Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Nigeria’s Oil Production Rises to 1.66 Million Barrels Per Day in April

Nigeria’s oil sector recorded its strongest production performance of 2026 in April, as the country moved closer to fully meeting its OPEC production quota amid renewed momentum across major upstream assets.

Latest figures released by the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) showed that Nigeria produced a combined average of 1.663 million barrels per day of crude oil and condensates in April, up from 1.546 million barrels per day recorded in March.

Crude oil production alone stood at 1.488 million barrels daily, representing about 99.2 percent of Nigeria’s 1.5 million barrels per day OPEC quota. The commission also reported a 7.58 percent month-on-month increase in total liquids production, with output fluctuating between a low of 1.46 million barrels and a peak of 1.85 million barrels per day during the month.

The improvement reflects growing stability across Nigeria’s oil industry despite lingering operational and security challenges in some production corridors. It also signals the impact of ongoing efforts to restore assets, improve efficiency, and expand export capacity.

Among the top-performing crude streams, Bonga recorded 3.06 million barrels in April, while Erha contributed 2.05 million barrels. Anyala-Madu (CJ Blend) posted 1.81 million barrels, Utapate delivered 1.78 million barrels, and Egina produced 1.47 million barrels. The newly introduced Cawthorne crude stream added 929,055 barrels during the month.

On the condensate side, Agbami delivered 2.01 million barrels, Akpo contributed 1.34 million barrels, while Tulja-Okwuibome recorded 304,827 barrels.

The latest figures continue an upward production trend seen since the start of the year and reinforce Nigeria’s broader push to strengthen foreign exchange earnings and increase federation revenues through improved oil output.

Earlier reports had linked the introduction of the Cawthorne export stream to wider efforts aimed at diversifying Nigeria’s crude grades and supporting long-term production growth.

The April rebound follows mixed signals earlier in the year. NUPRC Commission Chief Executive Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan had previously announced that crude oil production rose by about 40.5 percent to 1.84 million barrels per day in March.

The commission also disclosed that domestic refineries received 28.5 million barrels of crude oil in the first quarter of 2026, far below the 61.9 million barrels allocated for the period. Earlier industry data further showed that Nigeria recorded a crude oil and condensate production shortfall of about 16.6 million barrels within the first two months of the year.

Still, April’s performance offers another reminder of the scale of opportunity within Nigeria’s energy sector when production efficiency, asset recovery, and strategic reforms begin to align.

Genevieve Nnaji Returns To The Screen As Nigerian Storytelling Gains Another Global Spotlight

One of Nollywood’s most recognisable faces is returning to the screen, and once again, Nigerian storytelling is finding space on a global platform.

Genevieve Nnaji has been confirmed as part of the cast of Wahala, a new six-part BBC drama series that will air on BBC One and stream on BBC iPlayer. The production, backed by BBC Studios, marks one of the actress’ most significant acting returns in recent years and adds another international milestone to the growing global influence of Nigerian creatives.

At a time when stories shaped by African voices are increasingly commanding worldwide attention, Wahala places Nigerian identity, culture, relationships, and diaspora experiences at the centre of a high-profile television production.

The drama is adapted from Nikki May’s debut novel by BAFTA-nominated writer Theresa Ikoko. BBC officially unveiled the cast on Tuesday, introducing a female-led ensemble featuring Adelayo Adedayo, Deborah Ayorinde, Cush Jumbo, Susan Wokoma, and Genevieve Nnaji.

Set in present-day London, the series follows the intertwined lives of four Nigerian-British women navigating friendship, ambition, family pressures, love, and the emotional weight of hidden truths. The story revolves around Simi, Boo, and Ronke, played by Adedayo, Jumbo, and Wokoma, whose close friendship begins to fracture after the arrival of Isobel, portrayed by Ayorinde.

Producers say the thriller explores betrayal, long-buried secrets, and the ripple effects of unresolved past events. Even the title carries unmistakable Nigerian identity. In Nigerian Pidgin, “Wahala” translates to “trouble,” a word deeply woven into everyday expression across the country.

The series is being produced by Firebird Pictures under BBC Studios.

Reacting to the announcement, Nnaji described the production as an exciting project to be part of.

“I’m very happy to be joining Wahala and to be working with such a brilliant team. It’s an intriguing story and I’m excited to be a part of it,” she said.

For many Nigerians, the announcement carries significance beyond entertainment. Nnaji has remained one of Nollywood’s defining figures for decades, helping shape the industry’s global reputation through performances that travelled far beyond Africa’s borders. Her return arrives at a moment when Nigerian film, music, fashion, and literature continue to strengthen their influence internationally.

Her latest role also comes years after Lionheart, her directorial debut, premiered internationally in 2018 before landing on Netflix in January 2019 ,g a landmark period that further expanded conversations around Nollywood’s global potential.

Despite maintaining a relatively low public profile in recent years, Genevieve Nnaji’s name has continued to hold enormous cultural weight within the entertainment industry. The anticipation surrounding Wahala reflects not only admiration for her career, but also the growing appetite for layered African stories told with authenticity and scale.

As Nigerian creatives continue to shape conversations in global entertainment, productions like Wahala reinforce an increasingly clear reality: Nigerian stories are no longer waiting for international recognition, they are becoming impossible to ignore.

Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Nigeria Set To Host 2026 CAF Awards, Major African Football Assembly

Nigeria is once again preparing to take centre stage in African football after approval was granted for the country to host the 2026 CAF Awards alongside the 48th CAF Ordinary General Assembly.

The decision followed a meeting between CAF President Patrice Motsepe and President Bola Ahmed Tinubu during the ongoing Africa Forward Summit in Nairobi, Kenya, according to the Nigeria Football Federation.

Present at the meeting were Minister of Foreign Affairs Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu, NFF President Ibrahim Gusau, former NFF President and Special Adviser to the CAF President Amaju Pinnick, as well as CAF Acting General Secretary Samson Adamu.

In a statement released on Tuesday, the NFF confirmed that the CAF Ordinary General Assembly will hold in October this year, bringing together football administrators and federation leaders from CAF’s 54 member nations.

The hosting rights is a reminder of Nigeria's enduring influence in African football, a nation whose passion, talent and football heritage continue to shape the continental game.

The CAF Awards remain African football’s biggest celebration night, honouring the continent’s finest players, teams and rising stars in an atmosphere of prestige and excitement.

The last edition took place in Rabat, Morocco, on November 19, 2025, where Achraf Hakimi won the African Men’s Player of the Year award after helping Paris Saint-Germain secure both the UEFA Champions League and Ligue 1 titles. The Moroccan defender finished ahead of Mohamed Salah and Nigeria’s Victor Osimhen, becoming the first Moroccan winner since Mustapha Hadji in 1998.

Nigeria, however, maintained a strong presence in the women’s categories as Super Falcons goalkeeper, Chiamaka Nnadozie successfully defended her Goalkeeper of the Year title, while the Super Falcons were named National Team of the Year after another impressive campaign.

Nigeria has previously hosted the CAF Awards four times, with Lagos staging the most recent edition in January 2015 at the Eko Hotel Convention Centre.

The 2015 edition marked the beginning of Asisat Oshoala’s remarkable dominance in African women’s football, as she won her first Women’s Player of the Year award on home soil before eventually extending the record to six titles.

With another major CAF event now heading to Nigeria, the continent’s football spotlight is once again turning toward a country that has long remained one of Africa’s most powerful sporting voices.

Ekiti-Born Teenager Tops Nigeria’s 2026 UTME With Outstanding 372 Score

In a country too often reduced to headlines about crisis and limitation, another Nigerian teenager has yet again reminded the world where the nation’s true strength still lives, in the brilliance, resilience, and ambition of its young people.

Sixteen-year-old Owoeye Daniella Jesudunsin, an indigene of Ekiti State, has emerged as the highest-scoring candidate in Nigeria’s 2026 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME), recording an extraordinary aggregate score of 372 out of 400.

The announcement was made by the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) during the 2026 Policy Meeting on Admissions to Tertiary Institutions held in Abuja on Monday, placing Daniella at the summit of one of the country’s most competitive national examinations.

For many Nigerians, her achievement is a glimpse into the intellectual depth that continues to rise from communities across the country, often with little noise, but with undeniable excellence.

Daniella sat for the examination in Ogun State and is seeking admission to study Medicine and Surgery at the University of Lagos (UNILAG), one of Nigeria’s leading institutions and among the most sought-after destinations for aspiring medical professionals.

Her subject breakdown reflects a performance built on discipline and remarkable consistency. The teenager scored 98 in English Language, 98 in Chemistry, 94 in Physics, and 82 in Biology.

At an age when many are still discovering their direction, Daniella has already positioned herself among the brightest academic talents in the nation.

Expectedly, the news triggered widespread celebration across the country and Nigerians praised her determination and described her performance as deeply inspiring.

Yet beyond the applause lies the real national story.

Across Nigeria, from public schools to private learning hubs, thousands of young people continue to defy difficult odds daily, proving that the country’s future cannot be measured solely by its challenges. Daniella’s success now joins a growing list of achievements that reflect the untapped potential shaping the next generation.

Her preparation journey was also linked to DailyEd Online Tutorials, an educational platform that celebrated her emergence as the nation’s top scorer.

Founder of the platform, Pharmacist Olisaemeka Anaeze, described the feat as a reflection of sustained dedication from both students and educators.

“The highest UTME score in Nigeria came from DailyEd Online Tutorials — 372,” Anaeze stated.

According to him, the platform also produced more than 200 candidates who scored above 300 in the 2026 UTME.

He attributed the performance to the “hard work, consistency, and dedication” demonstrated by tutors, coaches, staff, and students throughout the examination season.

“This is only the beginning. 2027, we aim even higher,” he added.

For anyone constantly searching for stories that inspire confidence, Daniella’s accomplishment arrives as a refreshing reminder that excellence still thrives across Nigeria’s academic landscape. From Ekiti State to Ogun examination halls and finally to national recognition in Abuja, her journey reflects the enduring spirit of Nigerian youth,  gifted, determined, and fully capable of competing on any global stage when given the right support and opportunity.

In the end, the score may read 372, but to many Nigerians, the number represents proof that there remains a generation steadily writing a consistent story for Nigeria, one achievement at a time.

National Theatre Set for Bold Operatic Reimagining of Soyinka’s The Trials of Brother Jero

Lagos’ cultural scene is preparing for what could become one of the defining theatre moments of 2026 as Wole Soyinka’s celebrated satire, The Trials of Brother Jero, returns in an entirely different form, this time as a full African opera.

Scheduled to premiere on May 16 at the National Arts Theatre now known as the Wole Soyinka Centre for Culture and the Creative Arts, the production is expected to merge drama, orchestral music, satire and stage spectacle into a performance unlike anything audiences have previously experienced with the classic play. Beyond simply revisiting Soyinka’s work, the production signals another ambitious attempt to reinterpret Nigerian literature through contemporary performance traditions rooted in African creativity.

The project comes from Vesta Sound and Events Strategists and doubles as a celebration of the Vesta Orchestra’s 10th anniversary. At the centre of the production is Rosalyn Aninyei, who serves as producer and director, while Seun Owoaje composed the music for the opera adaptation.

Rather than presenting the familiar stage version known to generations of readers and theatre enthusiasts, the creators have transformed the one-act satire into a musical experience driven almost entirely by song. Every dialogue in the production is sung, turning Soyinka’s sharp critique of religious hypocrisy and the commercialization of faith into an immersive operatic performance.

Originally written as a commentary on manipulative religious figures in post-colonial Nigeria, The Trials of Brother Jero follows the antics of the flamboyant preacher Brother Jero, whose schemes and theatrics expose the exploitation often hidden beneath public displays of spirituality. In this new adaptation, those themes are expected to unfold through orchestral arrangements, chorus sections and solo vocal performances.

The May 16 performance will feature a 50-man orchestra alongside choristers and soloists, bringing together music, theatre and satire on one stage. Professor Wole Soyinka is also expected to attend the event.

The cast includes Captain Gibbs, Ige, Johnpaul Ochie and Abiola Lepe, while Kehinde Oretimehin handled the libretto and songs for the production.

For Aninyei, the decision to reinterpret Soyinka’s work through opera was both artistic and necessary. According to her, Nigerian literature deserves to be explored through newer creative forms capable of showcasing the country’s vast artistic talent.

She explained that while The Trials of Brother Jero has enjoyed decades of stage productions across schools and theatres, the team wanted to elevate the experience into something more musically expansive.

“In this production, instead of speaking, the dialogues are presented as songs all through,” she said. “It’s not just acting or talking, but the actors are singing, and the songs stick. That’s what makes opera so beautiful.”

The performance itself is expected to run for approximately 100 minutes, with the first act lasting about 40 minutes and the second running for 45 minutes.

Aninyei also pointed to the natural connection between opera and Nigerian culture, arguing that the expressive and dramatic nature of everyday Nigerian life makes the art form a fitting medium for African storytelling.

“Opera’s origin is Italian. Nigerians are very similar to Italians; we are very dramatic. The way we live is operatic,” she said.

She added that her father encouraged her to begin the operatic experiment with the works of Soyinka, whose writings remain widely read across generations. That recommendation eventually led the team to The Trials of Brother Jero as their opening statement.

Unlike traditional European opera where audiences may struggle to follow lyrical delivery, the producers insist this adaptation has been intentionally crafted for Nigerian audiences while remaining accessible to global viewers. The aim, according to the production team, is to ensure audiences remain fully engaged with both the conversations and the music throughout the performance.

At a time when Nigeria’s creative industry continues to search for fresh forms of expression capable of attracting new audiences and economic opportunities, the upcoming production represents a growing movement to reinterpret African classics with bold creative ambition while preserving the originality of the stories themselves.

For many theatre lovers, May 16 may not simply mark another stage performance in Lagos but could become a defining moment in the continuing evolution of Nigerian opera and modern African theatre.

Dangote Refinery Targets $50 Billion Valuation as Global Expansion Plans Gather Momentum

Aliko Dangote’s refining empire is moving into a new phase, one that could redefine not only Nigeria’s downstream petroleum landscape, but also Africa’s industrial ambitions on a far larger scale.

Ahead of a planned initial public offering expected later in 2026, the Dangote Refinery is reportedly seeking a valuation of as much as $50 billion, positioning the Lagos-based facility among the most valuable industrial assets on the continent.

The planned IPO, which investors across global and African markets are already watching closely, may see up to 10 percent of the refinery business offered to the public. Dangote had earlier disclosed in 2025 that the company was considering selling that stake, a move that could generate as much as $5 billion, estimated at about N6.86 trillion using the current official exchange rate referenced by the Central Bank of Nigeria.

According to Bloomberg, which first reported the development, a senior company executive confirmed that the proposed valuation reflects the refinery’s present expectations.

The scale of the numbers reflects the scale of the ambition behind the project itself. Built as a 650,000 barrels-per-day refinery, the Dangote Group is now planning an expansion that would push capacity to 1.4 million barrels per day, a leap that would further strengthen Nigeria’s standing in global energy conversations.

Industry observers believe proceeds from the listing could become a major funding channel for that next growth phase.

The refinery had already signalled its international ambitions in May 2024 when it unveiled plans for a dual listing on NGX Limited and the London Stock Exchange (LSE) and with emerging reports now suggest the listing strategy could extend beyond Nigeria and the United Kingdom, with other African exchanges also being considered as part of a broader continental investment push.

Beyond the numbers and stock market expectations, Dangote is simultaneously looking eastward.

The billionaire businessman recently disclosed plans for another mega refinery project in East Africa, a proposed 650,000 barrels-per-day facility that could mirror the Nigerian operation in both scale and influence.

Speaking in an interview with the Financial Times, Dangote revealed that Kenya is currently emerging as his preferred destination for the investment.

“I’m leaning more towards Mombasa because Mombasa has a much larger, deeper port,” he said.

His comments arrived only weeks after Kenyan President William Ruto disclosed that East African nations were discussing a regional refinery initiative to be located at Tanzania’s Tanga port. According to Reuters, the proposed project is expected to draw inspiration from the Dangote refinery model already operating in Nigeria.

Yet Dangote appeared to favour Kenya’s commercial strengths over Tanzania’s.

“Kenyans consume more. It’s a bigger economy,” he said.

He also indicated that the final decision may ultimately rest with Kenya’s leadership.

“The ball is in the hands of President Ruto. Whatever President Ruto says is what I’ll do.”

The proposed East African refinery is expected to require an investment of between $15 billion and $17 billion.

For many analysts, the rapid evolution of the Dangote Refinery story represents a symbol of how African-led industrial infrastructure can command global attention, attract multi-billion-dollar capital, and reshape energy supply chains from within the continent itself.

From Lagos to potential new operations in Mombasa, the vision now stretches far beyond a single refinery. It is a growing statement about scale, confidence, and Africa’s ability to build world-class industrial capacity on its own terms.

Isolo Set for Improved Electricity Supply as 9MW Power Project Secures Approval

In a country where communities have repeatedly learned to create solutions around infrastructure gaps, every meaningful improvement carries significance beyond convenience alone. Across Isolo, one of Lagos’ most active commercial and residential districts, businesses and residents have spent years navigating the realities of unstable electricity while continuing to drive economic activity forward. Now, a new embedded power project is offering fresh optimism for a more reliable energy future within the community.

Isolo Power Gen Limited has secured approval to develop a 9MW embedded power generation project in Lagos State, a move expected to strengthen electricity supply across Isolo and surrounding communities.

The approval was granted by the Lagos State Electricity Regulatory Commission (LASERC) during its latest licensing round. Among the 14 operators approved, Isolo Power Gen was the only company cleared under the embedded generation category for a 9MW project.

The facility will be located along 110/114 Apapa-Oshodi Expressway in Isolo and will operate through a localised distribution network designed to supply electricity directly within the area. If fully implemented, the project could significantly improve power reliability for residents and businesses, with the possibility of near round-the-clock electricity supply.

The embedded generation model allows electricity to be produced and distributed within a host community instead of relying entirely on the national grid. The approach is increasingly being adopted as part of Lagos State’s efforts to improve energy stability across key residential and industrial corridors.

Ownership of the project includes Westfield Assets Limited, Camara Exim Limited, Chellarams Plc, and Suresh Chellaram.

Beyond the infrastructure itself, the Isolo project reflects a broader shift toward practical, community-focused energy solutions capable of supporting local enterprise, reducing dependence on generators, and improving everyday life for thousands of residents.

In a country where innovation repeatedly rises to meet structural challenges, developments like this continue to highlight the determination of Nigerian communities to build sustainable progress from within.


LASU Bags ₦25 Million JAMB Award After Emerging Nigeria’s Most Preferred University

Lagos State University (LASU) has added another major milestone to its growing list of achievements after clinching a ₦25 million award from the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) for outstanding admissions performance.

The university received the prize during the 2026 JAMB Policy Meeting held in Abuja on Monday, May 11, under the National Tertiary Admissions’ Performance-Merit Award (NATAP-M Awards).

LASU was named the Second Runner-Up Institution in the overall category of the highly regarded award, earning an aggregate score of three points across the five assessment criteria of the Mega Award in the sixth edition for the 2025 admission cycle.

JAMB Registrar, Professor Ishaq Oloyede, presented the award to the Vice-Chancellor of the university, Professor Ibiyemi Ibilola Olatunji-Bello, mni, NPOM.

The recognition comes shortly after LASU emerged as Nigeria’s most preferred university for the 2026 admission exercise for the second consecutive year. According to admission figures released after the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME), a record 84,326 candidates selected the institution as their first-choice university.

Reacting to the development, the Vice-Chancellor said the latest achievements underscore LASU’s dedication to excellence, innovation, transparency, and a student-focused system of administration.

The latest recognition further strengthens the university’s standing as one of Nigeria’s leading public institutions, amid increasing competition for admission into tertiary institutions across the country.

Monday, 11 May 2026

Barcelona Partners Bayelsa to Launch Football Academy

Bayelsa State has secured a major international football partnership after Spanish giants FC Barcelona signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the state government to establish a football academy in the Niger Delta state.

The agreement was signed during the final of the 2026 Prosperity Cup at the Samson Siasia Sports Complex in Yenagoa.

Bayelsa Commissioner for Sports, Dr Daniel Igali, signed for the state government, while Mr Bernat Villa Garris represented Barcelona. Former Nigeria Football Federation President Amaju Pinnick and NFF Secretary General Dr Mohammed Sanusi witnessed the ceremony.

Governor Douye Diri described the partnership as a major youth development initiative aimed at creating opportunities through sports and steering young people away from social vices. He also reaffirmed his administration’s commitment to completing the proposed 30,000-seat stadium project in 2027.

Diri said the Prosperity Cup has expanded significantly since his administration took office in 2020. According to him, the tournament grew from over 100 teams last year to 227 teams in 2026, with female and para categories now included. The female competition featured 21 teams.

Barcelona representative Bernat Villa Garris said the club was impressed by the football talent in Bayelsa and expressed interest in supporting the development of players and coaches.

Amaju Pinnick praised the Bayelsa government’s investment in grassroots football, stating that the Niger Delta possesses talents capable of reaching the level of players like Lamine Yamal and Lionel Messi.

The event also received support from Premium Trust Bank, Linkage Assurance Plc, NDDC, Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board, Arco Engineering and Binad Table Water.

The Barcelona partnership reinforces Bayelsa’s growing reputation as one of Nigeria’s rising centres for grassroots football development and highlights the immense talent continuing to emerge from the Niger Delta.

Nigerian Researcher Earns Global Recognition at UK Leadership Summit

At a time when Nigerian scholars are increasingly shaping global conversations across science, technology and policy, another name has emerged on the international stage. Emma Etim, a Nigerian academic based in the United Kingdom, has been honoured as one of the 2026 U21 Leaders of the Future, a prestigious recognition unveiled during the Universitas 21 Annual Network Meeting and Leadership Summit held in Glasgow, Scotland.

The announcement, made on April 21 at the University of Glasgow, spotlighted Etim’s growing influence in academic research, leadership and his commitment to expanding access to higher education.

Etim is currently a doctoral researcher and Postgraduate Teaching Assistant at the School of Geography, University of Nottingham, UK. His work has drawn attention within international academic circles for its depth and relevance to emerging global sustainability discussions.

Backed by funding from Nigeria’s Petroleum Technology Development Fund, his research investigates how environmental responsibility is shaped within cultural, institutional and behavioural systems. The study explores the different ways societies construct environmental accountability and how those perspectives influence sustainability practices and policy conversations around the world.

Beyond the technical dimensions of the research, the award organisers also recognised Etim for his broader contributions as an emerging scholar whose work bridges academic excellence with social impact. His efforts in widening participation in higher education formed a key part of the recognition.

Speaking after receiving the honour, Etim reflected on the meaning behind the award, saying the recognition reinforces his conviction that academic work should create opportunities for transformation and inspire new thinking.

“This recognition affirms my belief that research and academic work are most meaningful when they enable others to imagine new possibilities and contribute to meaningful change,” he said.

The recognition adds to the growing list of Nigerians in the diaspora earning distinction across global institutions, while also projecting the country’s intellectual contributions onto influential international platforms. In an era where sustainability, environmental responsibility and inclusive education are shaping future policy directions worldwide, Nigerian scholars like Etim continue to demonstrate that impactful ideas can emerge from anywhere and resonate everywhere.

Sunday, 10 May 2026

Falconets Extend Perfect World Cup Qualification Record

Nigeria’s Falconets have once again secured qualification for the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup, extending one of the most remarkable records in global women’s football. 

The next edition of the tournament will take place in Poland from September 5 to September 27, 2026, with the Falconets set to represent Africa once again on the global stage.

Since the competition began in 2002, Nigeria has qualified for every single edition, making the Falconets the only African team to maintain a perfect attendance record at the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup.

The team has also built a strong reputation for developing elite talent, with many former players progressing to the Super Falcons and major clubs around the world.

Twice runners-up in the tournament’s history, the Falconets continue to carry Nigeria’s flag proudly, reinforcing the country’s enduring influence in women’s football.

Lagos Begins 24-Hour Power Future in Bold Energy Shift

Lagos is preparing to test one of its boldest electricity reforms yet: dedicated franchise zones designed to deliver uninterrupted power supply in selected parts of the state.

The Lagos State Electricity Regulatory Commission (LASERC) says the first set of 24/7 electricity franchise areas will begin pilot operations by October 2026, marking a significant step in the state’s push to build a more independent, reliable, and performance-driven electricity market.

The announcement was made by LASERC Chief Executive Officer, Temitope George, during the commission’s maiden stakeholder engagement held at The Cordis Hotel on Thursday. The initiative forms part of the commission’s Short-Term Regulatory Agenda, a roadmap that outlines Lagos’ electricity transformation strategy through 2030.

Although the specific districts selected for the pilot phase have not yet been disclosed, LASERC says two or three franchise zones will be commissioned initially. The areas are expected to serve as testing grounds for a new electricity management model focused on improved infrastructure coordination, stronger customer service delivery, and greater reliability in power supply.

Beyond simply keeping the lights on, the pilot programme is designed to evaluate whether Lagos can successfully sustain a commercially viable electricity ecosystem outside the limitations that have long defined Nigeria’s broader power sector.

As part of the transition, LASERC plans to introduce Grid Interface Guidelines by July 2026. The framework is expected to regulate operational collaboration between electricity operators licensed by Lagos State and federal electricity institutions.

Another major target is metering. The commission says it will commence a 100% grid and customer metering initiative by July 2026 in a move aimed at improving billing transparency and reducing dependence on estimated billing practices that have frustrated consumers for years.

At the heart of the broader reform agenda is the Electric Eye of Lagos (EEL) Programme, an AI-enhanced advanced metering infrastructure intended to provide real-time visibility into electricity trading and power delivery across the state. LASERC expects the framework design to be completed by August 2026, while pilot deployment is scheduled for October of the same year.

Consumer engagement is also being integrated into the reform process. LASERC says complaint centres will first open in Amuwo Odofin by August 2026, before expanding to Ikorodu and Epe in September.

The commission also plans to release Draft Market Rules by October 2026, with final regulations expected before the end of the year in December. Regulatory Sandbox Guidelines are equally in the pipeline to encourage innovation and deeper private-sector participation in Lagos’ evolving electricity market.

By 2030, LASERC says it aims to reduce market losses to below 10% while achieving more than 97.5% electricity availability across Lagos.

The ongoing reforms trace back to 2024, when Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu approved the constitution of LASERC following the signing of the Lagos Electricity Bill 2024 into law. The legislation replaced the Lagos State Power Sector Reform Law of 2018 and established a new regulatory framework covering electricity generation, distribution, and tariff administration within the state.

Momentum around the reforms accelerated in March 2026 when Governor Sanwo-Olu formally inaugurated the LASERC board, effectively activating the commission’s operational leadership structure.

The reforms were also enabled by the Federal Government’s 2023 approval granting Nigerian states the authority to generate and distribute electricity independently.

Alongside LASERC, the Lagos Electricity Bill established additional institutions intended to strengthen the state’s energy ecosystem, including the Lagos State Electrification Agency, which is focused on expanding off-grid electricity access. Other support structures introduced under the law include the Lagos Electrification Fund, an Independent System Operator, and a Power Enforcement Unit.

Lagos has also begun expanding its generation capacity through new partnerships with private power companies.

In April 2026, the Lagos State Government signed Power Purchase Agreements and concession deals with three independent power producers as part of plans to increase generation capacity from less than 60MW to between 200MW and 400MW over the next few years.

The agreements involved Mainland Power Limited, Fenchurch Power Limited in partnership with Aggregate Utilities Limited, and Viathan Engineering Limited.

Under the new arrangement, legacy “take-or-pay” and “deemed energy” payment models were scrapped in favour of metered electricity delivery, a move expected to improve transparency and accountability within the market. The state is also introducing dual power supply systems for critical infrastructure to strengthen reliability.

For Lagos, the franchise-zone experiment represents an attempt to build a functioning electricity market around efficiency, measurable performance, and modern regulation, one that could eventually reshape how urban power delivery works in Nigeria’s commercial capital.

The pilot could become one of the clearest examples yet of how subnational electricity reform may redefine the country’s energy future from the ground up.

Rena Wakama’s Rise Continues as Former School Immortalises Nigerian Basketball Trailblazer

Long before the international awards, Olympic headlines and continental titles, Rena Wakama was simply a student-athlete at Wake Forest High School in North Carolina. Today, that same institution has formally etched her name into its Hall of Fame, recognising a Nigerian basketball figure whose influence now stretches far beyond the United States.

Wakama was inducted as part of the school’s Class of 2026, joining fellow honourees Graham Bunn, Ron Daniel, Andre Smith and Earl Smith during the induction banquet organised by the school.

For Nigeria, the recognition is yet another reminder that some of the country’s most powerful sporting stories are no longer confined to African competition alone. Nigerian excellence is increasingly shaping global conversations in women’s basketball, and Wakama has become one of the strongest symbols of that rise.

The 34-year-old coach reacted to the honour on Instagram on Tuesday, choosing gratitude over celebration as she reflected on the milestone.

“All glory to God, the legacy was never mine to keep, only His to build,” she wrote.

“Thank you to my village, this legacy belongs to all of us. Wake Forest High School, thank you.”

Though born in North Carolina, Wakama’s name has become firmly tied to one of the most transformative periods in Nigerian basketball history. Since taking charge of D’Tigress in 2023 as the team’s first female head coach, she has helped elevate the programme into a respected global force.

Her coaching journey has also expanded rapidly beyond the national team. She currently combines her role with D’Tigress alongside responsibilities as head coach of Hive BC and assistant coach at the Chicago Sky, further strengthening her reputation across international basketball circles.

Under her leadership, Nigeria captured a fifth consecutive AfroBasket title and a seventh overall after defeating Mali 78–64 in the final held in Abidjan in August 2025. The victory reinforced D’Tigress’ dominance on the continent and highlighted the consistency the team has achieved in recent years.

However, it was at the 2024 Olympic Games that Wakama and her squad delivered one of the defining moments in African basketball history.

D’Tigress stunned Canada 79–70 to become the first African basketball team, male or female, to qualify for the quarter-finals of the Olympics. The achievement resonated far beyond sport. It was a statement about preparation, belief and the growing confidence of Nigerian teams competing in the global stage.

The historic Olympic run also earned Wakama the Best Coach award from the International Basketball Federation, further confirming her emergence as one of the most respected coaching figures in the women’s game.

Wake Forest High School, a public secondary institution serving grades nine through 12 in North Carolina, has maintained a longstanding tradition of honouring former students, staff and contributors who have distinguished themselves in sports, education and community impact.

Wakama’s induction now places her among those celebrated figures, but her story continues to evolve far beyond ceremonial recognition.

At a time when African women’s basketball is demanding greater global respect, Nigeria remains at the forefront of that movement and Rena Wakama is helping lead it with authority, ambition and results.

Her journey is no longer just about personal achievement as it has become part of a broader Nigerian sporting story that continues to command international attention.

Adeleke University Secures Full NUC Accreditation for 22 Programmes

Adeleke University, Ede, has strengthened its position as one of the fast-rising private institutions contributing to Nigeria’s evolving academic landscape after securing full accreditation from the National Universities Commission for 22 undergraduate programmes.

The approval, granted following the NUC’s October to December 2025 accreditation exercise, reflects another encouraging development in Nigeria’s higher education sector, where institutions are increasingly investing in technology, innovation, healthcare, engineering, and research-driven learning.

The university management officially announced the achievement on Wednesday, while the Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Solomon Adebola, shared details of the development during a meeting with members of the university community.

According to the vice-chancellor, the approval was conveyed through a formal letter signed by the NUC Director of Accreditation, Abraham Chundusu, on behalf of the commission’s Executive Secretary.

For Adeleke University, the accreditation marks an important step in its continuing effort to build a learning environment capable of preparing young Nigerians for opportunities within an increasingly competitive global economy.

Prof. Adebola explained that the accreditation process involved extensive assessments by officials of the National Universities Commission, who evaluated the institution’s academic personnel, facilities, infrastructure, and overall capacity to sustain quality education standards.

He described the successful outcome as a validation of the university’s commitment to academic excellence and institutional growth.

The accredited programmes span multiple disciplines considered vital to Nigeria’s development ambitions. In the social sciences and humanities, the university secured full accreditation for Finance, Public Administration, Office and Information Management, English Language and Literary Studies, Religious Studies, History and International Studies, Mass Communication, and Nursing Science.

The institution also recorded significant progress in technology-focused disciplines, an area increasingly shaping the future of education, entrepreneurship, digital innovation, and economic advancement across Africa.

Courses granted full accreditation in that category include Computer Science, Cyber Security, Information Systems, Information Technology, and Software Engineering.

In Engineering, the NUC approved Chemical Engineering, Civil Engineering, and Computer Engineering, further expanding the university’s growing footprint in technical education and industrial training.

The sciences were also strongly represented, with Biochemistry, Biotechnology, Microbiology, and Food Science and Nutrition receiving full accreditation status.

Prof. Adebola noted that the accreditation will remain valid for five years.

Beyond the 22 programmes, the university management also highlighted recent approvals for two major professional courses, the Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) programme under the Faculty of Health Sciences and the Doctor of Pharmacy (D.Pharm) programme in the Faculty of Pharmacy.

The addition of both programmes signals the institution’s growing ambitions within Nigeria’s healthcare education sector at a time when the country continues to invest in developing highly skilled medical and pharmaceutical professionals.

Commending members of staff for their contributions to the achievement, the vice-chancellor praised both academic and non-academic employees for their dedication and consistency.

He said the milestone reflects the values embedded in the university’s motto, “Education, Excellence, and Character.”

At a time when many young Nigerians are seeking institutions capable of combining quality education with future-focused learning, Adeleke University’s latest accreditation success adds to the growing story of Nigerian universities pushing boundaries, expanding opportunities, and shaping a stronger academic future for the country.

Saturday, 9 May 2026

Osimhen Inspires Galatasaray To Historic 26th Turkish League Crown

Victor Osimhen once again delivered on the biggest stage as Galatasaray sealed the Turkish Super Lig title in dramatic fashion with a thrilling 4-2 victory over Antalyaspor at Rams Park in Istanbul on Friday night.

The Nigerian forward produced a decisive second-half brace to power the Istanbul giants to their 26th league championship, ensuring the title was secured with one game still left in the season.

What initially looked like a difficult evening for Galatasaray eventually turned into a celebration driven by resilience, attacking quality and the clinical finishing of one of Nigeria’s brightest football stars.

Antalyaspor stunned the home crowd moments before the break when Soner Dikmen found the net in the 45th minute, giving the visitors a surprise advantage and momentarily silencing supporters inside Rams Park. The goal placed pressure on Galatasaray, who entered the contest knowing victory would officially confirm another league triumph.

The response after halftime, however, reflected the mentality of a side determined to remain at the summit of Turkish football.

Mario Lemina restored parity in the 56th minute, lifting the atmosphere inside the stadium and reigniting belief among the home supporters. Yet the tension quickly returned when Antalyaspor struck again six minutes later through a spectacular free-kick in the 62nd minute, reclaiming the lead and setting up a nervy closing phase.

That was when Osimhen took control.

The Super Eagles striker stepped forward in the 66th minute to drag Galatasaray level once more before completing a brilliant turnaround shortly afterwards with his second goal of the night. His brace shifted the momentum completely and pushed Galatasaray ahead for the first time in the encounter.

As Antalyaspor searched desperately for a response, Galatasaray continued pressing forward, refusing to allow the title celebration slip away. Deep into stoppage time, Kaan Ayhan added the fourth goal in the 95th minute to put the result beyond doubt and ignite wild celebrations among players and supporters alike.

The victory not only confirmed Galatasaray as champions once again, but also extended their dominance in Turkish football with a fourth consecutive league title. The triumph marks the club’s historic 26th Turkish Super Lig crown.

For Osimhen, the night added another memorable chapter to an impressive season in Turkey. In a match filled with pressure, momentum swings and title-defining moments, the Nigerian striker emerged as the difference-maker, delivering when his club needed him most and helping drive Galatasaray to yet another landmark achievement.

NovaDOC Initiative Targets Faster Emergency Response, 10,000 Nigerian Trainees

As Nigeria continues to expand its healthcare and emergency support systems, new innovations are emerging to improve how medical help reaches people during critical situations. From highways to communities and public spaces, faster emergency response is becoming an important part of the country’s growing healthcare conversation.

One of such efforts is the newly launched “NovaDOC Integrated Emergency Response and Digital Health Ecosystem,” unveiled in Abuja by the Doctors On Call Health Support Initiative.

Speaking during the launch, the founder of the organisation, Dr Adejobi Adeloye, announced plans to train 10,000 Nigerians in emergency response, telehealth coordination and healthcare support services.

According to him, the programme is designed to equip participants with practical lifesaving skills while also creating employment opportunities within the healthcare support sector.

“We promised to train 10,000 Nigerians, and we are fulfilling that promise through this initiative,” Adeloye said.

The programme will also produce 1,000 certified facilitators who will continue emergency response training across the country through a digital learning platform.

The NovaDOC ecosystem was developed to improve response to road accidents, trauma cases, snakebites and other medical emergencies through a combination of technology, emergency support tools and coordinated medical response.

Over the years, healthcare experts and emergency stakeholders have continued to emphasise the importance of faster intervention during emergencies, especially on busy roads and in underserved communities where quick medical attention can make a major difference.

According to Adeloye, the NovaDOC system combines telehealth services, emergency alerts, responder coordination and specialised medical kits into one integrated platform.

The initiative includes four categories of emergency healthcare kits designed for different environments. The “Car Kit” is meant for private and commercial vehicles, while the “Wall Kit” is designed for homes, schools, churches, offices and public facilities.

The “Mall Kit” was created for military personnel and first responders operating in high-risk areas, while the “Plane Kit” targets aircraft and luxury transportation systems.

Adeloye explained that the kits contain trauma care supplies, blood pressure and blood sugar monitoring tools, snakebite treatment support and emergency alert systems linked directly to the NovaDOC platform.

The digital platform will also connect emergency responders, healthcare facilities and Nigerian medical professionals in the diaspora to provide real-time consultations and medical guidance during emergencies.

According to him, emergency alerts generated through the system will immediately notify nearby responders and healthcare providers, helping to reduce response time significantly.

“Our goal is to cut emergency response time drastically and ensure that emergency support reaches victims within minutes instead of hours,” Adeloye said.

Beyond healthcare delivery, the first phase of the initiative is expected to create 10,000 direct jobs, alongside additional opportunities in logistics, manufacturing, emergency services and healthcare support operations.

Adeloye also called for stronger collaboration with the Federal Government, emergency agencies, transport operators and private organisations to support nationwide deployment of the initiative.

“Through this system, Nigerian doctors in the diaspora can contribute directly to saving lives back home through real-time emergency support and telemedicine,” he added.

The initiative does reflect a growing wave of Nigerian-led healthcare innovation focused on improving emergency response systems, expanding access to support services and building stronger community-based healthcare solutions across the country.

Friday, 8 May 2026

Fountain University Secures Full NUC Accreditation for All Academic Programmes

Fountain University, Osogbo, has recorded a major academic milestone after securing full accreditation for all its academic programmes from the National Universities Commission (NUC), further strengthening its reputation as one of Nigeria’s rapidly advancing private universities.

The institution’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor Olayinka Ramota Karim, disclosed in an official statement that the University recently obtained full accreditation for 18 additional programmes for the 2025/2026 academic session. The achievement brings the total number of fully accredited programmes at the University to more than 39, with several also receiving relevant professional recognitions.

Professor Karim described the accomplishment as the result of strategic planning, consistency, and a strong institutional drive toward excellence. She expressed gratitude to Almighty Allah while acknowledging the commitment and contributions of the University’s governing council, academic staff, students, alumni, and other stakeholders.

“This remarkable achievement reflects our unwavering commitment to academic excellence, quality assurance, and global best practices in teaching, research, and community service,” she stated.

According to the Vice-Chancellor, the accreditation success further reinforces Fountain University’s mission of delivering globally competitive, industry-relevant education built on strong moral and spiritual values.

“At Fountain University, we are committed not only to academic success but also to character development and leadership formation,” she added, assuring parents and guardians of the institution’s dedication to maintaining high educational standards.

The University noted that the milestone aligns with its broader vision of exceeding academic benchmarks, expanding professional collaborations, and advancing innovation-driven learning across its faculties.

Fountain University also invited prospective students, development partners, and members of the global academic community to become part of its continuing growth and transformation.

Fountain University, Osogbo, is a leading private Islamic faith-based institution located in Osun State, Nigeria. Established to combine academic excellence with strong moral and ethical values, the University continues to provide a learning environment that promotes discipline, innovation, leadership, and character development. 

With this latest achievement, the institution further strengthens its standing as a centre for quality education, producing graduates equipped for professional success and meaningful societal impact.

Ekiti Pushes Poultry Economy Drive to Create 5,000 Youth Jobs

In many parts of Nigeria today, poultry farming is steadily evolving from a backyard survival business into one of the country’s most promising economic sectors. Across homes, restaurants, hotels and fast-food chains, demand for chicken and eggs continues to rise, driven by Nigeria’s growing population of more than 220 million people.

Yet despite the massive market and Nigeria’s enormous agricultural potential, local production still struggles to fully meet demand. For years, conversations around the country’s economy have remained heavily tilted toward oil, while sectors capable of creating widespread grassroots prosperity received far less attention than they deserved. Poultry farmers continue to battle rising feed costs, infrastructure gaps and limited access to finance, but the industry remains one of the fastest-growing agricultural sectors in the country, a reminder that some of Nigeria’s biggest economic opportunities may still be sitting far away from the oil fields.

That reality is now shaping a major economic push in Ekiti State.

In Ado Ekiti this week, hundreds of youths gathered for a five-day poultry production training programme organised under the Livestock Productivity and Resilience Support Project, popularly known as L-Pres. The programme, themed “Capacity Strengthening on Good Animal Husbandry Practices for Youths in Ekiti Broiler Production Scheme,” focused on modern broiler production techniques and animal husbandry practices.

Beyond the training itself, the state government unveiled a bigger ambition, empowering and engaging more than 5,000 youths in poultry production within the next two years.

Commissioner for Agriculture, Ebenezer Boluwade, said the initiative forms part of the state’s broader strategy to create jobs and strengthen food production through agriculture.

“Here, we are training 500 youths, but the objective in the next two years is that we want to employ more than 5,000 Ekiti youths across the value chain,” Boluwade said.

According to him, the government is not only focusing on poultry farming but on building an entire value chain covering production, processing and distribution.

He explained that one of the first major challenges being addressed is infrastructure, particularly poultry pens.

“The starting point for us is to address the issue of pens, which L-Pres is helping us to solve,” he said.

Boluwade disclosed that the state plans to establish capacity for about 300,000 pens across roughly 10 centres before the end of the year, with projections to produce up to one million birds annually.

The commissioner also revealed plans to establish two processing centres to strengthen market access and reduce waste.

“We are also setting up two processing centres in Ekiti State to complement the production. So, as we are producing from the upstream, the midstream is taking it to the processing centre, and as the processing centre is processing it, it is also being taken to the market. The market can be local or international,” he said.

He added that the state’s cargo airport could support movement of poultry products to cities such as Lagos and Abuja, while also opening export opportunities.

Industry experts have long described poultry as one of Nigeria’s most commercially viable agricultural sectors. Beyond farming itself, the industry supports livelihoods through feed production, transportation, veterinary services, hatcheries and retail supply.

The relatively short production cycle of broiler farming also makes it attractive to many young entrepreneurs, especially at a time when unemployment remains a major national challenge.

Lead Consultant, Olayemi Salako, said participants in the programme were being trained on modern broiler production methods designed to improve productivity and profitability.

“The expectation from this training is that participants will be able to have their own farms,” Salako said.

He added that trainees were also being educated on safer alternatives to excessive antibiotic use in poultry farming due to concerns around public health.

Permanent Secretary of the Ekiti State Ministry of Agriculture, Mr Ebenezer Ojo, described the programme as part of efforts to modernise agricultural practices and strengthen food security.

“Your role remains critical in driving value chain development and ensuring the long-term resilience of the livestock sector in Ekiti State,” Ojo told participants.

The initiative is being implemented under L-Pres, a World Bank-supported programme focused on improving livestock productivity, resilience and commercialisation in Nigeria.

For many of the youths gathered in Ado Ekiti, the programme reflected a growing belief that agriculture, when supported with infrastructure, training and market access, can become a serious engine of economic opportunity.

If Ekiti succeeds in creating the proposed 5,000 jobs while scaling poultry production toward one million birds annually, the state could emerge as a strong example of how agriculture can drive youth empowerment and economic growth in Nigeria.

Thursday, 7 May 2026

Dangote’s 20,000MW Power Ambition Could Mark a Turning Point for Nigeria’s Industrial Rise

For decades, one of the greatest obstacles to Nigeria’s economic potential has not been talent, ambition or market size but It has been power.

Factories slowed by outages, businesses forced to depend on generators, entire industries operating below capacity because the energy required to compete consistently failed to arrive. Yet amid those familiar national frustrations, a new possibility is beginning to emerge , one driven not by rhetoric, but by industrial-scale ambition.

Aliko Dangote, Africa’s richest man, has unveiled plans for a 20,000-megawatt power project, a proposal that could become one of the most consequential private-sector energy investments in Nigeria’s history.

Speaking during an interview with Makhtar Diop of the International Finance Corporation, Dangote revealed that his group is preparing to expand aggressively into power generation as part of a broader strategy focused on solving Africa’s infrastructure deficits.

“We are now going into power… 20,000 megawatts,” he said.

The scale of that figure is difficult to ignore. Nigeria’s installed electricity capacity is estimated at roughly 13,000MW, though actual generation remains significantly lower because of longstanding infrastructure constraints, transmission limitations and operational inefficiencies. A private-sector project targeting 20,000MW would represent more than another investment headline; it would signal a major shift in how large-scale infrastructure could be developed on the continent.

It is also another reminder that some of the most ambitious bets on Nigeria’s future are increasingly being made from within.

Dangote’s power plans are arriving alongside a broader expansion across sectors considered essential to Africa’s long-term industrial growth. According to the billionaire businessman, the group is intensifying investments in fertiliser production, LNG, mining and maritime infrastructure.

“And the needs of Africa are petroleum products, fertilisers,” Dangote said.

He disclosed that within the next two and a half years, the company expects to become the largest fertiliser producer in the world. Part of that strategy includes plans for 12 million tons of urea production, alongside the development of potash and phosphate mines in Congo Brazzaville.

The group is also constructing what Dangote described as the biggest deep-sea port with an 18-metre draft while simultaneously advancing LNG projects expected to strengthen industrial supply chains across Africa.

Taken together, the projects point to a growing confidence that Africa’s industrial future does not have to remain dependent on imported solutions or fragmented infrastructure systems.

Dangote said the company’s stronger financial position is helping unlock this next phase of growth.

“Our cash flow now is very, very strong,” he noted.

He added that the group has gained greater financial flexibility and is now in a stronger position to raise capital for major projects.

“We are now actually free of assets, and we can actually raise more money,” he said.

The latest announcement comes as the Dangote Petroleum Refinery continues its operational expansion. The refinery currently has a capacity of 650,000 barrels per day and is being scaled toward 1.4 million barrels per day, reinforcing its position as one of Africa’s most significant industrial projects.

Perhaps the bigger story is what this moment represents for Nigeria itself. At a time when global narratives around Africa often focus on deficits, instability or dependency, projects of this magnitude are reshaping perceptions of what is possible. Nigeria’s infrastructure challenges remain substantial, but so too is the scale of local ambition emerging to confront them.

A 20,000MW power project will not solve every problem overnight but it reflects a widening belief that the country’s industrial future can be built through bold, long-term investments capable of transforming not just businesses, but national capacity itself and in a nation long defined by untapped potential, that shift matters.

Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Osun Rewards 31 Outstanding WASSCE Students as Academic Excellence Takes Centre Stage


Across Nigeria, remarkable young minds continue to emerge from classrooms with brilliance, discipline, and ambition, often with far less recognition than they deserve. In Osun State, however, a different message was sent on Wednesday: excellence will not go unnoticed.

At the maiden Imole SSCE Scholarship Award Ceremony held inside the Olagunsoye Oyinlola Hall of Osun State University, Osogbo, 31 exceptional students who excelled in the 2025 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) were honoured with scholarships and cash prizes in a celebration that placed education, merit, and youthful potential firmly in the spotlight.

The initiative was organised through a collaboration between the Osun State Government and consulting firm Electronic Collections Group (ECG), with teachers and schools also receiving recognition for their role in shaping the students’ success.

Each top-performing student representing Osun’s 30 local government areas received N100,000, while the overall best student was rewarded with a N1 million prize. Teachers who prepared the students across the nine WAEC subjects received N50,000 each, while participating schools were supported with educational materials.

At a time when young Nigerians continue to prove their academic strength on local and global stages, the ceremony reinforced the importance of recognising excellence early and investing in future leaders. Behind every outstanding result are students pushing beyond limitations, teachers working with commitment despite some difficult conditions, and communities determined to keep hope alive through learning.

According to Governor Adeleke, the programme was created to raise young people “that will not walk in darkness.”

“To our awardees, you are that light but your light must shine beyond this stage, into your future,” the governor said.

He also commended educators and administrators for their contribution to building not just academic success, but character and leadership, stressing that his administration remains committed to recognising excellence at every level.

“Our administration honours excellence from the grassroots to the peak,” Adeleke stated.

The governor further pointed to improvements in Osun’s educational performance since his administration came into office, noting that the state rose from poor rankings to become the seventh-best performing state in Nigeria within his first year.

“The education policy of the governor is working despite the challenges,” he said.

For many observers, the significance of the event extended beyond the financial rewards. It reflected a growing understanding that investing in education is ultimately an investment in Nigeria’s long-term strength. Every scholarship awarded, every student encouraged, and every teacher recognised contributes to a larger national story that is too often overlooked, one where Nigerian excellence continues to thrive despite obstacles.

Tuesday, 5 May 2026

BoA’s 1.2 Million-Hectare Plan Signals a New Era for Nigerian Agriculture

Nigeria’s agricultural story has long been defined by potential waiting on the sidelines. Vast stretches of arable land, estimated at over 30 million hectares, coexist with a farming system still dominated by manual labour and constrained yields. Now, a new proposal is attempting to redraw that narrative placing mechanisation, scale, and grassroots access at the centre of the country’s food future.

At the National Assembly on Tuesday, the Bank of Agriculture (BoA) introduced an ambitious plan that reaches into every corner of the federation. Presented during plenary by the bank’s Managing Director, Ayo Sotinriade, the initiative seeks a direct partnership with the House of Representatives to mechanise farming across 1.2 million hectares, spanning all 360 federal constituencies.

The scale is deliberate. The intention is not incremental change, but a coordinated shift from fragmented subsistence practices to a more structured, commercially viable agricultural system capable of feeding the nation and positioning Nigeria as a net exporter of food.

At the heart of the proposal is a cost-sharing framework designed to bring lawmakers into the engine room of execution. Each member of the House is expected to fund 60 per cent of a tractor to be deployed within their constituency, ensuring that modern equipment reaches farmers who have historically operated without it.

The numbers behind the plan underscore its ambition. A single tractor, according to Sotinriade, can cover at least five hectares per hour and as much as 600 hectares annually. Multiplied across a projected fleet of 2,000 tractors, the result is a nationwide capacity to cultivate up to 1.2 million hectares every year.

The proposal however, goes beyond machinery. It introduces a new layer of agricultural infrastructure at the community level, farming hubs anchored on secure land provided within constituencies. These hubs are envisioned as full-service centres where farmers can access inputs, irrigation systems, aggregation facilities, financial services, and extension support. A tractor booking system is also built into the model to maximise efficiency and ensure that access is structured rather than arbitrary.

If executed as designed, productivity gains could be significant. The programme is targeting yields exceeding two tonnes per hectare, supported by irrigation systems that would enable year-round cultivation and allow for at least three farming cycles annually.

Sotinriade framed the initiative not just as an agricultural intervention, but as a tool for social stability, one capable of creating jobs, improving incomes, and reducing the pressures that often feed unrest.

There is also a human dimension embedded within the proposal. Internally displaced persons, particularly in states such as Borno and Benue, are expected to benefit from structured access to land, tools, and support systems, offering a pathway back into productive livelihoods.

By leveraging the constituency network of lawmakers, the BoA is positioning itself to bypass some of the bottlenecks that have historically slowed implementation. It is a model that ties national ambition to local accountability, placing tools and decision-making closer to the farmers themselves.

As Nigeria continues its push to diversify beyond oil, agriculture remains one of its most credible pathways to inclusive growth. Yet the difference between promise and performance has always come down to execution.

The 1.2 million-hectare vision now on the table is bold, measurable, and grounded in clear mechanics. If it moves from proposal to reality, it could mark a defining step in reshaping how Nigeria feeds itself and how it empowers those who make that possible.

Lagos Breaks New Ground in Cancer Care with 100 Robotic Prostate Surgeries in One Year

For decades, a serious diagnosis came with an unspoken directive: look beyond Nigeria’s borders for solutions. That reflex, however, is beginning to fade.

In Lagos, a new standard in prostate cancer care is taking shape, driven by advanced robotics, grounded in local expertise, and backed by a growing confidence that world-class treatment can be delivered within Nigeria.

This shift is not rhetorical but measurable. At The Prostate Clinic (TPC) in Lagos, more than 100 robotic-assisted prostate cancer surgeries have been performed within a single year, an outcome that signals both technical capability and institutional intent. It places Nigeria within a global conversation it has too often been excluded from, not by potential, but by infrastructure.

The significance becomes clearer when set against a familiar pattern. For years, patients with complex conditions have looked outward, often at great cost. The African Export-Import Bank estimates that Nigeria loses about $1.1 billion annually to medical tourism. That figure is not just economic leakage; it reflects a system that has struggled to retain both trust and capacity.

Yet here, there is evidence of recalibration.

Patients are no longer only leaving, they are arriving. Beyond Nigerians, individuals from Canada, the United Kingdom, the United States, Brazil, Ghana, Togo, and other African countries have sought treatment at the Lagos-based facility. This is not a symbolic reversal; it is a practical one, grounded in outcomes.

Still, the broader reality remains urgent. Prostate cancer continues to rise in Nigeria, with mortality rates heavily shaped by late presentation. Among men of Black heritage, particularly those aged 40 and above, the risk is significantly higher, with studies indicating that one in four will develop the disease in their lifetime.

The contrast with more developed health systems is stark. In London, about 12.5 per cent of prostate cancer cases are diagnosed at an incurable stage. In Nigeria, that figure exceeds 80 per cent. By then, treatment options narrow sharply, and survival prospects diminish.

For Prof. Kingsley Ekwueme, a UK-trained consultant urologist and robotic surgeon, these are not abstract comparisons. They are the basis of a deliberate return.

“I have been planning to return to my country for over 10 years to do what I do in the UK,” he said. “Only a few can afford to travel for treatment, and that gap needed to be closed.”

His response was to build. Establishing TPC meant replicating a level of care he had long delivered abroad, this time within Nigeria, and accessible to a broader population.

At the centre of that effort is the Da Vinci robotic system, widely regarded as the gold standard in robotic surgery and currently available only at TPC within the country. But technology alone does not shift outcomes as the deeper challenge lies in awareness and timing.

Prostate cancer often advances silently. Early stages present no clear symptoms, which is why many cases are detected late. When symptoms do appear, frequent nighttime urination, weak urine flow, urgency, or erectile dysfunction, the disease may already be advanced.

The implication is straightforward: early detection determines survival.

Routine screening, particularly through Prostate-Specific Antigen (PSA) testing, remains critical, especially for men over 45 or those with a family history. When identified early, prostate cancer is not only treatable but curable.

“At that stage, it can be cured,” Ekwueme said, pointing to patients who have undergone successful procedures and are expected to live full life spans. Over the past year alone, the clinic has treated patients from Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Brazil, the United States, the UK, and Canada.

Expansion is already part of the equation. Plans are in place to establish a robotic oncology centre in Imo State, in partnership with the state government, extending access beyond Lagos.

For TPC’s Chairman, Francis Ogboro, the clinic’s trajectory reflects deliberate standards rather than isolated success. Delivering care at a global level, he noted, is not aspirational, it is expected. Increasingly, patient outcomes are validating that position.

Among those outcomes is the experience of Major General John Enenche (retd.), former Director of Media Operations at the Defence Headquarters, who reported a full recovery following treatment. After assessing the clinic’s approach and engaging directly with its leadership, he proceeded with confidence and regained his health.

Veteran journalist Ben Alozie offers further evidence. After undergoing surgery in 2022, a PET scan in 2024 showed no residual cancer cells. His conclusion is clear and grounded in experience: prostate cancer is not a death sentence.

Taken together, these developments point to something more than progress within a single facility but suggest a shift in trajectory, one where Nigeria is not defined solely by its healthcare gaps, but increasingly by its capacity to close them.

The work is not complete. Late diagnosis remains a national challenge, and access must continue to expand but the direction is becoming harder to ignore.

In this moment, Lagos is doing more than treating patients. It is reshaping expectations of what is possible, and where it can happen.

Monday, 4 May 2026

Rinsola Babajide and Shukurat Oladipo Etch Nigerian Presence into Roma’s Serie A Title Triumph

As Roma’s march to the 2025/26 Serie A Femminile title carried a clear Nigerian signature, with Rinsola Babajide and Shukurat Oladipo playing their part in a campaign defined by control, depth, and consistency.

The title was sealed at the Stadio Tre Fontane with a composed 2-0 win over Ternana. It is Roma’s third league crown in four seasons, further establishing their authority in Italian women’s football. Within that success, Babajide and Oladipo delivered contributions that reflected both adaptation and influence in their first full season at the club.

Babajide, who arrived from UDCA Tenerife in July 2025, made an immediate impression by scoring on her league debut against Parma. Her involvement across the season was measured but purposeful. In nine league appearances, she registered two goals and an assist, often deployed as a wide forward or introduced to alter attacking rhythm.

Her pace and direct approach provided Roma with a different dimension in the final third. A decisive assist in a narrow win over AC Milan stood out, while her involvement in fixtures against Inter Milan added to her value in defining moments of the title race.

At the back, Oladipo established herself with greater regularity. The 21-year-old defender, who joined from FC Robo Queens in early 2025, featured in 16 league matches and logged over 1,200 minutes. Her integration into the side was swift, and her consistency became a reliable feature of Roma’s defensive structure.

Strong in challenges and composed in positioning, Oladipo contributed to one of the league’s most effective backlines. Her availability and discipline ensured continuity in defence throughout the campaign.

Both players were also involved in Roma’s progress on the European stage, featuring in key qualification matches for the UEFA Women’s Champions League, including the playoff success against Sporting Lisbon.

For Nigerian football, this is more than a shared medal moment, it is a statement of presence and progression. Two Super Falcons, in their first full season at Roma, rising within a title-winning side and leaving their imprint across decisive moments of the campaign. 

In a league defined by structure and precision, Babajide and Oladipo did not just fit in, they counted and from Lagos to Rome, their triumph travels as a reminder that Nigerian excellence continues to find its place at the highest levels of the game, shaping outcomes and redefining expectations.

Ogbomoso Princess Toluni Ghandi-Olaoye Earns Computer Engineering Distinction at Michigan State University

In Ogbomoso, a familiar story is unfolding, one that continues to define Nigeria’s finest exports: excellence shaped at home, proven on the global stage.

Princess Toluni Ghandi-Olaoye, daughter of the Soun of Ogbomoso, Oba Ghandi Afolabi Olaoye, has earned a distinction in Computer Engineering from Michigan State University in the United States. It is an achievement that carries both academic weight and cultural significance, reflecting a blend of heritage, discipline, and intellectual depth.

Her accomplishment was celebrated by her father in a message shared on his verified Facebook page on Monday. The monarch spoke with measured pride, pointing to the qualities that have come to define her journey, resilience, focus, and an unwavering commitment to excellence.

In a field as exacting as Computer Engineering, distinction is not a ceremonial label as it is reserved for those who demonstrate consistency at the highest level, mastering both theory and application in an increasingly complex digital age. Princess Toluni’s performance places her firmly within that category.

Her time at Michigan State University also offered more than academic training as It provided global exposure, an immersion into diverse ideas, advanced systems, and the fast-moving demands of technology and innovation. For a young Nigerian scholar, this combination is both strategic and consequential.

Yet, beyond the degree lies something deeper, a part of a wider pattern, young Nigerians stepping into global institutions and leaving with more than certificates. They return, or move forward, equipped to shape industries, influence systems, and redefine expectations.

Oba Olaoye acknowledged this future-facing potential, expressing confidence that his daughter will continue to break new ground and make meaningful contributions to society. His words carried both a father’s pride and a belief in what disciplined minds can achieve.

Princess Toluni Ghandi-Olaoye’s story is not an isolated one. It is another clear signal of Nigeria’s enduring strength, its ability to raise individuals who compete, excel, and stand out anywhere in the world.

Fiona Ahimie and the Making of a Market Insider at the Helm of CIS


On June 25, Fiona Ahimie will take the oath as the 14th president and chairman of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS), stepping into a role no woman had occupied in the Institute’s 34-year history. The milestone is notable, but it is only a small part of a much longer story, one written over years inside Nigeria’s capital market, not outside it.

Ahimie belongs to a generation of professionals shaped by the trading floor, where the market is not studied from a distance but felt in real time. Her early days at Standard Bank Nigeria as a sales trader placed her in that environment: fast-moving, unforgiving, and precise. It was there she learned to read the pulse of the market, balancing client expectations with the constant shifts in price and sentiment.

She carried that grounding with her across several institutions, building experience that cut across the breadth of Nigeria’s financial system. At Lead Capital, African Alliance Securities Nigeria, and Stanbic IBTC Stockbrokers, she refined her understanding of how capital moves and how investors respond to opportunity and risk. By the time she took on the role of head of sales trading at FBNQuest Capital, she had moved beyond execution into a space where local insight met international flows.

Her transition to FBNQuest Securities in 2016 marked a shift from participation to leadership. As head of equities brokerage, she was tasked with more than keeping pace with the market, she had to reposition the business within it. Client relationships deepened, transactions increased, and within a relatively short time, the firm moved into the top tier of Nigeria’s securities league table. The momentum carried her into the role of managing director and chief executive, where she oversaw strategy during a period when the market itself was adjusting to new realities.

She now leads First Securities Brokers Limited, a subsidiary of First Holdco Plc, maintaining a close connection to the daily workings of the market even as her responsibilities expand.

Her journey within the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers followed a similarly deliberate path. She served first as second vice president, then as first vice president, working within the structure before rising to lead it. By the time the council vote brought her to the presidency, she had already spent years observing and shaping the Institute’s direction from within.

Her reach extends beyond CIS as she serves on the audit committee of the National Association of Securities Dealers and sits on corporate boards, including Purple Money Microfinance Bank. At Lagos Business School, she contributes to developing the next generation of business leaders.

Her academic record reflects the same steady progression: an MBA from Lagos Business School, executive education at IESE Business School in Spain, and professional qualifications as both a chartered stockbroker and a chartered accountant.

For Ahimie, the conversation around her emergence is often framed in terms she does not entirely accept. She has long argued that performance in the market is not defined by gender. Results, she insists, come down to judgment, discipline, and the ability to stay grounded under pressure.

She describes her approach as “gender-blind,” a way of working that focuses on competence rather than category. It has meant adapting to environments where men dominate, building professional relationships without drawing unnecessary lines, and staying focused on outcomes.

That focus, she acknowledges, has been supported by stability outside the workplace. A strong support system at home has allowed her to meet the demands of her career fully, an advantage she is careful not to take for granted.

When she speaks to younger professionals, her tone shifts from reflective to direct. There is little room for abstraction in her advice. Build capacity. Stay authentic. Keep improving and importantly, bring others along.

She is equally clear about ambition. It does not thrive on wishful thinking but requires preparation, the right qualifications, and a willingness to step forward when opportunities appear. Waiting, in her view, is a costly habit.

She also challenges a tendency among professionals,the reluctance to speak about their own contributions. In a field where visibility shapes advancement, she believes impact should not be hidden. When work delivers results, it should be acknowledged.

Her predecessor, Oluropo Dada, has pointed to her record as the basis for confidence in her leadership, describing her as equipped with the experience and clarity needed to guide the Institute through its next phase.

That phase comes at a time when Nigeria’s equities market is drawing renewed interest. Valuations are strengthening, participation is increasing, and expectations are rising alongside them. The role of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers which includes setting standards, reinforcing professionalism, and sustaining investor confidence, has become even more critical.

Ahimie steps into that responsibility with the advantage of familiarity. She has worked the market from multiple angles, from execution to strategy to governance and there is little about its workings that is theoretical to her.

Her rise does not read like a sudden leap but better understood as a steady climb, one shaped by experience, tested in practice, and confirmed over time.

In that sense, her story mirrors the market she now helps to guide: evolving, resilient, and driven by those who understand it from the inside.