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Home ANALYSTS INSIGHTS

Consumers to creators: How Nigeria can build its own AI future

by OLUSOJI ADEYEMO
June 23, 2026
in ANALYSTS INSIGHTS
corruption

 

For decades, the global technology narrative for Africa has been one of consumption and adaptation. We are the vibrant market for smartphones, the eager users of social media platforms, and the late adopters of enterprise software. In the pivotal field of Artificial Intelligence, however, a new and more assertive narrative is struggling to be born: Africa, led by nations like Nigeria, must transition from being mere consumers of AI to becoming active architects, creators of AI systems forged in the crucible of our own challenges and aspirations.

 

The stakes could not be higher. AI is not a neutral tool like a hammer; it is a foundational technology that will shape economies, power structures, and cultural narratives. If Nigeria merely imports off-the-shelf AI from Silicon Valley or Beijing, we risk importing their embedded biases, their commercial priorities, and their solutions to problems we don’t have. Our unique challenges, from multilingualism to informal economies to specific disease burdens — require homegrown intelligence.

 

The blueprint for this transition rests on four critical pillars: Talent, Data, Infrastructure, and Ecosystem.

 

First, Talent. Nigeria is not lacking in raw intellectual horsepower. Our youth are aspirational and tech-savvy. The gap is in specialised, high-end AI skills, researchers who can advance core algorithms, engineers who can build robust systems, and ethicists who can guide them. This requires a revolution in education. Universities must establish world-class AI research labs in partnership with industry. Initiatives like the African University of Science and Technology (AUST) in Abuja are models. Scholarship programmes and remote learning can connect Nigerian talent to global frontiers while keeping them rooted locally.

 

Second, Data. Data is the fuel for AI. Nigeria must treat its data as a strategic national asset. This means investing in the systematic creation of open, high-quality, and representative datasets in key sectors (health, agriculture, language). It also means enforcing data sovereignty laws that ensure Nigerian data is stored and processed under laws that protect citizen privacy while enabling innovation for public good.

 

Third, Infrastructure. Advanced AI research and development requires significant computing power, “compute.” Relying on foreign cloud services is expensive and raises sovereignty issues. Nigeria must invest in national high-performance computing (HPC) centres and data clouds, potentially through public-private partnerships. Reliable electricity and broadband are, of course, the non-negotiable bedrock.

 

Fourth, the Innovation Ecosystem. This is the glue. It includes:

  • Funding: Venture capital for deep-tech AI startups is scarce. The government, through agencies like the Bank of Industry and NITDA, can create dedicated AI grant and seed-funding schemes. Pension funds could be encouraged to allocate a fraction to venture capital in this strategic sector.
  • Collaboration: Stronger links between academia, industry, and government. National AI research challenges focused on local problems can spur innovation.
  • Policy: A clear, forward-looking National AI Strategy that aligns all actors, protects citizens, and promotes Nigeria as a destination for ethical AI investment.

 

The vision is not isolationist. It is sovereign collaboration. Nigeria should actively participate in global AI standards bodies, but with its own informed position. It should partner with international tech firms, but on terms that ensure technology transfer and local capacity building.

 

“We are at a rare moment in history,” says Dr. Adekunle O. Adeyemi, a leading AI researcher. “The AI paradigm is still forming. Nigeria has the demographic weight, the market size, and the acute problem-set to not just be a testing ground, but a source of fundamental innovation. We can create the ‘tropicalized’ AI that the world needs.”

 

Becoming a creator nation in AI is a moonshot ambition. It requires long-term vision, strategic investment, and political will that transcends election cycles. But the alternative, a future where the most powerful technology of our age is shaped entirely elsewhere, with our needs as an afterthought, is a far riskier path. 

 

For Nigeria, the call of this moment is clear: we must move from the back row of the global AI theater to its main stage, not just to perform, but to help write the script.

 

  • business a.m. commits to publishing a diversity of views, opinions and comments. It, therefore, welcomes your reaction to this and any of our articles via email: comment@businessamlive.com
OLUSOJI ADEYEMO
OLUSOJI ADEYEMO

Olusoji Adeyemo is a professional with over 17 years of experience. Currently serving as an Azure Application Innovation & AI Specialist at Microsoft UK, he has held key positions at Wipro, Huawei Technologies, Oracle, and Dell, showcasing his expertise in cloud infrastructure, Application modernization, and Business continuity solutions. He holds a Master’s degree in Computer Science with distinction from the University of Hertfordshire and Caleb University. He is currently running his PhD research in Explainable AI and ML. He is also certified in various cloud and project management technologies, including Microsoft Azure Expert, Google Expert, AWS and Scrum. He can be reached at mastersoji@gmail.com and on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/olusoji-adeyemo/

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