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    Home » Solar cost pressure looms as China cuts subsidies

    Solar cost pressure looms as China cuts subsidies

    April 2, 2026
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    Lagos — Nigeria’s growing appetite for solar energy is being put to the test at a delicate moment, as China moves to withdraw key export incentives that have long kept the cost of solar equipment within reach for emerging markets. While the shift is unlikely to derail adoption, it introduces fresh uncertainty into a sector that has, until recently, been driven by falling prices.

    For years, cheaper solar components largely from China helped open up the market in Nigeria. Households and small businesses that once viewed solar as out of reach began to see it as a viable alternative to unreliable grid power and expensive diesel generators. In many urban centres, the numbers started to make sense, with payback periods becoming shorter and more predictable.

    That advantage is now narrowing. With Beijing set to end value-added tax rebates on solar exports and scale back incentives for battery production, the era of ultra-low pricing is gradually coming to an end. The immediate impact may not be dramatic, but the direction is clear costs are likely to edge upward.

    For many Nigerians who had been planning to install solar, the timing is becoming more critical. Decisions that could once be deferred are now being brought forward, as buyers attempt to lock in current prices before further adjustments take hold. At the same time, others may begin to reconsider, particularly where upfront costs are already a constraint.

    The pressure is more pronounced when it comes to battery storage. While panels themselves have become relatively affordable, batteries remain the most expensive component of a solar system. They are also the most essential in Nigeria’s context, where electricity is needed beyond daylight hours. Any increase in battery costs could significantly affect the overall viability of solar installations.

    Installers and developers are also adjusting to the new reality. Projects planned under earlier pricing assumptions may need to be recalibrated, and in some cases delayed. There is already a growing tendency to secure inventory early, raising the possibility of temporary supply tightness as importers respond to shifting global conditions.

    Even so, the underlying drivers of solar adoption in Nigeria remain unchanged. Grid instability, rising electricity tariffs and the high cost of diesel continue to push consumers towards alternatives. If anything, these pressures ensure that demand for solar will persist, even if growth becomes more measured.

    In the final analysis, China’s policy shift does not mark the end of Nigeria’s solar expansion. Rather, it signals the beginning of a more mature phase one in which cost discipline, financing innovation and local capacity will play a greater role in determining how far and how fast the transition can go.

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