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Electrical Certification and Building Insurance in Nigeria: A Critical Gap in Risk Management -By Engr Chris Ebia

The future of safe and resilient urban development in Nigeria will depend not only on architectural ambition and structural expansion, but also on the extent to which the nation is willing to uphold the principles of sound electrical engineering practice within its built environment.

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Chris Ebia

One of the most overlooked questions in Nigeria’s building and insurance ecosystem is also one of the most important: before an insurance company underwrites a building, was the electrical installation professionally evaluated and certified by a qualified electrical engineer as safe, compliant, and fit for operation?
This question is fundamental because electrical power systems constitute one of the most critical infrastructures within any modern building. Every residential facility, commercial complex, industrial plant, healthcare institution, educational establishment, and public structure depends on the integrity, reliability, and safety of its electrical installation for continuous operation. Yet, despite this reality, electrical safety assessment is often treated as a secondary consideration within the broader framework of building development, facility management, and insurance underwriting in Nigeria.

The consequences of this negligence are increasingly evident across the country. A significant number of fire outbreaks, equipment failures, power disruptions, and electrocution incidents recorded annually within Nigerian buildings can be traced directly or indirectly to electrical faults. In many instances, these failures originate not from extraordinary operational conditions, but from fundamental engineering deficiencies embedded within the electrical infrastructure itself. Poorly designed distribution networks, inadequately sized conductors, improper load estimation, weak earthing systems, defective insulation coordination, poor protection selectivity, excessive voltage drop, substandard installation practices, and the proliferation of counterfeit electrical components collectively contribute to a dangerously unstable electrical environment in many facilities.

What makes the situation more concerning is that many of these buildings successfully pass through construction and occupancy stages without comprehensive electrical integrity verification. Architectural aesthetics and structural completion are frequently prioritized, while the electrical system – which remains one of the most technically sensitive and failure-prone aspects of the facility – receives insufficient professional scrutiny. In some cases, electrical installations are executed by unqualified personnel operating outside established engineering standards and statutory regulations. The result is the energization of buildings whose electrical networks possess latent failure conditions capable of initiating thermal runaway, insulation breakdown, arcing faults, short-circuit events, or catastrophic fire incidents under relatively normal loading conditions.

From an engineering perspective, the reliability of a building’s electrical system cannot be determined merely by the presence of lighting points, distribution boards, or power outlets. Electrical fitness is established through systematic engineering evaluation involving detailed load analysis, conductor ampacity verification, fault level assessment, protective device coordination, insulation resistance testing, earth continuity verification, grounding system analysis, power quality evaluation, and compliance assessment with recognized electrical codes and standards. Such evaluations are necessary to determine whether the installation can safely withstand operational demands, fault conditions, environmental influences, and future load expansion without compromising safety or system stability.

This is precisely why electrical certification by qualified professionals should occupy a central position within building insurance risk assessment. Insurance fundamentally operates on the principle of risk evaluation and loss mitigation. Therefore, insuring a building without comprehensive electrical integrity assessment is analogous to underwriting an industrial machine without verifying its mechanical condition. Electrical installations represent both operational assets and potential ignition sources. Where deficiencies exist within the electrical network, the probability of insulation failure, overload conditions, fault current escalation, and fire initiation increases substantially. Consequently, the absence of professional electrical certification introduces a level of technical uncertainty that directly affects risk exposure for insurers, property owners, and occupants alike.

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Globally, advanced building safety systems increasingly integrate periodic electrical inspection and certification into facility management and insurance compliance frameworks. Such practices recognize that electrical installations deteriorate over time due to thermal stress, insulation aging, environmental conditions, harmonic distortion, overloading, poor maintenance culture, and unauthorized modifications. Therefore, electrical safety is not a one-time consideration confined to the commissioning stage of a building; it is a continuous engineering responsibility requiring routine inspection, testing, and recertification throughout the operational life cycle of the facility.

Nigeria’s rapidly expanding urban infrastructure and increasing electricity demand make this issue even more urgent. Modern buildings now accommodate significantly higher electrical loads due to the proliferation of air-conditioning systems, data infrastructure, automation technologies, elevators, industrial equipment, renewable energy integration, and backup power systems. Without proper load forecasting, diversity analysis, and protection system coordination, many existing installations become vulnerable to progressive system overstressing. Unfortunately, these vulnerabilities often remain undetected until catastrophic failure occurs.

The recurring pattern of electrical fire incidents across markets, office complexes, residential estates, hotels, worship centres, and industrial facilities should therefore not be viewed merely as isolated accidents. Rather, they reflect deeper systemic weaknesses within the nation’s electrical safety culture, regulatory enforcement mechanisms, and engineering compliance framework.

A society that consistently underestimates the importance of electrical engineering standards inevitably experiences recurring infrastructure losses, economic disruption, increased insurance liabilities, and preventable fatalities.

Addressing this challenge requires coordinated institutional and professional intervention. Regulatory agencies responsible for building approval and urban development must strengthen electrical compliance verification processes. Insurance companies should incorporate mandatory electrical certification and periodic recertification into underwriting requirements for commercial and high-occupancy buildings. Property developers and facility owners must recognize that engaging qualified electrical engineers is not an optional financial burden, but an essential investment in operational safety, infrastructure reliability, and asset preservation. Furthermore, professional engineering bodies must intensify public awareness regarding the technical and economic implications of poor electrical installations within the built environment.

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Ultimately, a structurally impressive building cannot be considered truly safe if its electrical infrastructure lacks engineering integrity. Beneath aesthetically finished walls may exist improperly coordinated protection systems, overloaded conductors, compromised insulation networks, or defective grounding arrangements capable of initiating large-scale system failure at any moment. Electrical hazards are often invisible until failure occurs, and by the time they manifest, the consequences are frequently devastating.

For this reason, electrical certification should no longer be treated as a procedural formality within Nigeria’s construction and insurance sectors. It must become a fundamental component of national infrastructure safety policy and professional risk management practice.

The future of safe and resilient urban development in Nigeria will depend not only on architectural ambition and structural expansion, but also on the extent to which the nation is willing to uphold the principles of sound electrical engineering practice within its built environment.

Engr Chris Ebia
R.COREN, MNSE, MNIEEE, MNIPES, MIAENG, MIAPMNN, MLECAN

is a NEMSA certified electrical installer & MD, MyDream Engineering Solutions ltd
07067115709 engrebia@gmail.com

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