Ekiti State has emerged as the first subnational government in Nigeria to domesticate the Nigeria Tax Administration Act (NTAA), marking a significant milestone in the country’s ongoing effort to modernise tax administration, improve revenue efficiency, and harmonise fiscal governance across federal and state levels.
Thursday, 25 December 2025
Ekiti Becomes First Nigerian State to Domesticate Nigeria Tax Administration Act
Ekiti State has emerged as the first subnational government in Nigeria to domesticate the Nigeria Tax Administration Act (NTAA), marking a significant milestone in the country’s ongoing effort to modernise tax administration, improve revenue efficiency, and harmonise fiscal governance across federal and state levels.
Wednesday, 24 December 2025
Ebuka Esiobu Is Building MyArteLab to Power Africa’s Creative Marketplace
As Africa’s creative economy grows in scale and global relevance, structural gaps around discovery, trust, and fair compensation remain. Ebuka Esiobu is addressing these gaps through MyArteLab, a digital marketplace designed to connect clients with verified African photographers and designers in a fast, fair, and secure way.
MyArteLab started quietly, but its evolution has been shaped by a deliberate decision to build in public. For Esiobu, this approach has reinforced accountability, resilience, and long-term commitment to the platform’s mission. It also reflects a broader shift among African founders toward transparency and community-led product development.
The platform simplifies the hiring process for creative professionals by enabling clients to discover talent, collaborate directly, and complete bookings with confidence. Verification sits at the heart of the model, addressing a persistent trust deficit in Africa’s creative markets, where informal structures have often limited scale and sustainability for both clients and creatives.
Beyond transactions, MyArteLab is positioned as part of the infrastructure supporting Africa’s creative industries. The continent is home to a large and growing pool of photographers and designers powering media, branding, technology, and storytelling, yet many remain under-discovered and underpaid. By centralising access and promoting professional standards, MyArteLab aims to unlock more consistent income opportunities while giving clients reliable access to quality talent.
Building in public has also helped shape a community around the product, with feedback and shared progress informing its early-stage development. MyArteLab is currently expanding through a waitlist model, allowing creatives and clients to join ahead of broader rollout via www.myartelab.com.
From an investment perspective, MyArteLab sits at the intersection of the creator economy, digital marketplaces, and Africa’s expanding services sector.
As demand for African creative talent continues to rise across media, technology, and commerce, platforms that enable trusted discovery and efficient hiring are becoming increasingly valuable.
With a clear problem focus, a trust-led model, and a growing community, MyArteLab presents a compelling early-stage opportunity for investors seeking exposure to Africa’s creative and digital economy infrastructure, one built not on hype, but on discipline, transparency, and long-term value creation.
As the continent’s creative economy continues to mature, initiatives like MyArteLab signal a future where African talent is easier to find, easier to trust, and better positioned to thrive on its own terms.
$750 Million Vote of Confidence: Heirs Energies and the Power of Nigerian Competence
When Heirs Energies Limited executed a landmark USD 750 million financing agreement with the African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) in Abuja on Saturday, 20 December 2025, the transaction did far more than refinance existing obligations and unlock new growth capital. It sent a clear, resonant message to the global investment community: African enterprises, when governed with discipline and ambition, can execute at the highest international standards and Nigeria is producing such champions.
The agreement, signed in the presence of Mr. Tony O. Elumelu, CFR, Chairman of Heirs Energies, and Dr. George Elombi, President and Chairman of Afreximbank, ranks among the largest financings ever secured by an indigenous African energy company. It stands as a powerful validation of Heirs Energies’ operating excellence, governance culture, and long-term growth strategy and of Afreximbank’s role as a catalyst for African-led development.
Beyond the Capital: A Vote of Confidence
At its core, the USD 750 million facility reflects lender confidence and not merely in assets, but in people, systems, and philosophy. Afreximbank’s decision to scale its support underscores its belief in Heirs Energies’ proprietary strength in brownfield asset optimisation, financial stewardship, and institutional governance.
Yet the significance of the deal stretches well beyond balance sheets. It represents the maturation of a vision first tested under far more uncertain circumstances.
The 2021 Bet That Changed the Narrative
In 2021, Heirs Energies made a bold, counter-cyclical move: acquiring strategic oil and gas assets divested by Shell in Nigeria. At the time, scepticism was widespread. Questions lingered about indigenous capacity, financing complexity, regulatory risk, and operational continuity.
Afreximbank, however, stepped forward decisively, issuing a USD 600 million letter of commitment that anchored the transaction. That early show of confidence enabled Heirs Energies to mobilise over USD 2.5 billion in global capital, closing one of the most complex energy acquisitions in Nigeria’s history.
The journey was anything but smooth. Regulatory delays, policy uncertainty, transaction restructuring, and rising costs tested both resilience and resolve, yet the company persevered, guided by a simple but powerful belief: Africa must develop Africa and African businesses must be built to global standards.
Today’s USD 750 million financing stands as a public endorsement of that conviction.
Building Institutions, Not Empires
For Tony Elumelu, the Heirs Energies story is part of a broader, decades-long philosophy of transformation anchored in leadership, governance, and long-term capital.
Years earlier, he had taken over a distressed bank many believed unsalvageable but through disciplined leadership and institutional reform, it became what is now United Bank for Africa (UBA), operating across 24 countries and four continents, and widely regarded as one of Africa’s most resilient financial institutions.
That same playbook has been applied across sectors.
In hospitality, a once-avoided asset was transformed into the Transcorp Hilton Abuja, now Nigeria’s flagship business hotel and a symbol of professional management and patient capital.
In power, Heirs Holdings invested heavily in asset rehabilitation and capacity expansion, navigating sector-wide liquidity challenges and over ₦600 billion in outstanding government receivables, yet still meeting its financial obligations with discipline. Notably, the Group fully repaid its approximately USD 300 million acquisition loan for Transcorp Power, reinforcing its credibility in capital markets.
Energy, however, represents the most demanding frontier and perhaps the most consequential for Nigeria’s future.
Why Heirs Energies Has Succeeded
The strength of Heirs Energies rests on three interlocking fundamentals.
First: People.
Capital alone does not transform businesses; people do. Heirs Energies assembled a team combining global technical expertise with deep local understanding and a shared sense of mission. Many made personal sacrifices, relocating, committing long hours, and betting their reputations on building a Nigerian energy company that could compete globally.
Second: Financial Discipline.
Operating in volatile sectors where defaults are common, Heirs Energies chose prudence over bravado. Even during periods marked by oil theft, operational disruptions, and delayed revenues, the company never defaulted on its obligations. Performance, not noise, became its currency and credibility followed.
Third: Governance.
Ownership is deliberately separated from management. Institutions are built, not personalised. Transactions are conducted transparently, even where affiliations exist, to preserve independence and trust. This governance culture explains why partners like Afreximbank are willing not only to support, but to scale their support.
African Capital, African Enterprise
Afreximbank’s role in this journey cannot be overstated. From inception through uncertainty to expansion, the Bank has exemplified patient, strategic African capital, a capital that understands local context while insisting on global standards.
The USD 750 million financing is thus more than a corporate milestone. It is a case study in what becomes possible when African institutions back African enterprises that perform.
A Nigerian Signal to the World
As Heirs Energies deepens its footprint across the energy value chain and positions itself for the next phase of growth, the implications extend far beyond one company. The transaction reinforces Nigeria’s capacity to produce credible, well-governed, globally respected enterprises, even in the most capital-intensive sectors.
For African private-sector leaders, the lesson is clear: institutional trust is earned through performance and when earned, it unlocks not just capital, but opportunity for businesses, for sectors, and for the continent.
In the end, the Heirs Energies-Afreximbank deal is not merely a financing story, but one of conviction rewarded, competence proven, and a Nigerian enterprise helping to redefine what African business leadership looks like on the global stage.
Tuesday, 23 December 2025
Tanzania Coach: Beating Nigeria Would Feel Like Winning AFCON
As Tanzania prepare to face Nigeria in their opening Group C match at the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco, the scale of the challenge before the Taifa Stars is underlined by Nigeria’s towering history and influence at Africa’s biggest football tournament.
Nigeria are three-time Africa Cup of Nations champions, having lifted the trophy in 1980, 1994 and 2013. Beyond those triumphs, the Super Eagles have reached the AFCON final on five other occasions, in 1984, 1988, 1990, 2000 and 2023, finishing as runners-up. In total, Nigeria have made the final eight times, a record that places the country firmly among Africa’s most consistent football powers.
The Super Eagles have also hosted the tournament twice: in 1980, when Nigeria won their first AFCON title on home soil, and in 2000, co-hosting alongside Ghana and reaching the final. Few nations can boast such a deep and sustained presence at the continental level.
Nigeria’s strength is further reflected in the global profile of its players. The Super Eagles squad is dominated by footballers plying their trade in top leagues across England, Italy, Spain, Germany, France and beyond, with stars competing regularly in the UEFA Champions League, Europa League and other elite competitions. Nigerian players are not only prominent in Europe but are also among the most recognisable African footballers worldwide, celebrated for their athleticism, skill and tactical intelligence.
This international depth stands in sharp contrast to Tanzania, whose squad is largely home-based or drawn from modest leagues. While the Taifa Stars continue to grow and gain experience, they are yet to produce the volume of globally established professionals that Nigeria consistently supplies to world football.
Historically, Nigeria have also dominated this fixture. Their first AFCON meeting came in 1980, when the Super Eagles defeated Tanzania 3–1 in the tournament opener en route to lifting the trophy. Subsequent competitive meetings, including AFCON qualifiers, have further reinforced Nigeria’s superiority.
Tanzania head coach Miguel Gamondi has openly admitted the gulf in pedigree, famously stating that beating Nigeria would feel like “winning the AFCON” for his side. The remark, while ambitious, speaks volumes about Nigeria’s stature: the Super Eagles are not just another opponent, but a benchmark of African football excellence.
As the 2025 tournament begins, Nigeria arrive once again as one of the teams expected to contend for the title - rich in history, stacked with international experience, and driven by a legacy that few African nations can match.
For Tanzania, the match represents hope and possibility but for Nigeria, it is familiar territory: the pursuit of continental glory, backed by decades of achievement and global respect.
Monday, 22 December 2025
Ayra Starr’s 2025 Triumph: 13 Awards, One Global Star
2025 was not just a good year for Ayra Starr, it was a landmark one. With 13 major awards and a growing global following, she moved beyond “rising star” status and into a space reserved for artists shaping culture across continents.
Ayra Starr’s rise feels almost mythical, yet it is rooted in grit, instinct, and an unshakeable belief in self. Born Oyinkansola Sarah Aderibigbe, Ayra Starr represents a new generation of Nigerian artists who are not just crossing borders but redefining what global pop culture sounds like on their own terms.
Her journey began quietly. Raised between Benin Republic and Nigeria, Ayra grew up in a household that valued creativity and self-expression. Music was not initially a grand ambition; it was a companion. She sang instinctively, wrote when emotions demanded it, and absorbed influences ranging from Afrobeats and R&B to alternative pop and soul. Those early years shaped the introspective confidence that would later become her artistic signature.
Before music took center stage, Ayra explored modeling, a phase that sharpened her sense of presence and self-assurance. Yet it was songwriting, in a raw form, vulnerable, and honest, that truly defined her. Posting original songs and covers online, she caught the attention of a rapidly expanding digital audience. Her voice, soft yet commanding, stood out in a crowded space.
The turning point came when her music reached Mavin Records and Don Jazzy recognized not just talent, but clarity of vision. Signed in 2020, Ayra Starr wasted no time. Her self-titled debut EP introduced a fearless new voice, while her breakout hit “Away” announced her arrival with quiet authority. Then came “19 & Dangerous,” an album that captured youth, independence, and emotional honesty with striking precision. Ayra wasn’t chasing trends, she was setting her own emotional frequency.
What followed was a steady ascent. Her sound matured, her confidence deepened, and her global presence expanded. Songs like Rush became cultural moments, resonating far beyond Nigeria. Ayra Starr’s music began to travel across Africa, into Europe, North America, and beyond, without losing its Nigerian soul. She carried Lagos with her into every playlist, stage, and award ceremony.
Her followership reflects that reach. Ayra Starr commands millions of listeners across streaming platforms and an intensely loyal fan base that connects with her vulnerability and authenticity. To many young Africans, she represents freedom, the freedom to feel deeply, to speak boldly, and to exist unapologetically. Her fans don’t just listen to her; they see themselves in her.
The year under review marked a defining chapter in her career. Ayra Starr emerged not only as a fan favorite but as an industry force, sweeping an extraordinary 13 major awards across Africa and the global music scene:
🔹BET Award for Best International Act
🔹MOBO Award for Best International Act
🔹MOBO Award for Best African Music Act
🔹Trace Award for Best Artist (Western Africa Anglophone)
🔹African Entertainment Awards USA – Best Female Artist
🔹Africa Arts Entertainment Award – Best Female Artist, West Africa
🔹Galaxy Music Awards – Artist of the Year
🔹The Headies Award for Best R&B Single
🔹South African Music Awards – Rest of Africa Award
🔹Odeon Awards – Best International Song of the Year
🔹Golden Star Awards – Artist of the Year
🔹Turntable Music Award for Outstanding Achievement
🔹Entertainment Arts Excellence Award – Best Continental Female Artist
Each award tells a story, not just of success, but of consistency, cultural impact, and global resonance. Ayra Starr is no longer simply “one to watch.” She is present, dominant, and influential.
Yet, what truly sets her apart is restraint. Despite the accolades, she remains grounded in her artistry. She experiments without losing identity, evolves without abandoning roots, and speaks to the world while staying unmistakably Nigerian. Her music is confident but tender, bold yet reflective, a balance that mirrors her generation.
Ayra Starr stands today as one of Nigeria’s brightest cultural exports, a symbol of how local stories can command global attention without dilution. Her rise is not an accident; it is the result of preparation meeting opportunity, talent meeting discipline, and Nigeria meeting the world through sound.
And if this chapter is any indication, Ayra Starr is only just beginning.
Super Falcons Win Pre-AFCON 3-A-Side Ceremonial Tournament in Morocco
Nigeria’s Super Falcons recorded an encouraging victory in December 2025, emerging winners of the pre-AFCON 3-a-side ceremonial tournament held in Morocco, an event organised by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) as part of build-up activities ahead of the 2026 Women’s Africa Cup of Nations (WAFCON).
The short-format tournament, which featured selected African national teams, was designed to celebrate women’s football on the continent while promoting unity and visibility for the women’s game in the lead-up to the main championship. Although ceremonial in nature, the matches were played with intensity, providing a platform for skill, flair, and tactical awareness in a fast-paced setting.
The Super Falcons stood out across the competition, adapting seamlessly to the 3-a-side format that placed emphasis on close ball control, speed, creativity, and quick decision-making. Nigeria’s composure and technical superiority proved decisive, underlining the team’s enduring pedigree as Africa’s most successful women’s national side.
The tournament also served as an opportunity for national teams to engage fans and test ideas in a relaxed but competitive environment. Nigeria was represented by players drawn from the Super Falcons’ broader national team pool. Given the exhibition nature of the event, the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) did not release an official squad list, and the matches were not classified as full international fixtures.
Importantly, the ceremonial tournament formed part of preparations for the 2026 Women’s Africa Cup of Nations, which will be hosted by Morocco, with matches scheduled to take place across multiple venues in the country. While CAF has confirmed Morocco as host, specific dates and final match venues are expected to be announced in line with CAF’s official tournament calendar.
For Nigeria, the victory in Morocco goes beyond the result itself. It reinforces the Super Falcons’ readiness, confidence, and ambition as preparations continue for WAFCON 2026. The performance also offered fans a positive reminder of the team’s depth, adaptability, and long-standing dominance in African women’s football.
As attention now shifts fully to the main tournament, the Super Falcons’ triumph at the pre-AFCON ceremonial event stands as a symbolic but meaningful statement: Nigeria remains firmly positioned as a leading force in African women’s football.
The Aliko Dangote challenge By Sonala Olumhense
Sunday, 21 December 2025
Olokola Deep Sea Port: West Africa’s Largest Deep Sea Gateway, Unlocking Nigeria’s Industrial and Export Potential
Olokola Deep Sea Port is emerging as one of the most ambitious and consequential infrastructure projects in Nigeria’s modern economic history.
Positioned along the Atlantic coastline between Ogun and Ondo states, the port is being developed as a world-class deep sea gateway capable of handling the largest vessels that operate on global shipping routes.
According to Aliko Dangote, Africa’s leading industrialist and President of the Dangote Group, the port is projected to be ready in about two and a half years, a timeline that has drawn strong attention from investors, policymakers, and the international maritime community.
At its core, the relevance of Olokola Deep Sea Port lies in its capacity to fundamentally reshape Nigeria’s trade and logistics landscape.
Nigeria currently relies heavily on existing ports that face congestion, draft limitations, and high turnaround times.
Olokola is designed to address these structural challenges by offering deep draft access, modern cargo-handling facilities, and seamless connections to industrial clusters. This means Nigeria can directly receive and dispatch large container ships, bulk carriers, and tankers without transshipment through foreign ports, reducing costs and improving efficiency for businesses operating in and out of the country.
The economic benefits of the port are far-reaching. Once operational, Olokola is expected to stimulate industrial growth across the southwest corridor and beyond, serving as a powerful anchor for manufacturing, petrochemicals, agro-processing, and export-oriented industries.
Thousands of direct and indirect jobs will be created during construction and operations, spanning engineering, logistics, shipping, security, and services.
More importantly, the port will enhance Nigeria’s competitiveness in regional and global trade, strengthening foreign exchange earnings through exports while lowering import-related inefficiencies that have long burdened the economy.
For investors, Olokola represents a rare convergence of scale, timing, and strategic importance. The port is not just a maritime facility but a platform for integrated economic activity, with opportunities across terminal operations, logistics parks, warehousing, industrial estates, ship services, energy infrastructure, and ancillary businesses.
Its proximity to major markets, access to inland transport corridors, and linkage to industrial hubs make it particularly attractive for long-term capital seeking stable returns in infrastructure and real-sector growth.
As global supply chains continue to realign, investors with early exposure to Olokola stand to benefit from Nigeria’s expanding role as a trade and production hub in West Africa.
One of the most compelling national arguments for the port is Nigeria’s vast endowment of solid minerals. From limestone, iron ore, and bitumen to gold, lithium, and other strategic minerals, Nigeria possesses resources that are critical to global industries.
However, the absence of efficient, large-scale export infrastructure has limited the country’s ability to fully monetise these assets.
Olokola offers a practical solution by providing a modern, high-capacity export outlet that can handle bulk mineral shipments competitively.
This development aligns with Nigeria’s broader push to diversify exports, move beyond crude oil dependence, and unlock value from its natural resources in a more organised and transparent manner.
For the Dangote Group, Olokola Deep Sea Port is both strategic and transformative. Dangote’s investments in Nigeria span cement, sugar, salt, fertiliser, petrochemicals, and refining, with the Dangote Petroleum Refinery already redefining the country’s energy narrative.
Olokola complements these investments by offering a dedicated logistics backbone that supports large-scale exports and imports of raw materials and finished products.
The port is expected to play a critical role in the movement of refined petroleum products, fertilisers, and other industrial outputs from Dangote facilities to global markets, reinforcing Nigeria’s position as an industrial exporter rather than a raw-material economy.
Beyond the Dangote Group, the significance of Olokola lies in what it symbolises for Nigeria: confidence in long-term growth, belief in local capacity, and a commitment to building infrastructure that matches the country’s economic potential.
If delivered as planned, the port will stand as one of the largest and most advanced deep sea ports in West Africa, serving not just Nigeria but the wider sub-region.
It represents a future where Nigerian trade flows are faster, cheaper, and more competitive, and where infrastructure becomes a catalyst for inclusive growth rather than a constraint.
As construction progresses toward the projected two-and-a-half-year completion window, Olokola Deep Sea Port is increasingly seen as more than a project. It is a statement of intent that Nigeria is ready to lead, ready to trade, and ready to fully leverage its resources, industrial strength, and entrepreneurial ambition on a global stage.
Dame Margaret Ebunoluwa Aderin-Pocock: Nigeria’s Gift to the Stars and to Humanity
Some lives seem destined to reach beyond the ordinary. Dame Margaret Ebunoluwa Aderin-Pocock’s story is one of those rare journeys where intellect, resilience, heritage, and compassion converge to shape a figure whose influence stretches from classrooms to space laboratories, and from local communities to the global scientific stage.
At the heart of her identity lies her Nigerian heritage, which she has always carried with pride and purpose. Born to Nigerian parents and bearing the Yoruba name Ebunoluwa, meaning “gift from God,” she grew up with a strong sense of discipline, service, and responsibility. Her father, a former teacher in Nigeria who later ran an import-export business in the UK, and her mother, a youth worker and magistrate, instilled in her the belief that education should be used not just for personal advancement, but for the benefit of society. Her roots have never been a footnote in her story; they have shaped her determination to ensure that African brilliance, particularly Nigerian brilliance, is visible, valued, and respected in global intellectual spaces.
Her childhood, however, was far from easy. Growing up in council flats in Camden, north London, she was diagnosed with dyslexia at a time when learning differences were poorly understood. Reading and writing were a struggle, and academic setbacks were frequent. Yet even then, her aptitude for numbers, logic, and problem-solving stood out. Rather than limiting her, dyslexia forced her to think differently, sharpening her ability to visualise problems and approach challenges from unconventional angles. Those early years forged resilience, empathy, and a refusal to accept narrow definitions of intelligence, qualities that would later define both her scientific career and her public voice.
Her fascination with the universe was sparked early, fuelled by television programmes such as Doctor Who, The Clangers, and, most significantly, The Sky at Night with Sir Patrick Moore.
Wanting to see the wonders she heard described on television, she bought a modest telescope that barely worked. Instead of giving up, she enrolled in a local “make-your-own-telescope” evening class, where she found herself the youngest person in the room, and often the only Black woman. What mattered, she later reflected, was not fitting in, but sharing a common goal. That homemade telescope became transformative. She used it for her undergraduate project at university, and it steered her into optics, instrumentation, and ultimately space science. She still keeps it as a reminder of where her journey truly began.
Educated in the United Kingdom, she navigated both opportunity and exclusion as a young Black woman of Nigerian descent entering highly specialised scientific spaces. Instead of shrinking herself to meet expectations, she leaned into excellence.
She studied physics before earning a PhD in mechanical engineering specialising in space science at Imperial College London, graduating in 1994. Her career would go on to span some of the UK’s most respected academic, government, and aerospace institutions, including Imperial College London, the University of Leicester’s Space Research Centre, and Astrium, now Airbus Defence and Space.
Over the course of her professional life, Dame Margaret has worked on more than 30 space and satellite missions, designing and developing advanced scientific instruments used to study Earth, the Sun, and distant planetary systems.
Around 70 per cent of her work has involved Earth-observation satellites, contributing to climate science and helping scientists better understand environmental change.
She has also worked on spectrographs and optical systems used on major ground-based telescopes, including leading the installation of a spectrograph she helped develop at Imperial College on the Gemini South telescope in the Chilean Andes. For six months atop the mountain, she would spend nights beneath the stars, reflecting on the scale and beauty of the universe, a wonder that never dulled, no matter how familiar the sky became.
Her scientific expertise also extended into government research. In the mid-1990s, she worked with a branch of the UK Ministry of Defence, contributing to projects involving landmine detection and missile-warning systems. This period underscored the real-world impact of advanced physics and engineering, reinforcing her belief that space science is not abstract or indulgent, but deeply connected to life on Earth. As she often explains, technology developed for space exploration frequently finds critical applications on the ground, advancing everything from environmental monitoring to public safety.
Although she once dreamed of going to space herself, she realised early on that building instruments capable of travelling beyond Earth was the next best thing. She did not become an astronaut, but her work has flown far beyond the planet, making her one of the quiet architects of modern space exploration.
Yet her influence would not be confined to laboratories and observatories. Over time, she became acutely aware of a troubling gap: even as scientific discovery accelerated, public engagement with science was declining. She noticed it in everyday conversations, jokingly calling it the “dinner-party test,” where mentioning she was a scientist often prompted awkward reactions. When she explained what she actually did, people were fascinated. The problem, she realised, was not science itself, but how it was communicated.
Determined to change that, she founded Science Innovation Ltd, a social enterprise dedicated to bringing science to life for the public, particularly young people. For nearly two decades, she has visited schools, spoken at conferences, and delivered outreach programmes across the UK and beyond. She estimates that she has spoken to over half a million people, most of them children, helping them see science not as remote or elitist, but as something they already participate in every time they ask “why?”
Her growing public profile eventually led her back to the programme that inspired her as a child. After the death of Sir Patrick Moore in 2012, she was invited to join the presenting team of BBC’s The Sky at Night. While honoured, she was also aware of the weight of expectation attached to one of the longest-running television programmes in the world. Some critics dismissed her appointment as political correctness, overlooking her decades of scientific and communication experience. She met that scepticism with competence, warmth, and undeniable authority. Nearly a decade later, she has become one of the programme’s defining voices, guiding audiences through discoveries that once belonged only to textbooks and research papers.
Alongside broadcasting, she has continued to advocate tirelessly for diversity and inclusion in STEM. She speaks openly about the importance of recognising forgotten and uncredited scientists, particularly women and those from non-Western cultures. Her book, The Art of Stargazing, reflects this philosophy, inviting readers to explore the constellations not only through classical Western mythology, but through the stories and interpretations of ancient civilisations around the world. For her, astronomy is both a science and a shared human heritage, one that belongs to everyone.
Her work and advocacy have been recognised at the highest levels. She was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) for services to science education and diversity, an honour that reflects not only her scientific achievements, but her sustained commitment to widening access and representation.
Balancing an international career with family life, she is also a devoted wife and mother. During the Covid lockdowns, evenings spent stargazing with her husband and daughter became moments of perspective and calm, reinforcing her belief that looking up can remind us of our shared humanity and our place in the universe.
Dame Margaret Ebunoluwa Aderin-Pocock’s life is a testament to the power of curiosity, perseverance, and purpose. She has shown that you do not need to travel to space to change how humanity understands it, and that barriers, whether rooted in background, race, or learning difference, can become sources of strength.
Through science, storytelling, and service, she continues to open the skies to all, carrying her Nigerian heritage with quiet pride and unmistakable impact.