Nigeria’s emergence as the highest-ranked African country in the 2026 Global Index on Responsible AI is more than another encouraging headline. Moving up forty-two places to rank thirty-eighth globally and first in Africa signals that the country is beginning to establish itself as a serious participant in one of the defining technological transformations of our time. While rankings should never become ends in themselves, they do provide an important indication that deliberate investments in policy, digital capability and institutional thinking are beginning to receive international recognition. More importantly, they offer evidence that Africa can move beyond being a passive consumer of Artificial Intelligence and begin shaping how these technologies are developed, governed and deployed both across the continent and globally.
That achievement deserves recognition because leadership in Artificial Intelligence will never be determined solely by the sophistication of algorithms or the size of technology companies. Increasingly, it will be determined by the strength of governance. The countries that succeed over the next decade will not necessarily be those that build the largest language models or attract the greatest amount of venture capital. They will be those that create trusted environments where innovation can flourish without sacrificing transparency, accountability, privacy or public confidence. Responsible AI is rapidly becoming an economic differentiator because businesses, investors and citizens alike are demanding assurance that technological progress will not come at the expense of ethics or fundamental rights.
Nigeria’s recognition as a global “Bright Spot” for advancing AI literacy reflects an understanding that Artificial Intelligence is ultimately about people rather than machines. Initiatives such as the National AI Strategy and the Three Million Technical Talent programme acknowledge an important reality that many countries continue to overlook. AI adoption without widespread capability simply widens inequality, while AI literacy creates opportunity. Building a workforce that understands not only how to develop AI systems but also how to govern, audit and deploy them responsibly is likely to prove one of Nigeria’s most valuable long-term investments. Digital infrastructure can be purchased. Skilled people, institutional capability and public trust require years of deliberate cultivation.
The challenge now is ensuring that this recognition becomes the foundation for something much more enduring. Nigeria should resist the temptation to view this achievement as the finish line because the difficult work is only beginning. Artificial Intelligence is already transforming banking, healthcare, manufacturing, agriculture, education and public administration. As adoption accelerates, so too will questions surrounding bias, explainability, cybersecurity, accountability, intellectual property, data protection and regulatory oversight. These issues cannot be addressed retrospectively after systems have become deeply embedded within society. They require governance frameworks capable of evolving at the same pace as technological innovation, supported by regulators who possess the expertise to supervise increasingly complex AI ecosystems.
This presents Nigeria with an opportunity that extends well beyond its own borders. Africa has too often inherited governance models designed for different economies, different political traditions and different societal priorities. Artificial Intelligence offers the continent an opportunity to contribute to global rule-making rather than merely complying with standards developed elsewhere. Nigeria’s progress places it in a strong position to help shape an African model of responsible AI, one that balances innovation with inclusion, economic growth with human rights, and technological ambition with democratic accountability. Such leadership would carry significance far beyond rankings because it would establish Africa as a genuine contributor to global AI governance rather than simply another market for imported technologies.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s ambition of building a one-trillion-dollar economy powered by innovation, productivity and inclusive growth will depend upon precisely this balance. Economic transformation cannot be achieved through technology alone. It requires institutions capable of earning trust, universities capable of producing world-class talent, regulators capable of supervising emerging risks, and businesses willing to innovate responsibly. Artificial Intelligence should never be viewed as an isolated technology strategy. It is increasingly becoming an economic strategy, a governance strategy and, ultimately, a national competitiveness strategy.
Nigeria has earned international recognition for the progress it has made. The greater challenge now is ensuring that this momentum translates into sustainable institutions, stronger governance and globally respected AI leadership. Rankings inevitably change from year to year, but countries that build resilient governance frameworks create something far more valuable than a temporary position on an index. They create confidence, and confidence remains the most important currency in the digital economy.
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Michael Irene, CIPM, CIPP(E) certification, is a data and information governance practitioner based in London, United Kingdom. He is also a Fellow of Higher Education Academy, UK, and can be reached via moshoke@yahoo.com; twitter: @moshoke






