In a significant strategic pivot, the Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company (IBEDC) has announced plans to boost regional energy security by reviving dormant hydroelectric infrastructure. The Chairman of the newly reconstituted Board of Directors, Chief Tunde Afolabi, revealed on Tuesday, February 24, 2026, that the utility firm will explore embedded generation opportunities by rehabilitating redundant hydro plants across Oyo and Osun states.
The operational and structural consequence of this move is a shift toward a more decentralized and reliable energy mix. By breathing life back into these abandoned assets, IBEDC aims to reduce its total dependence on the national grid. Furthermore, Afolabi disclosed a plan to purchase electricity directly from Generating Companies (GenCos), with a target of adding 200 megawatts (MW) to its current allocation. This bilateral contracting model is designed to stabilize supply reliability for customers across its expansive franchise.
Analytically, the announcement comes at a significant milestone for the company following the resignation of three nominees from the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON). The emergence of a new core investor and a reconstituted board which includes prominent figures such as Mr. Ayodeji Gbeleyi and Dr. Taiwo Afolabi signals a transition focused on governance and capital depth. This leadership reset is intended to address the persistent liquidity pressures and infrastructure decay that have historically hampered the company’s performance.
The impact on “Infrastructure Modernization and Workforce Stability” is a vital dimension of the new board’s agenda. Chief Afolabi pledged sustained capital investment in the rehabilitation and expansion of distribution feeders, the upgrading of overloaded transformers and injection substations, and the systematic replacement of obsolete network components to curb technical losses.
Addressing potential concerns regarding the corporate transition, the Chairman assured employees that there would be no job losses. Instead, he emphasized a performance-based empowerment strategy where staff will be re-equipped to meet the company’s new service standards. This approach aims to maintain institutional memory while driving the efficiency required to tackle challenges like energy theft and ageing assets.
Furthermore, Director Michael Magaji emphasized that stakeholder engagement will be central to this new era. IBEDC, which serves Oyo, Ogun, Osun, Kwara, and parts of neighboring states, intends to foster more transparent communication with its customer base. By repositioning its workforce and deepening its investment in local generation, the company is positioning itself as a more autonomous and proactive player in Nigeria’s post-privatization power landscape.
The long-term outlook for IBEDC depends on the speed at which it can integrate the 200MW of bilateral power and the technical success of the hydro plant rehabilitations. If successful, this model could serve as a blueprint for other DisCos looking to solve the liquidity-supply paradox through localized, sustainable generation.




