🇳🇬 Nigeria Comparison 10 min read

Solar Design Software Nigeria 2026

Best solar design software for Nigerian installers and developers in 2026: compare SurgePV, PVsyst, and Aurora Solar on off-grid sizing.

Keyur Rakholiya

Written by

Keyur Rakholiya

CEO & Co-Founder · SurgePV

Akash Hirpara

Reviewed by

Akash Hirpara

Co-Founder · SurgePV

Published ·Last reviewed ·Regulator: Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC)

Nigerian solar developers face a design challenge that no major software platform was originally built to solve: a market where 95% of commercial projects are hybrid or off-grid, where the financial case is built on diesel displacement rather than grid export, and where irradiance data must reflect both northern dusty conditions and southern rainy seasons. The global solar design tools — built for California, Germany, and Australia — work poorly in this context without significant adaptation.

This comparison covers the three software platforms most used by Nigerian solar professionals in 2026: SurgePV, PVsyst, and Aurora Solar. The evaluation is specific to the Nigerian market requirements: off-grid and hybrid design, C&I diesel displacement modelling, NERC-compatible documentation, and total cost in naira.

Primary Design Standards
NERC Technical Standards for Mini-Grid Systems; IEC 60364-7-712
Equipment Standard
NEMSA type approval — inverters (IEC 62109), modules (IEC 61215/61730), batteries (IEC 62619)
NERC Permit Document
Single-line diagram + load assessment + battery sizing (1.5-day autonomy) + tariff model
DisCo Notification Document
Single-line diagram + protection settings table + NEMSA certificate
Key Irradiance Datasets
NASA POWER (free); Meteonorm (paid); SolarGIS (paid)

Grid-Export Financial Models Are Wrong for Nigerian C&I Solar

Most solar design software was built for markets with net metering or feed-in tariffs, where the financial model centres on grid export revenue. Nigeria has neither for C&I systems below 1 MW. The financial case is entirely about diesel displacement and occasional grid backup reduction. Software that cannot model diesel cost avoidance as the primary economic driver will produce a misleading financial proposal — which leads to incorrect customer expectations and project failures.

At a Glance: Platform Comparison

FeatureSurgePVPVsystAurora Solar
Off-grid / hybrid designFull supportFull supportLimited
Nigerian irradiance dataBuilt-inBuilt-inAvailable
Diesel displacement financial modelBuilt-inNot includedNot included
Battery autonomy calculationAutomatedManualNot available
Single-line diagram exportYesBasicYes
Customer proposal in nairaYesNoManual currency entry
Cloud-based / multi-userYesDesktop onlyYes
NEMSA equipment libraryNigeria-relevantGlobal, manual filterGlobal, limited
Annual cost (approx. ₦, 2026)₦180,000 – ₦350,000₦1,100,000 – ₦2,300,000₦900,000 – ₦2,100,000
Pricing currency₦ (stable)EUR (variable)USD (variable)

SurgePV: Built for Nigeria’s Market Reality

SurgePV is cloud-based solar design software with specific features for the Nigerian off-grid and C&I market. Key capabilities relevant to Nigerian projects:

Off-grid and hybrid system design: SurgePV handles full off-grid, grid-tied, and hybrid configurations. Battery sizing calculates usable capacity, required autonomy days, and nameplate capacity at the specified depth of discharge — the exact calculation format that NERC requires for permit applications.

Diesel displacement financial model: The financial proposal module accepts diesel fuel price (₦/litre), generator efficiency (litres/kWh), and current DisCo tariff to calculate annual diesel savings, annual grid savings, and combined payback period. All figures output in naira without manual conversion.

Nigerian irradiance data: SurgePV includes Nigerian irradiance data from NASA POWER for all state capitals and major cities, with monthly average values that enable worst-month sizing — the correct approach for Nigerian project design.

NERC-compatible single-line diagrams: The SLD export produces documentation suitable for DisCo pre-connection notification packages and the technical description component of NERC permit applications.

Customer proposals: Proposals output in naira with Nigerian-context financial calculations — payback period, IRR, and 25-year savings — without requiring manual spreadsheet work after the design is complete.

PVsyst: Yield Accuracy at High Cost

PVsyst is the gold standard for solar yield simulation accuracy and is widely used in Nigeria for bankability studies in mini-grid project finance. Nigerian solar engineers use PVsyst for:

  • Independent yield verification for project finance documents
  • Detailed system loss analysis (shading, soiling, wiring, inverter clipping)
  • Sensitivity analysis for best/expected/worst case yield scenarios
  • Export to investor and lender reports for NEP and GMG applications

Limitations for the Nigerian market:

  • Desktop software only: Not accessible from site, not sharable with team members without separate licences
  • EUR pricing: At ₦1,600–₦1,800/EUR (2026 exchange rates), PVsyst costs ₦1.1–₦2.3 million per year per user — prohibitive for most Nigerian SME installers
  • No diesel displacement financial model: PVsyst calculates energy yield, not project economics in naira. A separate Excel model is needed for every financial proposal
  • Steep learning curve: Training new engineers takes 20–40 hours to reach competency for off-grid design

When PVsyst makes sense: Large NERC permit applications (above 500 kW) where investors require an independent yield simulation; REA program applications where grant value justifies the software cost; projects with complex shading scenarios requiring full 3D horizon analysis.

Aurora Solar: Strong for Grid-Tied, Weak for Nigeria’s Reality

Aurora Solar is a US-focused platform optimised for residential and commercial grid-tied solar in markets with reliable grids and net metering. Its strengths — 3D shading analysis, digital sales workflow, and customer engagement tools — are relevant for the small but growing grid-tied residential market in Nigeria (primarily high-end residential in Lekki, Ikoyi, Abuja).

Why Aurora underperforms for most Nigerian projects:

  • The financial model is built around net metering and grid export — Nigeria’s NERC regulations do not provide these for C&I systems below 1 MW
  • Off-grid design functionality is not a core feature
  • USD pricing (Aurora costs $149–$349/month, equivalent to ₦200,000–₦460,000/month at current rates) represents a significant premium over Nigerian-context alternatives
  • Customer support operates in US time zones, with limited West Africa coverage

When Aurora makes sense in Nigeria: Residential rooftop solar in premium Lagos and Abuja neighbourhoods where the customer wants a polished 3D visualisation and the system is grid-tied; installers who also operate in markets with net metering (Ghana’s PURC has net metering provisions, Kenya’s KPLC has export tariff rules) and need one tool across multiple markets.

The Financial Model Matters More Than the Design Tool

For Nigerian C&I solar, the sale is won or lost on the financial proposal — specifically on whether the diesel displacement savings are clearly and credibly quantified. The conversation with a Lagos factory owner or a Port Harcourt hotel manager is not about generation yield in kWh. It is about: “How much am I spending on diesel today, and how much of that does solar replace?”

A convincing answer to that question requires:

  1. Actual fuel consumption data from the client (12 months of diesel records)
  2. A solar generation model that accurately predicts output at the site
  3. An economic model that converts generation to ₦ savings at the applicable diesel and DisCo rates
  4. A payback calculation that works in naira, not USD or EUR, with sensitivity to diesel price changes

Software that handles all four steps in a single workflow — without requiring Excel intermediaries — reduces proposal preparation time from 2–3 days to 2–3 hours and eliminates the calculation errors that come from copying numbers between tools.

Design Nigerian Solar Projects and Close More C&I Deals

SurgePV produces Nigerian off-grid designs, battery sizing calculations, and diesel displacement proposals in naira — the full workflow from site survey to signed contract, without Excel.

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No commitment required · 20 minutes · Live project walkthrough

What Nigerian Installers Actually Need from Design Software

Based on the Nigerian market requirements, the minimum capability set for a software tool to be useful for Nigerian C&I solar:

RequirementWhy It Matters in Nigeria
Off-grid / hybrid system design90%+ of Nigerian C&I projects are hybrid or off-grid
Battery sizing with autonomy daysNERC requires 1.5-day autonomy for mini-grid permits
Worst-month irradiance sizingAnnual average irradiance leads to undersized arrays for rainy season
Diesel displacement financial modelThe primary economic driver — not grid export
Naira-denominated proposalsClient discussions happen in ₦, not USD or EUR
Single-line diagram exportRequired for DisCo notification and NERC permit applications
NEMSA-relevant equipment libraryEquipment without NEMSA approval cannot be installed legally

View all solar compliance guides for country-specific requirements across Nigeria, South Africa, the Philippines, India, and more.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most accurate irradiance data source for Nigerian solar projects? NASA POWER is the most widely used free source, providing monthly average irradiance by GPS coordinates with global coverage. Meteonorm provides more granular data for sites between weather stations and has better temperature data for battery thermal modelling. For bankability-grade studies (NERC permit applications, DFI financing), Meteonorm or SolarGIS data is preferred over NASA POWER. SurgePV uses NASA POWER as the base dataset with site-specific adjustments.

Can design software generate a NERC-compliant load assessment report? Load assessment reports for NERC permit applications are based on community surveys — field data collection that no software can automate. Software tools can provide templates for organising survey data and calculating peak demand with coincidence factors, but the underlying data must come from a physical survey of the community. The design software then uses the survey outputs as inputs for system sizing.

Is there Nigerian government support for adopting solar design software? There is no direct government subsidy for solar design software adoption in Nigeria. However, some REA programs (NEP technical assistance, GMG facility) provide capacity building funding that can include tools and training for participating developers. Developers accessing REA technical assistance should confirm whether software licensing is a covered expense under their specific program agreement.

How does solar design software handle the NERC 1.5-day battery autonomy requirement? SurgePV’s battery sizing module calculates the required usable capacity based on the daily load and autonomy days input, then derives the required nameplate capacity at the specified depth of discharge. The output is a sizing table that can be directly included in the NERC permit application’s technical documentation section. PVsyst requires the autonomy calculation to be done manually in the off-grid design module. Aurora Solar does not include a battery autonomy calculation feature suitable for NERC permit documentation.

About the Contributors

Author
Keyur Rakholiya
Keyur Rakholiya

CEO & Co-Founder · SurgePV

Keyur Rakholiya is CEO & Co-Founder of SurgePV and Founder of Heaven Green Energy Limited, where he has delivered over 1 GW of solar projects across commercial, utility, and rooftop sectors in India. With 10+ years in the solar industry, he has managed 800+ project deliveries, evaluated 20+ solar design platforms firsthand, and led engineering teams of 50+ people.

Editor
Akash Hirpara
Akash Hirpara

Co-Founder · SurgePV

Akash Hirpara is Co-Founder of SurgePV and at Heaven Green Energy Limited, managing finances for a company with 1+ GW in delivered solar projects. With 12+ years in renewable energy finance and strategic planning, he has structured $100M+ in solar project financing and improved EBITDA margins from 12% to 18%.

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