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FCCPC Reopens Ikeja Electric Headquarters Following Compliance Agreement

In a significant regulatory development in Nigeria’s power sector, the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), has unsealed the headquarters of Ikeja Electric Plc in Lagos following the company’s agreement to a binding compliance undertaking to address consumer rights violations.

The announcement was made in a statement by the Commission’s Director of Corporate Affairs, Ondaje Ijagwu.

Background: Why the Headquarters Was Sealed

The Commission had initially sealed Ikeja Electric’s headquarters on December 11, 2025, after the electricity distribution company failed to comply with a directive from the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC). The directive required Ikeja Electric to unbundle a Maximum Demand account into 20 individual accounts for a customer who had been without electricity for over two and a half years.

The sealing was described by FCCPC’s Director of Surveillance and Investigation, Bola Adeyinka, as a proportionate enforcement measure, taken only after repeated engagement and multiple opportunities for voluntary compliance. Adeyinka noted that similar enforcement actions had been threatened previously, such as in November of last year, when FCCPC warned Ikeja Electric (IKEDC), and Eko Electricity Distribution Company (EKEDP), against flouting directives concerning the replacement of Unistar prepaid meters.

Compliance Undertaking and Reopening

Following negotiations with the FCCPC, Ikeja Electric signed a binding undertaking, pledging to:

In response, the FCCPC lifted the seal on Ikeja Electric’s headquarters, allowing the company to resume normal operations. The Commission warned that any breach of the undertaking would expose the company to renewed and escalated enforcement action under the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Act (FCCPA), 2018.

Regulatory Perspective

Reacting to the development, FCCPC’s Executive Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Tunji Bello, emphasized that the Commission’s intervention was necessary to enforce the provisions of the FCCPA. He stated:

“Our responsibility is to ensure that consumers are treated fairly and that service providers comply with lawful decisions and directives. Enforcement is not an end in itself. Where compliance is achieved and credible commitments are made, the Commission will respond appropriately.”

Bello further clarified that the FCCPC’s actions demonstrate a balanced regulatory approach, explaining:

“We intervene decisively where consumer harm persists, and we de-escalate where enforceable compliance is secured. What remains constant is our duty to protect consumers and uphold regulatory accountability.”

He reaffirmed the Commission’s commitment to ensuring that electricity consumers and other service users across Nigeria are treated fairly, while cautioning that future breaches of compliance undertakings will attract stronger enforcement measures.

Implications for Consumers and the Power Sector

This enforcement action sends a clear signal to service providers in Nigeria’s electricity sector: consumer rights and regulatory directives carry legal weight, and regulatory bodies will not hesitate to escalate enforcement if obligations are not met. At the same time, it highlights that cooperative compliance remains a viable path, demonstrating that companies willing to engage with regulators constructively can avoid prolonged penalties.

As Nigeria continues to face challenges in electricity distribution and consumer service delivery, the FCCPC’s decisive yet measured approach may set a precedent for stricter regulatory oversight and improved consumer protection across the utilities sector.

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