In a significant move toward closing Nigeria’s energy gap, the Rural Electrification Agency (REA) has reported substantial construction progress on the $750 million Distributed Access through Renewable Energy Scale-up (DARES) project. Managing Director Abba Aliyu confirmed on Tuesday, February 24, 2026, that key infrastructure milestones have been reached across several rural sites, marking a successful transition from planning to field execution.
The socio-economic and structural consequence of this initiative is the targeted electrification of over 17.5 million people. As the successor to the Nigeria Electrification Project, the World Bank-backed DARES program is designed to replace more than 280,000 polluting generators with clean solar mini-grids. This shift is expected to provide a reliable power base for households and hundreds of thousands of small businesses, fundamentally altering the economic landscape of Nigeria’s underserved peri-urban and rural regions.
Analytically, the project is currently successfully navigating its foundational phase. Aliyu disclosed that contractor Al Alfuttaim Nigeria Limited has already completed the casting of mounting support bases in four out of ten primary project locations. This technical milestone is a critical precursor to the installation of solar panels and power distribution hardware. Progress is particularly concentrated in Kano State, where multiple clusters in Mekiya, Dagar, and Ballagaza within the Gabasawa Local Government Area have reached completion, alongside several clusters in the Maraya Rogo community of Warawa LGA.
The impact on “Sustainable Development and Rural Productivity” is a vital dimension of the DARES roadmap. By establishing decentralized renewable energy systems, the REA is creating the groundwork for productive electricity use, which allows rural farmers and artisans to process goods locally, increasing their profit margins. Aliyu emphasized that the agency is maintaining a disciplined execution model, ensuring that the quality of these installations supports long-term sustainability rather than just short-term access.
Furthermore, the DARES project aligns with Nigeria’s broader energy transition plan to reduce reliance on fossil fuels. With the foundational support bases now cast, the next phase will involve the rapid mounting of solar arrays and the integration of battery storage systems. This decentralized approach allows for faster deployment than traditional grid extensions, providing an immediate solution to energy poverty in the benefiting communities.
The long-term outlook for the DARES project suggests it will become a blueprint for large-scale renewable energy scaling across Sub-Saharan Africa. As the REA continues to meet its implementation timelines, the focus remains on ensuring that these new energy hubs foster local economic growth. For the residents of the beneficiary sites in Kano and beyond, these mounting bases represent the first tangible step toward a future powered by clean, reliable electricity.




