WATT Renewable Corporation has sealed a strategic agreement with MPS Technologies, one of Nigeria’s largest digital infrastructure providers, to design and deploy advanced solar-hybrid energy systems across select sites within MPS’s nationwide portfolio.
MPS Technologies operates over 700 cellular sites and data infrastructures across Nigeria, including mission-critical security facilities, connectivity hubs and major data centers.
By powering a portion of this infrastructure, WATT strengthens its role as a leading partner in Nigeria’s transition to reliable, low-carbon power – sustaining the telecommunications backbone and other essential services while enabling sustainable economic growth.
“At MPS, we are committed to building resilient and secure infrastructure,” said Dr. Thomas Sule, the man steering the colocation business unit. “Partnering with WATT allows us to scale our operations sustainably and contribute meaningfully to Nigeria’s clean-energy transformation.”
By integrating WATT’s proven solar hybrid solutions, MPS benefits essentially by enhanced network uptime for critical Infrastructure, reduce operational costs and dependency on diesel generators, cut carbon emissions in line with national global climate goals, strengthen operational security for key public safety networks – while building capacity to support a massive rollout of clean energy powered new sites nationwide.
This collaboration comes at a pivotal time for Nigeria’s energy and infrastructure landscape as the Federal Government’s renewed push to phase out diesel generators and adopt integrated hybrid energy solutions, warning that Nigeria may struggle to compete globally if its climate ambitions do not align with development realities.
“Our agreement with MPS is about powering Nigeria’s digital and security infrastructure backbone while driving measurable, sustainable economic impact across the nation,” said Oluwole Eweje, CEO of WATT Renewable Corporation. “Together, we are building the resilient infrastructure that millions of Nigerians will depend on for decades to come.”