Chidimma Uchegbu
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund), on Tuesday signed a landmark Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), that positions Nigeria’s higher education system at the centre of Africa’s emerging innovation and digital economy.
Speaking at the signing ceremony in Abuja, the UNDP Resident Representative in Nigeria, Mrs. Elsie Attafuah, described the partnership as “a defining moment” for the country’s journey toward becoming an innovation-driven, knowledge-powered economy.
Attafuah said the MoU emerged from months of joint consultation and co-creation, culminating in a National Innovation and Digital Transformation Partnership Programme aimed at repositioning universities and polytechnics as engines of inclusive growth, creativity and regional economic competitiveness.
She noted some early successes of the partnership, citing the Emerging Mining Tech Unipod at Nasarawa State University, Keffi, and the Artificial Intelligence Unipod at the University of Lagos, state-of-the-art hubs designed to drive mineral value addition, advanced geoscience, clean energy innovation, artificial intelligence applications and next-generation skills development.
“These are not isolated projects. They belong to the first cohort of eight university innovation ports and one polytechnic port ready for full activation, from Borno to Benue, Abia to Akwa Ibom, all aligned with Nigeria’s economic priorities.”
According to her, the Unipods are “purpose-built innovation engines” designed to accelerate research-to-market pathways, connect innovators to industry and investors, and transform universities into full-fledged innovation ecosystems capable of producing enterprises, jobs and national competitiveness.
She stated that the strength of the partnership lies in TETFund’s nationwide institutional network and UNDP’s continental innovation assets, including the prestigious Timbuktu Pan-African Innovation Initiative.
“This partnership does more than formalize cooperation; it places Nigerian universities and polytechnics at the heart of Africa’s innovation future,” she added.
Attafuah praised TETfund for its commitment to strengthening Nigeria’s tertiary education architecture, adding that TETFund has long been a cornerstone of Nigeria’s nation-building project.
“Its investments have strengthened infrastructure, expanded research, and supported thousands of scholars. UNDP is honoured to partner with you in this next phase—one focused deliberately on innovation, digital transformation, and the knowledge economy,” she said.
On his part, TETFund’s Executive Secretary, Arc. Sonny Echono, described the signing as a “momentous day” that aligns with the Fund’s commitment to overhaul curriculum delivery and equip young Nigerians with the skills required by tomorrow’s global economy.
Echono said TETFund had long recognized the need to prepare Nigerian youths for emerging opportunities, especially as global demographic trends indicate that countries like Nigeria will supply much of the world’s future workforce.
“To fill that gap, we must prepare our youth adequately. That is why we are replicating innovation hubs on our campuses and now scaling them up significantly,” he said.
The TETFund boss disclosed that the Fund has tripled its allocation for innovation hubs in the 2025 intervention cycle and is working to ensure that the facilities are integrated into academic programmes and linked to community and national development needs.
Echono expressed confidence that partnering with UNDP, an organisation with global experience, reach and credibility, would accelerate learning, strengthen programme design and expand the impact of innovation hubs across tertiary institutions.
“This partnership will make our growth faster, our systems stronger and our institutions more relevant to the communities they serve. It is a critical pillar in delivering on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s transformation agenda for the sector,” he said.
Earlier in a joint statement by the UNDP Public Engagement, Outreach and Partnerships Lead, Ms. Christabel Chanda Ginsberg, and Director of Corporate Affairs at TETFund, Mr. Abdulmumin Oniyangi, both organisations reaffirmed their commitment to empowering Nigerian institutions, nurturing young innovators and transforming ideas into enterprises capable of generating jobs, prosperity and hope.
According to them, Nigeria is entering a defining decade in which innovation, digital capability, and knowledge ecosystems will be central to economic competitiveness.
“Building on decades of investment in research infrastructure and academic talent, the TETFund–UNDP partnership marks a major step toward transforming tertiary institutions into hubs of creativity, frontier technology adoption, and inclusive economic growth.
“The partnership will be implemented through the National Innovation and Digital Transformation Partnership Programme (NIDTPP) – a joint platform for programming, co-investment, technical collaboration, and ecosystem coordination.
“Through this MoU, both institutions will focus on five strategic areas: Institutionalising innovation across tertiary institutions Nigeria’s human capital base for transformative innovation, Accelerating research commercialisation and frontier technology adoption, Scaling access to sustainable financing for innovation, and Strengthening evidence, policy, governance, and impact systems,” the statement said.
JIt further noted that under the partnership, UNDP and TETFund aim to activate 8 University Innovation Pods and 1 Polytechnic Pod, Upgrade 9+ additional TETFund-funded innovation facilities, establish or strengthen 15–20 Technology Transfer Offices, TTOs, equip over 500,000 students and researchers with digital and innovation skills, and Support 1,500–2,000 university-linked startups and commercialise 5,000 research outputs.
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