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Eko Disco Leadership Shift Puts Lagos Power Reform Back in Focus

📅3 March 2026 at 15:17
📰This Day Live
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Engineer Olubunmi Peters’ recent engagement with Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu has renewed attention on electricity reform in Nigeria’s commercial capital, as Eko Electricity Distribution Company (Eko Disco) enters a new phase of leadership and ownership.

In a public update on X and other social channels, Governor Sanwo-Olu said discussions with Peters centred on improving electricity supply in Lagos and sustaining engagements that can deliver visible results for residents and businesses.

The meeting followed a major development in January 2026, when Transgrid Enerco, chaired by Peters, initiated the acquisition of controlling shares in Eko Disco. Since then, Peters has made a series of public appearances linked to the utility’s operations, including a visit with Eko Disco officials to the Agbara District to inspect ongoing and planned projects.

The timing is significant. Nigeria has for decades struggled with an unstable power system in which generation remains far below national demand. With a population above 200 million and available grid supply that has often hovered around levels considered inadequate for industrial growth, distribution companies remain central to the push for reliability.

In Lagos, where commercial and residential energy demand is among the highest in the country, performance at Eko Disco carries immediate consequences for households, manufacturers, small businesses and service providers.

Industry observers say Peters’ quick public engagement after assuming the chairmanship suggests an attempt to set a new tone around execution, partnerships and accountability.

Beyond optics, the pressure on the board is concrete: improve feeder reliability, reduce technical and commercial losses, manage metering gaps, strengthen response to faults and align investments with customer-heavy clusters.

The company’s visit to Agbara drew attention because the axis hosts a concentration of factories and logistics operations that depend on stable electricity for production schedules. Any disruption in that corridor can affect jobs, output costs and wider supply chains.

Stakeholders also expect closer coordination between Eko Disco, state institutions and federal market actors as sector reforms continue. With states now taking deeper interest in electricity planning under evolving legal and regulatory frameworks, board-level relationships are becoming more important for project speed and policy alignment.

For consumers, however, leadership changes will be judged by outcomes rather than announcements. Businesses want fewer outages and better fault resolution times. Households want more predictable supply and clearer billing processes. Both groups expect communication to improve when disruptions occur.

Peters has not publicly announced a full long-term roadmap, but the sequence of early engagements indicates focus on field visibility, government coordination and project inspection.

If those engagements are followed by measurable improvements in supply consistency and service delivery, the transition could mark a turning point for one of Nigeria’s most watched distribution zones.

If not, public frustration over power reliability in Lagos is likely to deepen.

For now, the leadership reset at Eko Disco has reopened a familiar national question: how quickly can governance changes at distribution companies translate into dependable electricity for end users?

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