Decentralizing Stability: How Blockchain and Renewable Energy Can Address Security Challenges in Benue State, Nigeria

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Abstract

In certain regions like Benue State, Nigeria, years of violence, poor leadership, corruption, and lack of access to reliable electricity have left many people feeling forgotten. Public trust in government and institutions has worn thin, especially in rural and conflict-affected areas where promises rarely turn into progress. This article looks at a new ways that combines the power of blockchain technology with community-based renewable energy systems to rebuild transparency, stability, and local confidence. By using blockchain’s secure and tamper-proof design alongside solar microgrids managed at the community level, this approach offers practical tools to make elections more credible, aid distribution more transparent, and land records more trustworthy. This probably will definitely encounter certain obstacles, which includes; political pushback to gaps in digital literacy and basic infrastructure, real barriers exist. That’s why the paper outlines a policy roadmap tailored to local realities — one that prioritizes inclusion, education, and ethical implementation. The study reviewed some global pilot programs and focusing on what works in Nigeria’s unique context, this article argues that technology alone isn’t the solution, but when paired with thoughtful policy and people-centered design, it can help restore trust and resilience in fragile democratic systems.

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