Afrobeats superstar Davido has offered a rare look into the business behind his family’s wealth, revealing that his father, billionaire Dr. Adedeji Adeleke, is one of Nigeria’s biggest private electricity producers.
In a video from a 2026 media appearance that has been making the rounds online, Davido said the Adeleke family’s power company generates about 18% of Nigeria’s electricity and sells it directly to the government.
The Grammy-nominated singer was speaking about his father’s background and why he chose to return to Nigeria after studying in the US.
“My dad made his first million when he was 23,” Davido said. “Now, we generate about 18% of the country’s electricity and sell to the government to distribute.”
He summed up the model with a line that quickly went viral: “Every time you put on light, he gets a check.”
According to Davido, the Adeleke business does not handle distribution to homes. Instead, it focuses solely on generation.
“We generate it and sell the power to the government because the government has the authority to distribute,” he explained. “It’s not on us. All we’re doing is generating and providing.”
That structure is common in Nigeria’s power sector. Independent Power Producers build plants and sell electricity in bulk to the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Company, which then distributes through the country’s 11 DisCos.
If the 18% figure is accurate, it would place the Adeleke company among the most significant private contributors to Nigeria’s grid — a grid that still struggles to meet demand for a population of over 200 million.
Dr. Adedeji Adeleke is a Harvard-educated businessman with interests across education, hospitality, and energy. He founded Adeleke University in Ede and is also the older brother of Osun State Governor Ademola Adeleke.
Davido said his father’s rise began early. The story of making his first million at 23 is, he said, “something the family talks about regularly.”
From there, the businessman expanded into sectors that touch everyday Nigerian life. In energy, the focus has been on large-scale generation to help close the country’s supply gap.
Davido added that the goal is even bigger. He said the family plans to expand operations to eventually supply 35% of West Africa’s electricity needs.
That would be an ambitious regional play at a time when many ECOWAS countries face similar power shortages.
The conversation also turned to infrastructure and quality of life. Davido, who holds both Nigerian and American citizenship, compared public services in both countries.
“Compared to America, you can’t even compare the benefits,” he said. “You go to the hospital, you have insurance, get taken care of. Back home, everything is cash and carry.”
The comment reflects a frustration many Nigerians share. While the private sector has driven growth in entertainment, tech, and finance, basic services like stable electricity and healthcare remain inconsistent.
For Davido, the contrast is personal. His music career gives him access to systems abroad, but his family’s investments keep him tied to Nigeria’s development.
Nigeria’s electricity challenge is well known. Despite reforms and privatization, most households and businesses still rely on generators. The national grid frequently collapses, and millions live with limited access to power.
That’s why private generators have become so important. Companies like the Adelekes’ fill a critical gap by building plants and selling power to the government.
If one family business is truly responsible for nearly one-fifth of national supply, it shows how much of Nigeria’s electricity now depends on private capital.
It also explains the Adeleke name’s prominence beyond music and politics. The family is now directly involved in keeping lights on, running universities, and shaping policy through political office.
Davido did not frame the comments as boasting. He presented them as context for his background and for his decision to invest in Nigeria.
The “check every time you put on light” quote resonated because it was simple and direct. It connected celebrity wealth to something ordinary Nigerians experience daily — flipping a switch.
The singer has long spoken about giving back through his 30 Billion Gang foundation, which focuses on health and education. This disclosure adds another dimension: his family is also trying to solve infrastructure problems at scale.
Whether regulators will confirm the 18% figure is another matter, and hitting a 35% West Africa target will require huge investment. But the statement makes one thing clear: in 2026, some of Nigeria’s most important power is coming not just from government, but from private dynasties
For Davido, it’s all part of the same story. “We generate and provide,” he said. And for millions of Nigerians, that generation is what keeps the lights on







