For decades, one of the greatest obstacles to Nigeria’s economic potential has not been talent, ambition or market size but It has been power.
Factories slowed by outages, businesses forced to depend on generators, entire industries operating below capacity because the energy required to compete consistently failed to arrive. Yet amid those familiar national frustrations, a new possibility is beginning to emerge , one driven not by rhetoric, but by industrial-scale ambition.
Aliko Dangote, Africa’s richest man, has unveiled plans for a 20,000-megawatt power project, a proposal that could become one of the most consequential private-sector energy investments in Nigeria’s history.
Speaking during an interview with Makhtar Diop of the International Finance Corporation, Dangote revealed that his group is preparing to expand aggressively into power generation as part of a broader strategy focused on solving Africa’s infrastructure deficits.
“We are now going into power… 20,000 megawatts,” he said.
The scale of that figure is difficult to ignore. Nigeria’s installed electricity capacity is estimated at roughly 13,000MW, though actual generation remains significantly lower because of longstanding infrastructure constraints, transmission limitations and operational inefficiencies. A private-sector project targeting 20,000MW would represent more than another investment headline; it would signal a major shift in how large-scale infrastructure could be developed on the continent.
It is also another reminder that some of the most ambitious bets on Nigeria’s future are increasingly being made from within.
Dangote’s power plans are arriving alongside a broader expansion across sectors considered essential to Africa’s long-term industrial growth. According to the billionaire businessman, the group is intensifying investments in fertiliser production, LNG, mining and maritime infrastructure.
“And the needs of Africa are petroleum products, fertilisers,” Dangote said.
He disclosed that within the next two and a half years, the company expects to become the largest fertiliser producer in the world. Part of that strategy includes plans for 12 million tons of urea production, alongside the development of potash and phosphate mines in Congo Brazzaville.
The group is also constructing what Dangote described as the biggest deep-sea port with an 18-metre draft while simultaneously advancing LNG projects expected to strengthen industrial supply chains across Africa.
Taken together, the projects point to a growing confidence that Africa’s industrial future does not have to remain dependent on imported solutions or fragmented infrastructure systems.
Dangote said the company’s stronger financial position is helping unlock this next phase of growth.
“Our cash flow now is very, very strong,” he noted.
He added that the group has gained greater financial flexibility and is now in a stronger position to raise capital for major projects.
“We are now actually free of assets, and we can actually raise more money,” he said.
The latest announcement comes as the Dangote Petroleum Refinery continues its operational expansion. The refinery currently has a capacity of 650,000 barrels per day and is being scaled toward 1.4 million barrels per day, reinforcing its position as one of Africa’s most significant industrial projects.
Perhaps the bigger story is what this moment represents for Nigeria itself. At a time when global narratives around Africa often focus on deficits, instability or dependency, projects of this magnitude are reshaping perceptions of what is possible. Nigeria’s infrastructure challenges remain substantial, but so too is the scale of local ambition emerging to confront them.
A 20,000MW power project will not solve every problem overnight but it reflects a widening belief that the country’s industrial future can be built through bold, long-term investments capable of transforming not just businesses, but national capacity itself and in a nation long defined by untapped potential, that shift matters.