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Inside the $800M Machine Giving One Nigerian City 24/7 Power The lights have stayed on in Aba, Nigeria for over 45 straight days. No blackouts. No generators. 24/7 electricity. In a country where 200 million people share less than 5,000 megawatts — this shouldn't be possible. The Aba Integrated Power Project is an $800 million power plant built from scratch by Professor Bart Nnaji — a robotics professor who left MIT and Pittsburgh to build Nigeria's first fully integrated private electricity system. His own 27km gas pipeline. His own 141MW power plant with GE turbines. His own distribution grid. His own 133,000 smart meters. Zero dependence on the national grid. It took 20 years. It survived a financial crisis, political sabotage, a 9-year legal war, and a gas supply collapse. The banker who kept the project alive in 2011 — Alex Otti — became the Governor of Abia State in 2023 and finished the job. Now Abia is the first Nigerian state to take full control of its own electricity market. This is the story of how one city bypassed the most broken power system on the continent — and why it might be the blueprint for the rest of Africa. 🔔 Subscribe for more African infrastructure stories