The Executive Vice-Chairman of the National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI), Mr. Khalil Suleiman Halilu, has spoken of plans by the agency to have its products and technologies available in every household in Nigeria in the next few years.
Speaking in Abuja, he disclosed that beginning from first quarter of next year some tangible products emanating from NASENI’s prototypes would be in the market through technology transfer arrangements.
“Expect some products from NASENI’s R&D efforts in Nigeria market during the first quarter of 2024”. The EVC/CEO disclosed this last Thursday during his maiden television media interaction held at the Agency’s headquarters in Abuja.
The EVC said expectations from stakeholders of NASENI were very high as its activities must ensure transparency and focus to assist the agency deliver on its mandate.
According to Hakilu, part of his preoccupations since assuming office in September was to give adequate attention to enhance the human capital potential of the agency through improved motivation for staff to enable them adjust to the transformations to be introduced in the system.
Also, he said stakeholders’ engagements and efforts to rebrand the agency around its products and technologies had remained top priorities.
The New NASENI Chief Executive said that the era of stacking prototypes on shelves had ended in the agency, saying that all its national re-branding to have footsteps of NASENI products in every household in the country.
“In the next few years this is what Nigerians should expect. We are no longer going to sit back to watch endless research and prototypes, keeping them on the shelves.
“We will take them to the market so that Nigerians can consume them. In fact, one of our next year plans is to have NASENI Showrooms in key cities of the country. So that NASENI products are not things you view only on televisions but anyone could walk into our product outlets to experience those technologies that we’ve been talking about. And that is another way we will be expecting the public to hold us accountable as part of the promises we made”, he said.
The EVC/CEO further stated that he met lots of wonderful researches with over 150 products at prototypes level when he came on board.
“However, the commercialization aspects are very little. Coming from my background of manufacturing and technology innovation, I believe the whole essence of doing research is to transform it into meaningful products that will have impacts on the economy.
“We are going to do this through technology transfer. Ever since we made the announcement to go into technology transfer particularly, especially the intention to have our products in the market, we have been receiving a lot of interests from private sector organisations looking out for our capacity, the spread and goodwill which we are endowed with being a government organisation and how they can partner with us”, Hakilu said.
Recalling a recent trip to China by the top management of the agency, led by the EVC/CEO himself, he said: “we just came back from China with the Vice-President from the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) Forum where we signed a $2 billion dollar partnership MOU for technology transfer into Nigeria which is something we were able to achieve in just five weeks of operations. At the same forum, we received a lot of partners that provided letters of Intent to partner with us, to invest in the country’s economy amounting to $4 billion.”
The EVC said NASENI’s China trip had the potential to yield about $6 billion in foreign direct investment (FDI) to Nigeria, adding that the areas that the agency received interests were around Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), Electric Vehicles (EVs), Agricultural equipment, Electronics and Electrical equipment and many others.
This effort, he observed, had sent a positive signal to the world and potential partners.
“Everyone is looking forward to Africa, there is no better time than now to leapfrog development, reduction of unemployment and alleviation of poverty. We have resources in abundance and we have to add value to whatever we are doing. One of the alarming things in our economy is the fact that we are adding little or no values to our commodities, yet we are heavily a consuming economy with a big workforce. We are trying to see how we are going to change that narrative; given the kind of mandate we have at NASENI.
“Nigeria cannot afford to continue to export her raw materials, therefore we have set up strategies, outfits and partners to see to the kind of policies as well as government inputs to support our desire to add value to our commodities and raw materials before exports”, he said.
Halilu recalled that NASENI under him had rigorously been involved in lots of stakeholder engagements with many organisations showing interest in its activities for collaboration and products offtake.
One of such partners, he said, was the Rural Electrification Agency (REA), which had committed itself to a whopping $200 million procurement agreement with NASENI as long as the agency could produce the kind of products they consume.
He said that NASENI’s team had also conferred with the Minister of Science and Technology to explore areas of opportunities around gas, ditto, the ministers of Information and Finance amongst other stakeholders.
Halilu added that lots of stakeholders’ had lined up and shown much interests in the new direction being charted by the New NASENI, and were willing to partner with the agency, adding that the most recent of the stakeholders’ engagement took place on Wednesday this week when the management of the Agency, led by the EVC/CEO, met with members of the National Assembly, especially the Senate Committee on NASENI which had oversight function on the agency.
“The distinguished lawmakers wanted products to come to the economy and NASENI too wants products to go into the market, so both we and the senators are on the same page in terms of expectation and the renewed hope to revamp the economy along the lines of productivity and development of the real sector”, he said.