Vision 2030: the role FahmanEnergy will play in Nigeria's energy transition
Nigeria's National Energy Transition Plan and Federal Government Vision 2030 commit the federation to two parallel goals: universal access to clean cooking energy by 2030 and universal access to electricity by 2030. Both commitments are real, both are achievable, and both are running behind schedule. This is where we believe FahmanEnergy fits — and the partners we need to get there.
The gap that has to close
As of Q1 2026, the federation sits at roughly:
- 30% of households using clean cooking fuel as the primary stove (LPG, biogas, electric) — the rest still rely on firewood, charcoal or kerosene.
- 56% national electrification, but only 32% in rural areas — and even where there's a connection, average daily reliable supply is under 9 hours.
- 4 million tonnes of annual LPG demand against an installed plant capacity that, on paper, can serve much more — except the plants are clustered in 6 urban LGAs.
The strategic problem is not generation, not regulation, not technology. It is last-mile delivery to the federation's bottom 30%. That is the gap a company like ours exists to close.
FahmanEnergy's 2030 commitments
We've translated the federal vision into a delivery plan our team can be measured against. By December 2030 we commit to:
Cooking energy
- 100,000 households on LPG as their primary cooking fuel — across Kwara, Niger, Kebbi and Kogi states.
- 4 NMDPRA-licensed refill plants operational (1 today + 3 by 2029).
- 40 last-mile distribution kiosks across 30+ rural towns, each with a motorcycle delivery rider serving surrounding villages.
- 3 kg, 6 kg and 12.5 kg cylinder formats available at every kiosk so the entry barrier matches the household's cash flow.
Solar electricity
- 5,000 rural solar electricity connections by December 2030 — primarily home systems (200–600W) for LPG households, plus 6 community mini-grids in agro-cluster centres.
- Pay-as-you-go financing on every connection, repaid over 24–36 months.
- Rollout begins 2028, scaling through 2029 and 2030.
People and partnership
- 100+ direct rural jobs created — kiosk operators, riders, plant staff, solar installers, customer-trust officers.
- Ten times that in indirect jobs across the supply chain.
- Partnerships with at least three Federal MDAs (NMDPRA, REA, SON), three state governments, and two multilateral development partners.
Alignment with the Sustainable Development Goals
Our work moves the dial directly on eight SDGs the federation has committed to. The most material:
- SDG 7 — Affordable and Clean Energy: 100,000 households moving from firewood to LPG, plus 5,000 electrified.
- SDG 3 — Good Health and Well-being: indoor air pollution reduction; respiratory disease in children under 5 is a primary outcome.
- SDG 5 — Gender Equality: 4–6 hours per week per household returned to women and girls who currently collect firewood.
- SDG 13 — Climate Action: displacement of charcoal and firewood reduces black-carbon emissions and protects middle-belt forests.
- SDG 8 — Decent Work and Economic Growth: 100+ direct jobs in LGAs the formal economy has bypassed.
- SDG 11 — Sustainable Cities and Communities: rural-cluster towns get reliable energy infrastructure they didn't have.
- SDG 15 — Life on Land: reduced firewood demand slows deforestation pressure.
- SDG 17 — Partnerships: our model only works with cross-sector cooperation; we are deliberate about it.
What we need from partners
From the Federal Government and regulators
Continued NMDPRA support for rural LPG licensing, faster equipment-import clearances for solar components, and inclusion of last-mile distributors in the Energy Transition Office's 2030 working group. We're already engaging through the standard channels and finding receptive counterparts.
From state and local government
Land allocations for refill plants and kiosks in agro-cluster towns, coordination with primary-health clinics on indoor-air-quality data, and inclusion in state-level energy planning meetings. Kwara State has been an early supporter; we want to extend that pattern to Niger, Kebbi and Kogi.
From development partners and multilaterals
Catalytic capital for the 3 kg starter-cylinder programme and the pay-as-you-cook financing pilot. These are the pieces that pull the bottom quartile of households into clean cooking, and they need patient money to scale before they're commercially self-sustaining.
From private investors
Series A capital to build out plants 2 and 3, expand the kiosk network, and seed the solar-electricity pilot. The unit economics work; what we need is the runway to compound.
2030 is closer than it looks
Four and a half years. From where we sit today — one plant, one branch, 800 households served — getting to 100,000 households requires us to compound at roughly 75% annually for five consecutive years. It's hard. It's also not unprecedented in last-mile distribution playbooks elsewhere on the continent. The maths works if the channel works, and the channel works because we've been building it deliberately for two years.
If you are working on Vision 2030 from any angle — federal, state, multilateral, philanthropic, commercial — we want to compare notes and look for places we can move faster together. Fahmanltd@gmail.com.