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$83m IFC-Backed Funding Boosts Nigeria’s Off-Grid Electricity Drive

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Off-Grid Electricity

By Adedapo Adesanya

Nigeria has secured $83 million in fresh financing to expand off-grid electricity supply as the country continues to shift towards decentralised power solutions to boost accessibility and alternative solutions.

The funding, backed by the International Finance Corporation (IFC) under the Distributed Access through Renewable Energy Scale-Up programme, is targeted at private developers deploying solar mini-grids and standalone systems in rural and underserved communities.

The agreement was signed during the 2026 Spring Meetings of the World Bank Group and IMF in Washington, marking a transition from small pilot projects to large-scale execution.

This intervention comes at a critical time, when Nigerians are tapping into solar alternatives as petrol prices continue to rise amid current Middle East disruptions.

According to the World Bank, about 85 million Nigerians, roughly 40 per cent of the population, still lack access to electricity. Even among those connected to the grid, supply remains unreliable. National output continues to hover between 4,000 and 5,000 megawatts, a level widely considered inadequate for an economy of Nigeria’s size.

The Head of the Nigeria Electrification Programme, Mr Olufemi Akinyelure, made it clear that the market is evolving beyond experimentation.

“This marks a shift from programme design to execution at scale. Distributed renewable energy in Nigeria is now a bankable market, not a pilot segment,” he said.

The $83 million facility is designed as a revolving debt model, combining concessional and commercial funding to provide long-term capital to developers. This approach reduces risk, improves access to finance, and allows projects to scale across multiple locations without repeated funding bottlenecks.

In practical terms, the first phase will support companies such as Darway Coast, PriVida Power, Prado Power, GVE Projects and StarTimes Smart Energy, while another group of developers is already lined up for the next round. The fund will allow the shortlisted firms to deploy power faster to communities that have waited decades for reliable electricity.

Backed by a $750 million World Bank facility, the initiative aims to reach over 17.5 million Nigerians by 2028 and deliver about 465 megawatts of distributed renewable energy capacity. Current data from the Nigeria Electrification Programme shows that more than 4.1 million people have already benefited, alongside the installation of over 175 mini-grids and 1.1 million solar home systems.

For many rural communities, it will help boost small businesses, healthcare delivery, and education. Traders can extend operating hours, clinics can preserve vaccines, and students can study beyond daylight. In areas where petrol and diesel generators dominate, the shift to solar also cuts fuel costs and reduces exposure to volatile energy prices.

According to the IFC Managing Director, Mr Makhtar Diop, the role of blended finance in unlocking scale helps address long-standing barriers within the energy ecosystem.

Special Adviser to the President on the Economy, Ms Sanyade Okolie, who represented the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr Wale Edun, said the federal government sees investment as critical to lifting millions of Nigerians out of poverty.

She added that the focus remains on attracting capital that delivers measurable improvements in living standards.

“For Mr President, the priority is to transform the Nigerian economy in a way that lifts people out of poverty. People must feel the difference,” she said.

On his part, the Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, Mr Bosun Tijani, linked the programme to Nigeria’s ambition of building a one trillion-dollar economy, stressing that infrastructure, particularly power and digital systems, will determine how fast that target can be reached.

Adedapo Adesanya is a journalist, polymath, and connoisseur of everything art. When he is not writing, he has his nose buried in one of the many books or articles he has bookmarked or simply listening to good music with a bottle of beer or wine. He supports the greatest club in the world, Manchester United F.C.

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Apapa Customs Foils Intercepts Expired Pharmaceuticals, Canadian Loud

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Customs Expired Pharmaceuticals

By Modupe Gbadeyanka

Some expired pharmaceutical products and 1.8 tonnes of Cannabis Sativa have been intercepted by officials of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Apapa Area Command.

The command’s Public Relations Officer, Mr Isah Sulaiman, a Chief Superintendent of Customs (CSC), disclosed that the pharmaceutical products are suspected to be pushed into the Nigerian market by relabelling them.

It was disclosed that the items were intercepted based on credible intelligence and enhanced risk profiling systems, in collaboration with the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) and other relevant regulatory bodies.

In one of the major interceptions, officers of the command seized a 40-foot container numbered CAAU7569127, which was found to contain a large consignment of Cannabis Sativa, popularly referred to as Canadian Loud.

The command revealed that a total of 3,639 sachets of the illicit substance were recovered, each weighing 500 grams, for a total estimated weight of about 1,819 kilograms (1.81 tonnes). Preliminary field tests confirmed the substance as Cannabis Sativa. The drugs were concealed inside a vehicle and within bags and drums packed inside the container.

Speaking on the seizures, Comptroller Emmanuel Oshoba warned perpetrators to desist from criminal activities, stating that “unpatriotic importers and their collaborators who deliberately engage in smuggling, drug trafficking and the importation of expired pharmaceuticals are enemies of Nigeria’s progress.”

“We have the intelligence, the technology and the resolve to identify and apprehend them. Anyone still contemplating these criminal acts should desist immediately, because the consequences will be swift, decisive and uncompromising,” he added.

He further reiterated that Apapa Port and all Customs-controlled areas remain under constant surveillance, adding that enforcement operations will continue to be intelligence-driven while ensuring legitimate trade is not hindered.

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Skite to Help Nigerian Experts Monetise Skills With All-in-One Creator Platform

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Skite

By Adedapo Adesanya

Skite is expanding its push into Nigeria’s rapidly growing knowledge economy with an all-in-one platform designed to help creators, coaches, consultants, educators and other professionals monetise their expertise from a single hub.

The platform enables users to sell courses and digital products, host paid communities, organise live events, offer one-on-one video consultations and monetise audience interactions without relying on multiple tools.

The move comes as more Nigerians turn to knowledge-based businesses as a source of income, creating demand for platforms that simplify how expertise is packaged, sold and delivered online.

While the creator economy has traditionally been associated with content creation and social media influence, a growing number of professionals are increasingly building businesses around coaching, training, consulting and digital education.

However, many creators still depend on several platforms to manage payments, courses, communities, customer engagement and events, often increasing operational costs and complexity.

Skite is seeking to address that gap by consolidating these functions into a single ecosystem built specifically for knowledge entrepreneurs.

According to the company, creators using the platform have recorded an average 30 per cent increase in revenue after consolidating their operations, while premium subscribers enjoy a zero-transaction-fee structure on earnings.

Speaking on the opportunity within the sector, Skite chief executive, Mr Samuel Obinna, said the company was focused on providing the infrastructure needed for creators to build sustainable businesses around their expertise.

“The knowledge economy is creating unprecedented opportunities for professionals to earn from what they know. We are building the tools that make it easier for creators to launch, manage and scale those businesses,” he said.

As Nigeria’s digital economy continues to expand, industry stakeholders expect knowledge entrepreneurship to become an increasingly important segment of the creator economy, with platforms such as Skite positioning themselves to serve the next generation of digital business owners.

Skite is an all-in-one creator monetisation platform that enables knowledge creators to build, grow and monetise their businesses from a single platform. The platform provides tools for selling courses and digital products, hosting paid communities, running live events, offering one-on-one consultations, monetising direct audience interactions and managing sales funnels. Skite is designed to help creators turn expertise into sustainable and scalable income.

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FG Activates 115,000 GovMail Accounts to Safeguard Communication

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GovMail

By Adedapo Adesanya

The federal government has directed all civil servants to immediately discontinue the use of personal email accounts for official communication, as part of efforts to prevent rising cyberattacks and safeguard the flow of information.

It has mandated the adoption of approved government email platforms across the federal public service.

The directive was announced by the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Mrs Didi Esther Walson-Jack, during a digital transformation summit held in Abuja to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Galaxy Backbone.

According to Mrs Walson-Jack, more than 115,000 official GovMail accounts have been activated to enhance the security, professionalism, and accountability of government correspondence.

She emphasised that official government business must no longer be conducted through personal email services or informal communication channels, which often pose challenges for record-keeping and institutional accountability.

She explained that one of the primary reasons for the policy is to ensure continuity in government operations. Official records and communications, she noted, must remain within government-controlled systems even after public officers leave office, preventing the loss of critical information tied to individual accounts.

The Head of Service also revealed that the Federal Government achieved a major digital transformation milestone by successfully digitising work processes across all 38 federal ministries and extra-ministerial departments before the end of December 2025.

Describing the accomplishment as a testament to effective leadership and institutional commitment, Mrs Walson-Jack said the milestone demonstrates the civil service’s growing readiness to embrace modern governance and technology-driven service delivery.

She further acknowledged longstanding challenges associated with manual processes, including delays, misplaced files, and bottlenecks in approval workflows.

The transition to digital systems, she said, has significantly improved document tracking, strengthened accountability mechanisms, and enhanced performance monitoring across government institutions.

The paperless civil service initiative is expected to accelerate decision-making, reduce bureaucracy, improve transparency, and ensure faster retrieval and processing of official records, ultimately creating a more efficient and responsive public service.

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