One of the biggest online growth industries, only those living in a cave without Internet are immune to modern day scammers, regardless of whether it's a scam farm in Myanmar, a Romanian job that doesn't exist or a Chinese pig butchering operation. Call it wishful thinking or online self-delusion, but two-thirds of the nearly 60,000 people GASA surveyed in 2024 thought they could recognize scams. Still, 74% concluded that they were the victim of an online crime; the average loss was $3,520. No surprise, bank, electronic money transfers and e-wallet transactions top the list of successful scams, because – as bank robber Willie Sutton said – 'that's where the money is.' With AI's help, scams today can feel like they're coming from all angles, including realistic looking but fake sites for banks, online payment companies and major web firms, like Amazon and PayPal. In fact, scams today seem limited only by criminal creativity, but the best defense is a good offence by using the fruits of artificial intelligence to stop them. The scam detectors I looked at come from the makers of the best antivirus software and use close to a million scams to train their models to analyze suspect imagery, text, video and overall design. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. I tried them out with three typical scams, including emails purporting to be from the FBI and PayPal as well as a rogue text about unpaid tolls. They show the range of efforts to get me to go to a malicious site, open a dangerous link or supply my login credentials. The good news in the AI arms race is that these detectors use scammers' favorite tool to defeat them and create a virtuous circle. Based on machine learning techniques, the detectors use verified scams they pick up to further train, refine and speed up the detection model that looks for patterns of fraud, deception and rip-offs. In other words, the more scams found, the better the detection can become. They can't perform magic. Although the AI scam detectors I used were generally effective at separating the online wheat from the chaff, some were frustratingly slow. The best part is that with greater input data, the AI models can be made more effective. And it looks like there'll be no shortage of scams to feed into the AI detection machine. Bitdefender has a two barreled approach that starts with its free Scamio detection site and mini apps for Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp and Discord. Just drop a dodgy image, email or text string into Scamio, and a moment later it pronounces the item safe or dangerous. Its chatbot provides the rationale in a chat window that can be interrogated. However, this leaves the onus on you to be skeptical and paranoid about your online life. Bitdefender's Scam Copilot (no relation to Microsoft Copilot) automates scam detection by incorporating an AI chatbot that's similar to Scamio and leverages the latest advances in Large Language Models (LLM). It proactively looks for hidden scams in the background of the company's Ultimate Security Plus and Premium Security plans. Scam Copilot spots rip offs that are endemic in your area as well as those hiding in Gmail, Outlook and text messages, calendar invites in iOS and chat apps, like WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, Telegram and Discord. To work, some of these apps require specific permission, such as access to notifications or the ability to read messages. To train its AI app, Bitdefender went through hundreds of thousands of online frauds and swindles using several machine learning techniques. The resulting layered model can identify malicious patterns, such as unauthorized remote access as well as dangerous online transactions, and blocks them before they show up on your screen. It runs on a balance between cloud and local processing. Its interface is similar to the rest of Bitdefender's products with a Scam Copilot box up front in the dashboard that replaces the Quick Scan option. It includes details about scams it encountered via email, links and messaging, along with a way to go right to an on-demand chat window with provisions for analyzing text, images and links. Overall, it did well catching all three scams I assembled. However, the Scam Copilot was slow at nearly 30 seconds to recognize each. In other words, it's thorough but can be time-consuming. Like Bitdefender's Scamio, Norton's Genie started as a stand-alone product for getting a thumbs up or down verdict on suspicious items. Using the latest AI techniques, Genie has expanded its usefulness as an automated scam detector that's a fully-fledged part of Norton's phalanx of protective services. Available with AntiVirus Plus, Norton Mobile Security, and Norton 360 plans, Genie Scam Protection combines traditional defenses like URL detection and behavioral analysis with natural language processing that can root out the telltale signs of potential scams from emails and texts and images. The Genie Scam Protection's model is the result of processing hundreds of thousands of real-world scams fed through its machine learning infrastructure. The resulting detection model runs on cloud processing to react to quick changes in criminal techniques. It starts with the Safe SMS feature's ability to stop text-based scams. Norton adds the SafeWeb protection to steer you away from those sites with a bad reputation for malware distribution and scamming visitors. It looks deeply into shopping sites to verify that they are genuine, don't have dangerous links or embedded malware. The company's Genie Scam Protection Pro takes this to a new level and is included with the top Norton 360 plans and LifeLock ID protection services, which adds $10,000 of insurance per event should something dangerous slip through. The Pro version has an extra focus on tech support scams and includes Safe Call to block scam calls that seem to outnumber legitimate calls these days. Meanwhile, Safe Email proactively scans existing emails looking for extra patterns that might indicate dangers. Regardless of which version you get, the scam protection fits into Norton's security dashboard and operates in the background – day and night. It shows the number of questionable files scanned and the latest information on current scams. There's also the Ask Genie box that provides direct access to try out presumed scams in the chat window. The Genie Scam Protection passed my three-part scam test and offers to provide details as to its decision. On the other hand, the FBI warning scam took 29.8 seconds to process, while others took half as long. Still, that's too long for many impatient web hounds. The newest of the three, McAfee Scam Detector, is not something the company will charge extra for or only include with its high-end security suites. Call it the democratization of scam protection, McAfee's scam protection will be part of all of the company's security products because it's considered fundamental protection. As an opening blow in the AI cold war, McAfee's technological emphasis was on stopping phishing scams that are after your login credentials or personal data. Today, Scam Detector goes a lot further by fighting fire with fire with AI techniques to recognize and stop a wide variety of computer-generated criminal scams. McAfee machine learning experts used thousands of known online scams to train its AI model and develop its detection algorithms to counter more personal and directed scams with a flexible technique that's able to spot all kinds of scams and frauds in a crowd. Fully automatic, the predictive model runs 24/7 in the background looking for the telltale signs of AI scams. It doesn't need a chat window for instant (or nearly so) analysis of suspect items and the good news for the impatient among us, including me, is that it all works quickly because the AI processing is done locally and not online. This works especially well on one of the best AI laptops with an NPU. The responses are generally completed in near real time but analyzing a video for AI scams might take as much as four seconds, not half a minute as is the case with some of the others. Whether it's text, an email or video, whenever something enters the computer with a recognizable scam component or pattern, the security software detects it, flags it and blocks its execution before it can unleash its dangers. McAfee's Scam Detector was still being finished back when I ran my scam tests with the others but after seeing it in action myself, I was very impressed with how quick and thorough it was. The bottom line for scams today is that they are the inevitable result of a free, open and inherently uncontrollable online world. There's no avoiding them, but you can fight back and turn the tables by aiming AI right back at them. The best scam detectors can put up a fight against all sorts of online rip offs, although for the time being you might have to be a little patient for a verdict.

Nigeria's air fare taxes more ridiculously expensive than most African countries
Nigeria's air fare taxes more ridiculously expensive than most African countries

Business Insider

time5 hours ago

  • Business Insider

Nigeria's air fare taxes more ridiculously expensive than most African countries

According to a recent report by the African Airlines Association, air travelers in Nigeria pay three times more in taxes than air passengers in other African countries. Nigerian air travelers face significantly higher taxes, averaging $180 per foreign departure compared to the African average of $68. Countries such as Gabon, Sierra Leone, and Nigeria have the highest aviation taxes, while others like Libya and Malawi have the lowest. High operational costs make flights within Africa from Nigeria more expensive than some flights to Europe. According to the survey titled AFRAA Taxes and Charges Study Review 2024, Nigerians pay an average of $180 each per foreign departure, which is almost three times the continental average of $68. Gabon is the most expensive country in terms of net taxes, levies, and fees, followed by Sierra Leone and Nigeria, the report revealed. The list also includes Niger, Benin, and Ghana. Libya, Malawi, Lesotho, and Algeria are the least expensive countries for international departure taxes. Flying from Nigeria to other African nations is more expensive than flying to some European locations due to high operating costs, according to Dr. Kingsley Nwokoma, President of the Association of Foreign Airlines' Representatives in Nigeria, as seen in the Punch newspaper. Nigeria's aviation problems The Nigerian government has admitted to some of the problems and is still working to find a long-term fix. The most recent of these was the clearing of a backlog of about $900 million in foreign airline receipts that had been held up by a lack of foreign exchange. In the past, this problem led to airlines raising prices for flights to Nigeria. Airlines have since been advised by authorities to modify their ticket pricing to reflect the improved circumstances. The cracks in Nigeria's aviation industry go beyond just expensive flight deposits. Currently, Nigeria ranks among the African countries without a national airline. Despite boasting Africa's largest population, a sizable market, and enormous potential, the West African country does not operate has failed to properly operate its own national airline. Nigeria Airways proudly flew the flag from 1958 to 2003. It featured everything from Airbus A310s to Boeing 737s and 747s. However, the airline was permanently grounded following decades of financial difficulties. Nigeria has made numerous attempts to establish a new national carrier since then, but for some reason or the other, has always come up short.

Benin, Togo owe Nigeria over $11 million for electricity in Q1 2025
Benin, Togo owe Nigeria over $11 million for electricity in Q1 2025

Business Insider

time2 days ago

  • Business Insider

Benin, Togo owe Nigeria over $11 million for electricity in Q1 2025

Nigeria claims it is owed over $11 million by Benin and Togo for electricity supplied in the first quarter of 2025, according to the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC). Nigeria is owed over $11 million by Benin and Togo for Q1 2025 electricity supplied, according to the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC). Only $5.8 million of $17.24 million billed to six international customers was recovered, with Niger Republic fully settling its invoice. The non-payment issue not only affects international trade but also involves domestic entities, underscoring systemic financial challenges. Despite receiving steady power through bilateral agreements with Nigerian generation companies, the two countries paid only a fraction of their outstanding invoices. Specifically, Togo made no payments, while Benin partially settled its debt, resulting in a combined debt of over $11 million. In Q1 2025, Nigeria invoiced six international electricity customers $17.24 million, but only recovered $5.8 million, approximately 34%. Niger Republic was the sole country to fully settle its invoice, paying $3.03 million in full. The significant shortfall, particularly from Benin and Togo, has raised concerns about the viability of Nigeria's cross-border electricity trade. Punch ng reports that domestically, some industrial customers paid their electricity bills in full, while many others defaulted or made partial payments, leaving outstanding invoices worth hundreds of millions of naira. Nigeria's regulator questions payment default NERC highlighted the non-payment issue among major government-owned entities, describing it as a long-standing problem requiring urgent reform. According to NERC, the poor payment culture of these countries threatens the financial stability of Nigeria's power market. The report noted that the persistent failure to meet payment obligations undermines confidence in bilateral power deals. Experts warn that without strong enforcement, local and cross-border defaults could deter future investments in Nigeria's power sector, exacerbating liquidity challenges for generation and transmission companies. As energy demand rises in the region, Nigeria's role as a power exporter faces pressure to ensure payment terms are honored.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store