Premium power graduates first cohort to bridge Nigeria’s energy skills gap

Premium Power Solutions will graduate the first cohort of its free Technician Academy on Oct. 6 in Lagos, part of a private-sector effort to close Nigeria’s chronic shortage of skilled technicians, undermining its energy sector.

Nigeria loses an estimated $26 billion annually to unreliable electricity, according to the World Bank, while manufacturers report power as one of their top five constraints to growth.

Yet the shortage of certified technicians remains largely overlooked, with fewer than one for every 1,000 households connected to the grid, industry data shows.

The 12-month program by Lagos-based Premium Power offers practical training in electrical and mechanical technology, protective gear, professional toolkits, and preparation for the Federal Ministry of Labour’s trade test, all at no cost to participants. The first class also includes female trainees, a step toward improving gender diversity in a male-dominated industry.

Ejiroghene Udu, Premium Power’s founder and chief executive officer, said the initiative is meant to create a pipeline of skilled workers who can immediately enter the market.

‘Energy at PPS means more than electricity; it’s about unlocking potential and dignity for our youth. This academy is our pledge to close the skills gap and empower a new wave of talent, especially young women, to shape Africa’s energy future,’ Udu said.

‘For me, this journey is deeply personal. Every young person trained here represents a life transformed and a step closer to bridging the technical skills gap in our country. I am especially proud of the women who have taken bold steps to break barriers and thrive in a space that has not always been welcoming to them.’

Nigeria has one of the youngest populations in the world, with about 43 percent under 15 years old, and unemployment among young people is more than double the national average.

Industry leaders say technical training could help absorb some of this demographic pressure while boosting the country’s ability to expand grid power and off-grid renewables.

By producing certified technicians, Premium Power is betting that its graduates will raise employability and help strengthen capacity in a sector critical to Africa’s fourth biggest economy.

The company sees the academy as both a corporate responsibility project and a strategic investment in sustaining long-term growth.

NNPC, Dangote Refinery ink new two-year crude supply deal

The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited has signed a fresh two-year crude supply agreement with the Dangote Petroleum Refinery, ensuring steady feedstock to the 650,000-barrel-per-day plant in Lekki, Lagos.

The deal, sealed in August, is part of the Federal Government’s drive to prioritise crude deliveries to the privately owned refinery, particularly in naira, to support energy security and stabilise domestic fuel supply.

According to industry data, about 82 million barrels of crude have been allocated to Dangote Refinery between October 2024 and September 2025. Of this volume, 49.3 million barrels – or 60 percent – were supplied in naira under the crude-for-naira initiative.

The agreement follows recent tension after the refinery suspended naira-based petrol sales citing the depletion of its naira crude allocation. Sales later resumed following intervention by the Naira-for-Crude Technical Committee chairman.

Andy Odeh, NNPC’s Chief Corporate Communications Officer, confirmed that the state-owned company continues to allocate crude in naira to the refinery.

He explained that NNPC, Dangote Refinery, and the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) periodically reconcile the volume and value of crude delivered in naira.

‘The state-owned energy company and the refinery have negotiated and signed a new sales and purchase agreement that will run until 2027,’ Odeh said.

‘In line with the FGN Crude for Naira Initiative, NNPC Limited has continued to allocate crude to Dangote Refinery in naira for the sale of products in the domestic market.

‘On this basis, NNPC, DPRP and the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) periodically reconcile the volume and cost of product supplied in naira commensurate with the crude delivered,’ Odeh explained.

He disclosed that NNPC allocated three naira crude cargoes in August, and five cargoes each for September and October 2025. While loading operations for August have been completed, September allocations are currently underway, with two vessels undergoing pre-loading formalities at terminals.

Odeh added that between October 2024 and October 2025, a total of 82 million barrels of crude had been allocated to Dangote Refinery, with 60 percent (49.3 million barrels) supplied in naira.

The new deal will run until 2027, ensuring continuity of supply following recent concerns when Dangote Refinery briefly suspended naira-based petrol sales citing exhaustion of its naira crude allocation. Sales later resumed after federal intervention.

Dangote’s media team has yet to respond to requests for further details on the arrangement.

Nigeria’s payment sector revenue to hit $4.7bn in 2029 – Report

Nigeria’s payments revenues are projected to surge from $1.3 billion in 2024 to $4.7 billion in 2029, according to Boston Consulting Group’s (BCG) newly released 23rd Global Payments Report.

The growth, driven largely by transaction-related revenues, positions Nigeria as a key engine in Africa’s fast-expanding payments sector.

The report titled ‘The Future Is (Anything but) Stable’ projects that Africa’s overall payments revenues will nearly double within the same period, rising from $9 billion in 2024 to $19 billion by 2029.

‘With a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of about 10 percent, the continent is expanding almost three times faster than the global payments sector, which is expected to moderate to 4 percent growth over the next five years,’ it said.

BCG’s analysis shows that transaction revenues in Nigeria are set to grow at a CAGR of 23 percent, while non-transaction revenues such as account services and ancillary fees will expand even faster, at 26 percent.

This trajectory, the report said, reflects the country’s rapid digital adoption, powered by fintech-led innovations in mobile onboarding, QR code payments, and point-of-sale expansion.

‘Nigeria is driving innovation and digital adoption at scale,’ said Tolu Oyekan, Managing Director and Partner at BCG Lagos.

‘With the Central Bank’s Vision 2025 and fintech-led advances like mobile onboarding and QR adoption, Nigeria’s payments revenues are set to grow rapidly, fuelled by the shift from cash to cards and real-time transfers. This progress is not only boosting financial inclusion and opportunity within Nigeria but also underscores the continent’s emergence as a global payments innovation leader.’

Globally, BCG forecasts payments revenues to reach $2.4 trillion by 2029, up from $1.9 trillion in 2024.

The report identifies five structural forces reshaping the industry: the rise of agentic AI, digital currencies such as stablecoins, fintech disruption, real-time account-to-account (A2A) systems, and cost transformation.

While traditional growth drivers, such as deposit margins, are losing momentum, new forces are emerging. Agentic AI is projected to influence more than $1 trillion in e-commerce spending, while stablecoins processed $26 trillion in transactions in 2024, albeit with just 1 percent linked to real-world payments.

Meanwhile, the report disclosed that real-time A2A systems now account for around a quarter of digital retail payments worldwide and are expected to exceed 50 percent in regions like Africa by 2030. Nigeria’s NIBSS instant payment system is central to this transition.

‘Payments-focused fintechs are also reshaping the market, generating $176 billion in revenue globally in 2024 and growing at 23 percent annually. They now account for 45 percent of total fintech revenues, attracting over $135 billion in equity funding over the past 25 years,’ the global payment report noted.

Inderpreet Batra, BCG’s global head of payments and fintech, said this is a turning point for the industry.

‘Traditional growth levers are losing force, but new drivers, including agentic systems, programmable money, and fintech innovation, are rapidly coming into focus. The players that align with these shifts now will lead the next decade.’

Stablecoins could power $100trn transactions by 2030 – Citi

Stablecoins could power $100 trillion in transactions as it is set for explosive growth, a new report from the Citi Institute stated.

Like ChatGPT transformed the trajectory of artificial intelligence, stablecoins are poised to become a breakthrough force in global finance, the study shows.

According to the study, Stablecoins 2030: Web3 to Wall Street, it is projected that there will be rapid adoption of stablecoins as corporations, banks, and payment systems accelerate their shift to digital money.

The report estimates that stablecoins could reach a market size of $1.9 trillion by 2030 under its base case, with a bullish scenario pushing that figure to $4 trillion.

A growth which could underpin up to $100 trillion in transactions, powered by digitally native companies, e-commerce platforms, and rising global demand for the U.S. dollar.

Yet, Citi warns that non-bank-issued stablecoins will not be the only players in the digital currency race.

Bank-issued tokens, including tokenised deposits and deposit tokens, are expected to play an even larger role in liquidity management, payments, and corporate treasury operations.

The report projects bank tokens could handle between $100 trillion and $140 trillion in transactions by 2030, eclipsing the scale of stablecoins.

‘Stablecoins will not operate in isolation. They will share the stage with bank tokens, central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), and other emerging formats, each competing on trust, privacy, and regulatory alignment,’ the report added.

Privacy concerns, evolving regulatory frameworks, and user caution around new digital formats remain hurdles for adoption.

Citi highlights that programmability, which is the ability to embed real-time reconciliation and compliance directly into money, could be the key feature that drives mainstream utility.

Tech firm launches BlooHR to streamline HR, payroll for businesses

Bloocloud Tek Consult, a business management solution provider, has launched BlooHR, a next-generation payroll and human resources management platform tailored to meet the demands of today’s dynamic workforce.

Speaking during the launch, James Ida, Head of Business and Marketing at Bloocloud Tek Consult, described BlooHR as a timely innovation designed to meet the evolving needs of businesses and employees in today’s digital economy.

According to him, the platform integrates payroll automation, employee data management, performance tracking, and compliance reporting into a single solution, removing the inefficiencies often associated with traditional HR processes.

‘Human capital is at the heart of every successful business. Yet, many organisations still struggle with outdated systems that waste time, drain resources, and frustrate employees.

‘A truly effective HR solution must go beyond basic record keeping. It should automate payroll, centralise employee data, track performance, and ensure regulatory compliance, all while empowering employees with transparency and timely access to their information,’ Ida said.

He further emphasised that the decision to launch BlooHR was informed by Bloocloud’s market research, which revealed that many small, medium, and large enterprises across Nigeria and Africa face the same challenges of compliance, record keeping, and payroll accuracy.

‘Our goal is to provide a solution that is not only affordable but also scalable, meeting the needs of startups, SMEs, and corporates alike,’ he added.

Also commenting on the innovation, Israel Atoe, MD/CEO of Bloocloud, reaffirmed the company’s commitment to innovation, saying that ‘At Bloocloud, we believe technology should work for people, not against them. BlooHR is our contribution to building workplaces where efficiency and employee satisfaction go hand in hand.’

Industry experts at the event highlighted that digital HR solutions are becoming increasingly critical as organisations embrace hybrid work models, tighter labour regulations, and the growing demand for data-driven decision-making. They pointed out that businesses that fail to adopt technology-driven HR systems risk losing competitiveness in a fast-changing workforce landscape.

BlooHR positions Bloocloud as a key player in Africa’s HR technology space. With its user-friendly interface and cloud-based deployment, the platform is designed to adapt seamlessly to organisations of varying sizes while providing secure, real-time access to data.

U.S. puts Brazil, South Africa on human trafficking watch list

The U.S. State Department on Monday placed Brazil and South Africa on its human trafficking watch list, citing failures to show sufficient progress in combating forced labor and sex trafficking.

Both countries were downgraded to the Tier 2 Watch List in the department’s annual Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report. The ranking means they must demonstrate greater efforts against trafficking or risk possible U.S. sanctions.

The TIP report acknowledged ‘significant efforts’ by both governments but said results fell short.

For South Africa, the report cited the launch of the country’s first sub-provincial task team and more convictions of traffickers. However, it said the government identified fewer victims and initiated fewer prosecutions compared to previous years.

In Brazil, the report noted a decline in trafficking investigations, prosecutions, and initial convictions.

Downgrade deepens Trump’s rift with both countries

The downgrade comes amid heightened tensions between both countries and the Trump administration. President Donald Trump has accused South Africa of persecuting its white minority and has imposed tariffs, visa restrictions, and sanctions. Brazil has also faced tariffs and restrictions following the trial and conviction of former President Jair Bolsonaro, a close Trump ally.

‘Human trafficking is a horrific and devastating crime that also enriches transnational criminal organisations and immoral, anti-American regimes,’ Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a statement, though he did not comment on the specific country rankings.

The TIP report was released nearly three months late after most staff in the office that prepares it were laid off. Deputy Secretary of State for Management and Resources Michael Rigas told Congress that staffing in the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons had been reduced by 71% this year as part of wider cuts.

Democratic lawmakers earlier raised concerns about the delay. Unlike in previous years, no State Department officials were made available to brief reporters on the report.

Rotary Club of Ikoyi Metro inspires young minds with million-Naira debate on AI’s future

In a vibrant celebration of intellect and youth potential, the Rotary Club of Ikoyi Metro recently hosted an interschool debate to honour Basic Education and Literacy Month.

The event according to a statement which , followed the club’s weekly meeting, saw five Lagos secondary schools engage in a spirited clash over a topic shaping the global conversation: ‘Will Artificial Intelligence Improve Our Future or Put It at Risk?’

With millions of naira in prizes, the initiative underscored Rotary’s mission to champion education and empower Nigeria’s next generation.

The debate, the statement said featured standout performances from student leaders: Utsu Comfort of Ireti Senior Grammar School (ISGS), Ugwuede Rhema of King’s College (KC), Nwankwo Munochimso of Holy Child College (HCC), Abdulmumin Zainab of Government Senior College (GSC), and Asiegbu Maryrose of Girls Senior Secondary Grammar School (GSSGS).

Over 30 students and a dozen teachers filled the room, with HCC sending the largest contingent of 11 students and one teacher, while GSC brought a lean team of six students and one teacher.

Rotarian Jude Izuka moderated with finesse, while judges Rotarian Anita Ugochukwu, Rotarian Dimeji Olatunji-Audu, and Rotarian Abiodun Aderonke Okusolubo, alongside timekeeper Rotarian Florence Kelvin, ensured a fair and lively contest.

The debate buzzed with insights, as students weighed AI’s transformative potential in education and healthcare against its risks of job losses and ethical challenges.

ISGS emerged victorious, but the event’s true win was its inclusivity.

Rotarian Francis Egede, Youth Service Chairman, praised the club’s collective effort, spotlighting United President Rotarian Alexander Chukwu and Immediate Past President Rotarian Gbolahan Adeyinka.

‘These students brought incredible perspectives,’ Egede said. ‘I learned so much, and I can’t wait for next year’s debate.’

Chukwu highlighted the event’s evolution: ‘Last year, we promised bigger and better, and we delivered. We expanded to five schools and ensured every participant; students, teachers, even spectators, receives a reward.’

ISGS secured N500,000, with its debaters earning N50,000 each and teachers N25,000 each. GSSGS, in second, received N400,000, with students at N30,000 each and teachers at N25,000 each. HCC took N300,000 for bronze, with N20,000 per student and N25,000 per teacher.

KC and GSC, in fourth and fifth, each got N200,000, with students receiving N10,000 each and teachers N25,000 each.

Every student attendee also pocketed an extra N10,000, a gesture of universal appreciation by the club president.

This debate was part of Rotary’s broader commitment to education, one of its seven focus areas.

Recently, the club awarded scholarships to 15 indigent students for school fees, WAEC, JAMB, and NECO exams during a District 9112 Governor visit.

‘While others sponsor morally questionable content, we choose to invest in our youths’ minds,’ Chukwu said.

‘This programme pushes them to think critically and build their futures.’

Fubara, 24 governors expected as Tinubu commissions Uzodinma’s legacy projects

Owerri, the Imo State capital, is wearing regal looks, as the state prepared to receive President Bola Tinubu to commission legacy projects executive by the Governor Hope Uzodinma’s administration.

BusinessDay gathered that the state is hosting a mini convention of the All Progressive Congress (APC), as all the 24 APC Governors, will be present, with party delegates coming in from across the 36 states.

It was also gathered that Governor Siminalayi Fubara of Rivers State is also expected to be at the event.

Aside from the Governors, Kayode Egbetokun, Inspector General of Police, traditional rulers and all the local government, are also mobilised for the event.

The state capital is wearing a new look, following massive clean up mobilisation by the state government to clear up the streets, weeding grasses along the road sides and preparing the venues where the President will have the events.

One of the projects lined up for commissioning include the flyover built by the government at the over the area known as ‘ Control’

The state government has cordoned off traffic along the newly constructed fly over at the Control, as the President is expected to commission the bridge

Some of the residents who spoke to BusinessDay around the flyover commended Governor Hope Uzodinma for making the project a reality.

Faith Osuji who sells her wares along the Bank Road noted that ‘ Do you know how long we have suffered because of this project? We are happy that the government has finally completed it’

‘ Our advice to the Governor is that they should not allow miscreants hide under the overhead bridge so that they will not use their as their hideouts.

A bus driver, who simply identified himself as Chidi, also hailed the Uzodinma’s administration for giving infrastructure in the state a face lift.

‘ Governor Hope has tried, but the only challenge is insecurity,’ he said.

Chidi who declared that Owerri, the state capital has enjoyed relative peace in recent times, said the reverse is however the case in the rural areas

‘ Let him work with the Federal government to address the insecurity in the local governments.

‘ We still find it difficult to travel to our villages, especially on market days’

Declan Emelumba, the Imo State Commissioner for Information who spoke with BusinessDay, said the state is fully prepared to receive the President

‘As you can see, we are fully ready to host Mr. President and his team in Owerri, today,’ the commissioner said.

The whole town is agog, the President will be unveiling the legacy projects of this administration

These include the Owerri to Mbaise road project, the over head flyover bridge at control, which had lingered on for several years

The Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu Center, is a 10,000 capacity edifice.

Speaking on security, the Commissioner noted that the state has overcome the ‘ Seat at home’ threats adding ‘ This does not apply in Imo’.

‘The Governor has done a lot to make Imo comfortable for our people, therefore, no one in his right senses will work against his or her own people,’ Emelumba said.

Umahi gives ultimatum to Winhomes over $250m investment claim, threatens to petition US, EFCC

David Umahi, the minister of works, has given a seven-day ultimatum to Winhomes Global Services Limited to provide the necessary documents for an alleged $250 million real estate investment along the ongoing Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, threatening to petition security agencies and international authorities to investigate the matter.

The minister dismissed claims by the company that it invested $250 million in a land acquisition affected by the Lagos-Calabar coastal highway project, insisting that there is no evidence to support the company’s allegations of government encroachment and demolition.

Speaking during an inspection of the project site in Lagos on Monday, Umahi accused the firm of misleading Nigerians and attempting to discredit the federal government’s infrastructure drive. He said the matter had already been resolved in court in favour of the government and that the Lagos State government had legally revoked the land in question.

‘I have a document from Winhomes that says they bought 12 hectares of land in 2022 for the sum of N50 million. In this area, with all the development around, I don’t know if the villagers were terribly cheated or if due process was followed. Nigerians should ask questions,’ Umahi told journalists at the site.

The minister alleged that the company exaggerated its claims, pointing to what he described as substandard fencing, a poorly constructed drainage of ‘not more than 10 meters,’ and no visible infrastructure of the value claimed.

‘The only thing we destroyed was the gatehouse, for which the enumerator graciously gave her N19 million.

‘The woman claimed she has invested $250 million. Not ?250 million, but dollars. We cannot trace the money, the approvals, or the investors. If she really brought that amount, where is it? Show us through the CBN, show us who paid, and how much they paid. Otherwise, it is a fraud to me,’ Umahi said.

He announced plans to petition the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Department of State Services (DSS) to investigate the matter, and warned that unless Winhomes provided verifiable evidence within seven days, the ministry would escalate the case to diplomatic channels.

‘I need an apology from the woman, and I’ll be writing to the Embassy of America to demand that they send the woman back to us so that she will come and tell us where the money is and how it left America to come to Nigeria,’ Umahi said.

Civil society representatives who joined the inspection also questioned the company’s claims. Declan Hekare, one of the activists who had earlier led protests in Abuja, said his findings on site contradicted the narrative of large-scale demolitions.

‘What I am seeing here is below my expectations. I expected to see structures that were erected and pulled down. That is not the case. If by the end of two weeks, more evidence is not provided, we will address a world press conference. Nigerians cannot be misled,’ Hekare declared.

On the broader project, Umahi assured that the coastal highway, one of the federal government’s four legacy infrastructure projects, would be delivered under a funding arrangement that combines 30 percent government financing and 70 percent private capital. He added that concessionaires with proof of funds were already lined up to participate.

Africa and AI: Are we already left behind?

When people talk about the ‘AI race,’ Africa often feels like a spectator watching from the stands. America, China, and Europe are sprinting ahead, backed by billions of dollars and huge machines powering their innovations. Meanwhile, on our side, the questions are louder than the answers: Where does Africa stand? Are we already left behind?

The truth is complicated. Africa is not short of talent. Walk into any tech hub in Lagos, Nairobi, or Cape Town and you’ll meet brilliant young people writing code, building apps, and dreaming of global impact. Yet when it comes to competing in the heavyweight category of artificial intelligence where giant models are trained, and billions are invested. Africa is far behind.

Let’s break it down.

Why the Track Feels Slippery

Artificial intelligence may look like rocket science, but its foundation rests on three things: electricity, data, and people. These three ingredients are where Africa’s challenges lie.

1. The Electricity and Internet Struggle

Anyone in Nigeria knows the frustration of power cuts. Now imagine running a data center (one of those facilities packed with computers that process massive amounts of information) while dealing with daily blackouts. AI requires nonstop, stable electricity. Without it, hardware gets damaged, costs skyrocket, and investors run away.

So, what do startups do? They rely on diesel generators. Apart from being expensive, these generators pollute the air and eat up funds that could have been used for research or hiring more staff.

Then comes the internet issue. AI depends on fast and affordable connectivity. But here, internet speed is often slow, and data prices are among the highest in the world. For young innovators, this creates a frustrating bottleneck.

And when we talk about servers (those powerful machines that train AI models) Africa owns less than 1% of global data center capacity. That means most of our AI work is ‘outsourced’ to servers in Europe or America. The result? Higher costs, slower speed, and lost opportunities.

2. The Data Deficit and Language Barrier

AI learns from data the way students learn from textbooks. If the textbooks don’t cover your culture, your history, or your language, the lessons will always feel foreign.

For Africa, the challenge is clear: most global AI systems are trained on Western data. They don’t understand African accents, local slang, or our 1,000+ languages. Imagine asking an AI health tool to analyse a Yoruba patient’s symptoms when most of its training data comes from London or New York hospitals. The results will likely be off-target.

Even more worrying is that much of Africa’s medical, agricultural, and financial data is not digitised at all. Hospitals still keep patient records on paper. Farmers often lack structured records of their harvest. Without this data, building effective AI systems becomes harder.

3. The Money and Talent Drain

To play at the global level, AI requires a lot of money. Training a large AI model can cost millions of dollars. African investors, however, often prefer safer bets like e-commerce or fintech rather than risky, long-term AI research.

And then there is the issue of brain drain. Africa produces talented engineers and scientists every year, but many get recruited by big tech companies abroad. The continent becomes a training ground for talent that eventually leaves. We celebrate the success of Africans working at OpenAI, Google or Microsoft, but deep down we know their expertise is not strengthening our local ecosystem.

Rays of Hope: What’s Changing

Despite these challenges, Africa is not standing still. Across the continent, people are rolling up their sleeves to build AI systems that speak to local problems.

Local Movements

Groups like Deep Learning Indaba and Masakhane are training researchers and developing open-source language models that actually understand African languages. These communities are saying, ‘If Silicon Valley won’t build for us, we will build for ourselves.’

Government Strategies

Countries like Rwanda, Kenya, and Egypt are drafting national AI strategies. These blueprints focus on areas such as healthcare, agriculture, and education, with the aim of applying AI to problems that truly matter locally.

It’s a shift from just consuming foreign technology to actively creating homegrown solutions.

Startups Finding a Way

African startups are also thinking creatively. Instead of waiting for perfect infrastructure, some are using edge computing putting processing power closer to the user to reduce reliance on fast internet. Others are designing AI tools for low-cost smartphones, knowing that’s the device most Africans can afford.

The Road Ahead: From Consumers to Creators

If Africa is going to catch up, we need a mindset shift. The question should not only be, ‘How do we join the global AI race?’ It should also be, ‘How do we design AI that solves African problems?’

Take agriculture as an example. Imagine a farmer in Benue uploading a picture of diseased crops on a simple phone app. The AI diagnoses the problem instantly, suggesting solutions without requiring 5G internet or an expensive device. That kind of tool could transform food security.

Or consider healthcare. An AI system trained on local patient data could help rural doctors detect illnesses earlier, saving lives in places where specialist doctors are scarce.

These are not futuristic dreams. They are possibilities within reach if governments, investors, and innovators commit to building AI for Africa, not just importing it.

So, Are We Left Behind?

Yes and no. Africa is behind when it comes to global investment, computing power, and data infrastructure. But the race is not only about who builds the biggest models or who gets the most patents. For Africa, the real prize is building AI that addresses hunger, unemployment, poor healthcare, and weak education systems.

In that sense, Africa is not out of the game. We are simply running a different kind of race, a marathon where endurance, creativity, and community will matter more than raw speed.

If we get it right, AI could become one of the most powerful tools for solving Africa’s toughest problems. And when that happens, the question won’t be whether we were left behind, but whether the rest of the world can keep up with Africa’s unique path