Author: The Nation

  • FULL LIST: Winners of 2026 Grammy Awards

    FULL LIST: Winners of 2026 Grammy Awards

    The 2026 Grammy Awards have concluded with Nigerian artistes making a mark. 

    Burna Boy, Davido, and Ayra Starr were among the nominees. 

    Unfortunately, Tyla took home the Best African Music Performance award for “Push 2 Start”, beating Burna Boy’s “Love”, Davido’s “With You” featuring Omah Lay, and Ayra Starr’s “Gimme Dat” featuring Wizkid 

    Below is the complete list of 2026 Grammys winners:

    Record of the Year

    DtMF — Bad Bunny

    Manchild — Sabrina Carpenter

    Anxiety — Doechii

    WILDFLOWER — Billie Eilish

    Abracadabra — Lady Gaga

    Luther — Kendrick Lamar with SZA — WINNER

    The Subway — Chappell Roan

    APT. — ROSÉ, Bruno Mars

    Album of the Year

    DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS — Bad Bunny — WINNER

    SWAG — Justin Bieber

    Man’s Best Friend — Sabrina Carpenter

    Let God Sort Em Out — Clipse, Pusha T & Malice

    MAYHEM — Lady Gaga

    GNX — Kendrick Lamar

    MUTT — Leon Thomas

    CHROMAKOPIA — Tyler, The Creator

    Song of the Year

    Abracadabra — Henry Walter, Lady Gaga & Andrew Watt, songwriters (Lady Gaga)

    Anxiety — Jaylah Hickmon, songwriter (Doechii)

    APT. — Amy Allen, Christopher Brody Brown, Rogét Chahayed, Henry Walter, Omer Fedi, Philip Lawrence, Bruno Mars, Chae Young Park & Theron Thomas, songwriters (ROSÉ, Bruno Mars)

    DtMF — Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, Scott Dittrich,, Benjamin Falik, Roberto José Rosado Torres, Marco Daniel Borrero, Hugo René Sención Sanabria & Tyler Thomas Spry, songwriters (Bad Bunny)

    Golden [From “KPop Demon Hunters”] — EJAE & Mark Sonnenblick, songwriters (HUNTR/X: EJAE, Audrey Nuna, REI AMI)

    Luther — Jack Antonoff, Roshwita Larisha Bacha, Matthew, Bernard, Ink, Scott Bridgeway, Sam Dew, Kendrick Lamar, Mark Anthony Spears, Solána Rowe & Kamasi Washington, songwriters (Kendrick Lamar With SZA)

    Manchild — Amy Allen, Jack Antonoff & Sabrina Carpenter, songwriters (Sabrina Carpenter)

    WILDFLOWER — Billie Eilish O’Connell & Finneas O’Connell, songwriters (Billie Eilish) — WINNER

    Best New Artist

    Olivia Dean — WINNER

    KATSEYE

    The Marias

    Addison Rae

    Sombr

    Leon Thomas

    Alex Warren

    Lola Young

    Producer of the Year, Non-Classical

    Dan Auerbach

    Cirkut — WINNER

    Dijon

    Blake Mills

    Sounwave

    Songwriter of the Year, Non-Classical

    Amy Allen — WINNER

    Edgar Barrera

    Jessie Jo Dillon

    Tobias Jesso Jr.

    Laura Veltz

    Best Pop Solo Performance

    DAISIES — Justin Bieber

    Manchild — Sabrina Carpenter

    Disease — Lady Gaga

    The Subway — Chappell Roan

    Messy — Lola Young

    Best Pop Duo/Group Performance

    Defying Gravity — Cynthia Erivo & Ariana Grande — WINNER

    Golden [From “KPop Demon Hunters”] — HUNTR/X: EJAE, Audrey Nuna, REI AMI

    Gabriela — KATSEYE

    APT. — ROSÉ, Bruno Mars

    30 For 30 — SZA with Kendrick Lamar

    Best Pop Vocal Album

    SWAG — Justin Bieber

    Man’s Best Friend — Sabrina Carpenter

    Something Beautiful — Miley Cyrus

    MAYHEM — Lady Gaga — WINNER

    I’ve Tried Everything But Therapy (Part 2) — Teddy Swims

    Best Dance/Electronic Recording

    No Cap — Disclosure & Anderson .Paak

    Victory Lap — Fred again.., Skepta, & PlaqueBoyMax

    SPACE INVADER — KAYTRANADA

    VOLTAGE — Skrillex

    End of Summer — Tame Impala — WINNER

    Best Dance Pop Recording

    Bluest Flame — Selena Gomez & benny blanco

    Abracadabra — Lady Gaga — WINNER

    Midnight Sun — Zara Larsson

    Just Keep Watching (From F1® The Movie) — Tate McRae

    Illegal — PinkPantheress

    Best Dance/Electronic Album

    EUSEXUA — FKA twigs

    Ten Days — Fred again..

    Fancy That — PinkPantheress

    Inhale / Exhale — RÜFÜS DU SOL

    Best Remixed Recording

    Abracadabra (Gesaffelstein Remix) Gesaffelstein, remixer (Lady Gaga, Gesaffelstein)

    Don’t Forget About Us, KAYTRANADA, remixer (Mariah Carey & KAYTRANADA)

    A Dreams A Dream – Ron Trent Remix, Ron Trent, remixer (Soul II Soul)

    Galvanize, Chris Lake, remixer (The Chemical Brothers & Chris Lake)

    Golden – David Guetta REM/X, David Guetta, remixer (HUNTR/X: EJAE, Audrey Nuna, REI AMI)

    Best Rock Performance

    U Should Not Be Doing That —Amyl and The Sniffers

    The Emptiness Machine — Linkin Park

    NEVER ENOUGH — Turnstile

    Mirtazapine — Hayley Williams

    Changes (Live From Villa Park) Back to the Beginning – YUNGBLUD Featuring Nuno Bettencourt, Frank Bello, Adam Wakeman, II — WINNER

    Best Metal Performance

    Night Terror — Dream Theater

    Lachryma — Ghost

    Emergence — Sleep Token

    Soft Spine — Spiritbox

    BIRDS — Turnstile — WINNER

    Best Rock Song

    As Alive as You Need Me to Be — Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross, songwriters (Nine Inch Nails) — WINNER

    Caramel — Vessel1 & Vessel2, songwriters (Sleep Token)

    Glum — Daniel James & Hayley Williams, songwriters (Hayley Williams)

    NEVER ENOUGH — Daniel Fang, Franz Lyons, Pat McCrory, Meg Mills & Brendan Yates, songwriters (Turnstile)

    Zombie — Dominic Harrison & Matt Schwartz, songwriters (YUNGBLUD)

    Best Rock Album

    private music — Deftones

    I quit — HAIM

    From Zero — Linkin Park

    NEVER ENOUGH — Turnstile — WINNER

    Idols — YUNGBLUD

    Best Alternative Music Performance

    Everything Is Peaceful Love — Bon Iver

    Alone — The Cure — WINNER

    SEEIN’ STARS — Turnstile

    Mangetout — Wet Leg

    Parachute — Hayley Williams

    Best Alternative Music Album

    SABLE, fABLE – Bon Iver

    Songs of a Lost World — The Cure — WINNER

    DON’T TAP THE GLASS — Tyler, The Creator

    Moisturizer — Wet Leg

    Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party — Hayley Williams

    Best R&B Performance

    YUKON — Justin Bieber

    It Depends — Chris Brown Featuring Bryson Tiller

    Folded — Kehlani — WINNER

    MUTT (Live From NPR’s Tiny Desk) — Leon Thomas

    Heart of a Woman — Summer Walker

    Best Traditional R&B Performance

    Here We Are — Durand Bernarr

    UPTOWN — Lalah Hathaway

    LOVE YOU TOO — Ledisi

    Crybaby — SZA

    VIBES DON’T LIE — Leon Thomas — WINNER

    Best R&B Song

    Folded — Darius Dixson, Andre Harris, Kehlani Parrish, Donovan Knight, Don Mills, Khris Riddick-Tynes & Dawit Kamal Wilson, songwriters (Kehlani) — WINNER

    Heart 0f a Woman — David Bishop & Summer Walker, songwriters (Summer Walker)

    It Depends — Nico Baran, Chris Brown, Ant Clemons, Ephrem Lopez Jr., Ryan Press, Bryson Tiller, Elliott Trent & Dewain Whitmore Jr., songwriters (Chris Brown Featuring Bryson Tiller)

    Overqualified — James John Abrahart Jr & Durand Bernarr, songwriters (Durand Bernarr)

    YES IT IS — Jariuce Banks, Lazaro Andres Camejo, Mike Hector, Peter Lee Johnson, Rodney Jones Jr., Ali Prawl & Leon Thomas, songwriters (Leon Thomas)

    Best Progressive R&B Album

    BLOOM — Durand Bernarr — WINNER

    Adjust Brightness — Bilal

    LOVE ON DIGITAL — Destin Conrad

    Access All Areas — FLO

    Come as You Are — Terrace Martin & Kenyon Dixon

    Best R&B Album

    BELOVED — GIVĒON

    Why Not More? — Coco Jones

    The Crown — Ledisi

    Escape Room — Teyana Taylor

    MUTT — Leon Thomas — WINNER

    Best Rap Performance

    Outside — Cardi B

    Chains & Whips — Clipse, Pusha T & Malice Featuring Kendrick Lamar & Pharrell Williams — WINNER

    Anxiety — Doechii

    tv off — Kendrick Lamar Featuring Lefty Gunplay

    Darling, I — Tyler, The Creator Featuring Teezo Touchdown

    Best Melodic Rap Performance

    Proud of Me — Fridayy Featuring Meek Mill

    Wholeheartedly — JID Featuring Ty Dolla $ign & 6Lack

    Luther — Kendrick Lamar with SZA — WINNER

    WeMaj —Terrace Martin & Kenyon Dixon Featuring Rapsody

    SOMEBODY LOVES ME — PARTYNEXTDOOR & Drake

    Best Rap Song

    Anxiety — Jaylah Hickmon, songwriter (Doechii)

    The Birds Don’t Sing — Gene Elliott Thornton Jr., Terrence Thornton, Pharrell Williams & Stevie Wonder, songwriters (Clipse, Pusha T & Malice Featuring John Legend & Voices Of Fire)

    Sticky — Aaron Bolton, Dudley Alexander Duverne, Gloria Woods, Dwayne Carter, Jr., Janae Wherry, Tyler Okonma & Rex Zamor, songwriters (Tyler, The Creator Featuring GloRilla, Sexyy Red & Lil Wayne)

    TGIF — Lucas Alegria, Dillon Brophy, Yakki Davis, Gloria Woods, Jess Jackson, Ronnie Jackson, Mario Mims & Jorge M. Taveras, songwriters (GloRilla)

    tv off — Jack Antonoff, Larry Jayy, Kendrick Lamar, Dijon McFarlane, Sean Momberger, Mark Anthony Spears & Kamasi Washington, songwriters (Kendrick Lamar Featuring Lefty Gunplay) — WINNER

    Best Rap Album

    Let God Sort Em Out — Clipse, Pusha T & Malice

    GLORIOUS — GloRilla

    God Does Like Ugly — JID

    GNX — Kendrick Lamar — WINNER

    CHROMAKOPIA — Tyler, The Creator

    Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album

    Wintersongs — Laila Biali

    The Gift of Love — Jennifer Hudson

    Who Believes In Angels? — Elton John & Brandi Carlile

    Harlequin — Lady Gaga

    A Matter of Time — Laufey — WINNER

    The Secret of Life: Partners, Volume 2 — Barbra Streisand

    Best Musical Theater Album

    Buena Vista Social Club — WINNER

    Death Becomes Her

    Gypsy

    Just In Time

    Maybe Happy Ending

    Best Country Solo Performance

    Nose On the Grindstone — Tyler Childers

    Good News — Shaboozey

    Bad As I Used to Be [From “F1® The Movie”] — Chris Stapleton

    I Never Lie — Zach Top

    Somewhere Over Laredo — Lainey Wilson

    Best Country Duo/Group Performance

    A Song to Sing — Miranda Lambert and Chris Stapleton

    Trailblazer — Reba McEntire, Miranda Lambert, Lainey Wilson

    Love Me Like You Used to Do — Margo Price & Tyler Childers

    Amen — Shaboozey & Jelly Roll — WINNER

    Honky Tonk Hall of Fame — George Strait, Chris Stapleton

    Best Country Song

    Bitin’ List — Tyler Childers, songwriter (Tyler Childers) — WINNER

    Good News — Michael Ross Pollack, Sam Elliot Roman & Jacob Torrey, songwriters (Shaboozey)

    I Never Lie — Carson Chamberlain, Tim Nichols & Zach Top, songwriters (Zach Top)

    Somewhere Over Laredo — Andy Albert, Trannie Anderson, Dallas Wilson & Lainey Wilson, songwriters (Lainey Wilson)

    A Song to Sing — Jenee Fleenor, Jesse Frasure, Miranda Lambert & Chris Stapleton, songwriters (Miranda Lambert and Chris Stapleton)

    Best Traditional Country Album

    Dollar a Day — Charley Crockett

    American Romance — Lukas Nelson

    Oh What a Beautiful World– Willie Nelson

    Hard Headed Woman — Margo Price

    Ain’t in It for My Health — Zach Top — WINNER

    Best Contemporary Country Album

    Patterns — Kelsea Ballerini

    Snipe Hunter — Tyler Childers

    Evangeline Vs. The Machine — Eric Church

    Beautifully Broken — Jelly Roll — WINNER

    Postcards From Texas — Miranda Lambert

    Best American Roots Performance

    LONELY AVENUE — Jon Batiste Featuring Randy Newman

    Ancient Light — I’m With Her

    Crimson and Clay — Jason Isbell

    Richmond on the James — Alison Krauss & Union Station

    Beautiful Strangers — Mavis Staples — WINNER

    Best Americana Performance

    Boom — Sierra Hull

    Poison In My Well — Maggie Rose & Grace Potter

    Godspeed — Mavis Staples

    That’s Gonna Leave a Mark — Molly Tuttle

    Horses — Jesse Welles

    Best American Roots Song

    Ancient Light — Sarah Jarosz, Aoife O’Donovan & Sara Watkins, songwriters (I’m With Her) — WINNER

    BIG MONEY — Jon Batiste, Mike Elizondo & Steve McEwan, songwriters (Jon Batiste)

    Foxes In the Snow — Jason Isbell, songwriter (Jason Isbell)

    Middle — Jesse Welles, songwriter (Jesse Welles)

    Spitfire — Sierra Hull, songwriter (Sierra Hull)

    Best Americana Album

    BIG MONEY — Jon Batiste — WINNER

    Bloom — Larkin Poe

    Last Leaf on the Tree — Willie Nelson

    So Long Little Miss Sunshine — Molly Tuttle

    Middle — Jesse Welles

    Best Bluegrass Album

    Carter & Cleveland — Michael Cleveland & Jason Carter

    A Tip Toe High Wire — Sierra Hull

    Arcadia — Alison Krauss & Union Station

    Outrun — The Steeldrivers

    Highway Prayers — Billy Strings — WINNER

    Best Traditional Blues Album

    Ain’t Done with the Blues — Buddy Guy — WINNER

    Room on the Porch — Taj Mahal & Keb’ Mo’

    One Hour Mama: The Blues of Victoria Spivey — Maria Muldaur

    Look Out Highway — Charlie Musselwhite

    Young Fashioned Ways — Kenny Wayne Shepherd & Bobby Rush

    Best Contemporary Blues Album

    Breakthrough — Joe Bonamassa

    Paper Doll — Samantha Fish

    A Tribute to LJK — Eric Gales

    Preacher Kids — Robert Randolph — WINNER

    Family — Southern Avenue

    Best Folk Album

    What Did the Blackbird Say to the Crow — Rhiannon Giddens & Justin Robinson

    Crown of Roses — Patty Griffin

    Wild and Clear and Blue — I’m With Her — WINNER

    Foxes In the Snow — Jason Isbell

    Under the Powerlines (April 24 – September 24) — Jesse Welles

    Best Gospel Album

    Sunny Days — Yolanda Adams

    Tasha — Tasha Cobbs Leonard

    Live Breathe Fight — Tamela Mann

    Only on the Road (Live) — Tye Tribbett

    Heart of Mine — Darrel Walls, PJ Morton — WINNER

    Best Contemporary Christian Music Album

    CHILD OF GOD II — Forrest Frank

    Coritos Vol. 1 — Israel & New Breed — WINNER

    King of Hearts — Brandon Lake

    Reconstruction — Lecrae

    Let the Church Sing — Tauren Wells

    Best Latin Pop Album

    Cosa Nuestra — Rauw Alejandro

    BOGOTÁ (DELUXE) — Andrés Cepeda

    Tropicoqueta — KAROL G

    Cancionera — Natalia Lafourcade — WINNER

    ¿Y ahora qué? — Alejandro Sanz

    Best Música Urbana Album

    DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS — Bad Bunny — WINNER

    Mixteip — J Balvin

    FERXXO VOL X: Sagrado – Feid

    NAIKI — Nicki Nicole

    EUB DELUXE — Trueno

    SINFÓNICO (En Vivo) — Yandel

    Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album

    Genes Rebeldes — Aterciopelados

    ASTROPICAL — Bomba Estéreo, Rawayana, ASTROPICAL

    PAPOTA — CA7RIEL & Paco Amoroso — WINNER

    ALGORHYTHM — Los Wizzards

    Novela — Fito Paez

    Best Música Mexicana Album (including Tejano)

    MALA MÍA — Fuerza Regida, Grupo Frontera

    Y Lo Que Viene — Grupo Frontera

    Sin Rodeos — Paola Jara

    Palabra De To’s (Seca) — Carín León — WINNER

    Bobby Pulido & Friends Una Tuya Y Una Mía – Por La Puerta Grande (En Vivo) — Bobby Pulido

    Best Tropical Latin Album

    Fotografías — Rubén Blades, Roberto Delgado & Orquesta

    Raíces — Gloria Estefan — WINNER

    Clásicos 1.0 — Grupo Niche

    Bingo — Alain Pérez

    Debut y Segunda Tanda, Vol. 2 — Gilberto Santa Rosa

    Best Global Music Performance

    EoO – Bad Bunny — WINNER

    Cantando en el Camino — Ciro Hurtado

    JERUSALEMA — Angélique Kidjo

    Inmigrante Y Que? — Yeisy Rojas

    Shrini’s Dream (Live) — Shakti

    Daybreak — Korwar

    Best African Music Performance

    Love — Burna Boy

    With You — Davido Featuring Omah Lay

    Hope & Love — Eddy Kenzo & Mehran Matin

    Gimme Dat — Ayra Starr Featuring Wizkid

    PUSH 2 START — Tyla — WINNER

    Best Global Music Album

    Sounds of Kumbha — Siddhant Bhatia

    No Sign of Weakness — Burna Boy

    Eclairer le monde – Light the World — Youssou N’Dour

    Mind Explosion (50th Anniversary Tour Live) — Shakti

    Chapter III: We Return to Light — Anoushka Shankar Featuring Alam Khan & Sarathy Korwar

    Caetano e Bethânia Ao Vivo — Caetano Veloso and Maria Bethânia — WINNER

    Best Reggae Album

    Treasure Self Love — Lila Iké

    Heart & Soul — Vybz Kartel

    BLXXD & FYAH — Keznamdi — WINNER

    From Within — Mortimer

    No Place Like Home — Jesse Royal

    Best Children’s Music Album

    Ageless: 100 Years Young — Joanie Leeds & Joya

    Buddy’s Magic Tree House — Mega Ran

    Harmony — FYÜTCH & Aura V — WINNER

    Herstory — Flor Bromley

    The Music of Tori and The Muses — Tori Amos

    Best Comedy Album

    Drop Dead Years — Bill Burr

    PostMortem — Sarah Silverman

    Single Lady — Ali Wong

    What Had Happened Was… — Jamie Foxx

    Your Friend, Nate Bargatze — Nate Bargatze — WINNER

    Best Audio Book, Narration & Storytelling Recording

    Elvis, Rocky & Me: The Carol Connors Story — Kathy Garver

    Into the Uncut Grass — Trevor Noah

    Lovely One: A Memoir — Ketanji Brown Jackson

    Meditations: The Reflections of His Holiness The Dalai Lama — Dalai Lama — WINNER

    You Know It’s True: The Real Story of Milli Vanilli — Fab Morvan

    Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media

    A Complete Unknown — Timothée Chalamet

    F1® The Album — (Various Artists)

    KPop Demon Hunters — (Various Artists)

    Sinners — (Various Artists) — WINNER

    Wicked — (Various Artists)

    Best Score Soundtrack Soundtrack for Visual Media (Includes Film and Television)

    How to Train Your Dragon — John Powell, composer

    Severance: Season 2 — Theodore Shapiro, composer

    Sinners — Ludwig Göransson, composer — WINNER

    Wicked — John Powell & Stephen Schwartz, composers

    The Wild Robot — Kris Bowers, composer

    Best Score Soundtrack for Video Games and Other Interactive Media

    Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora – Secrets of the Spires — Pinar Toprak, composer

    Helldivers 2 — Wilbert Roget, II, composer

    Indiana Jones and The Great Circle — Gordy Haab, composer

    Star Wars Outlaws: Wild Card & A Pirate’s Fortune — Cody Matthew Johnson & Wilbert Roget, II, composers

    Sword of the Sea — Austin Wintory, composer — WINNER

    Best Song Written for Visual Media

    As Alive as You Need Me to Be [From “TRON: Ares”] — Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross, songwriters (Nine Inch Nails)

    Golden [From “KPop Demon Hunters”] — EJAE & Mark Sonnenblick, songwriters (HUNTR/X: EJAE, Audrey Nuna, REI AMI) — WINNER

    I Lied to You [From “Sinners”] — Ludwig Göransson & Raphael Saadiq, songwriters (Miles Caton)

    Never Too Late [From “Elton John: Never Too Late”] — Brandi Carlile, Elton John, Bernie Taupin & Andrew Watt, songwriters (Elton John, Brandi Carlile)

    Pale, Pale Moon [From “Sinners”] — Ludwig Göransson & Brittany Howard, songwriters (Jayme Lawson)

    Sinners [From “Sinners”] — Leonard Denisenko, Rodarius Green, Travis Harrington, Tarkan Kozluklu, Kyris Mingo & Darius Povilinus, songwriters (Rod Wave)

    Best Music Video

    Young Lion — Sade, Sophie Muller, video director; Sade & Aaron Taylor Dean, video producers

    Manchild — Sabrina Carpenter, Vania Heymann & Gal Muggia, video directors; Aiden Magarian, Nathan Scherrer & Natan Schottenfels, video producers

    So Be It — Clipse, Hannan Hussain, video director; Daniel Order, video producer

    Anxiety — Doechii, James Mackel, video director; Pablo Feldman, Jolene Mendes & Sophia Sabella, video producers — WINNER

    Love — OK Go, Aaron Duffy, Miguel Espada & Damian Kulash Jr., video directors; Petra Ahmann, video producer

    Best Music Film

    Devo — Devo, Chris Smith, video director; Danny Gabai, Anita Greenspan, Chris Holmes & Chris Smith, video producers

    Live at the Royal Albert Hall — RAYE, Paul Dugdale, video director; Stefan Demetriou & Amy James, video producers

    Relentless — Diane Warren, Bess Kargman, video director; Peggy Drexler, Michele Farinola & Kat Nguyen, video producers

    Music By John Williams — John Williams, Laurent Bouzereau, video director; Sara Bernstein, Laurent Bouzereau, Justin Falvey, Darryl Frank, Brian Grazer, Ron Howard, Meredith Kaulfers, Kathleen Kennedy, Frank Marshall, Steven Spielberg & Justin Wilkes, video producers

    Piece By Piece— Pharrell Williams, Morgan Neville, video director; Morgan Neville, Caitrin Rogers, Mimi Valdes & Pharrell Williams, video producers

    Best Recording Package

    And The Adjacent Possible — Hà Trinh Quoc Bao, Damian Kulash, Jr., Claudio Ripol, Wombi Rose & Yuri Suzuki, art directors (OK Go)

    Balloonerism — Bráulio Amado & Alim Smith, art directors (Mac Miller)

    Danse Macabre: De Luxe — Rory McCartney, art director (Duran Duran)

    Loud Is As — Farbod Kokabi & Emily Sneddon, art directors (Tsunami)

    Sequoia — Tim Breen & Ken Shipley, art directors (Various Artists)

    The Spins (Picture Disc Vinyl) — Miller McCormick, art director (Mac Miller)

    Tracks II: The Lost Albums — Meghan Foley & Michelle Holme, art directors (Bruce Springsteen) — WINNER

    Best Album Cover

    CHROMAKOPIA — Shaun Llewellyn & Luis “Panch” Perez, art directors (Tyler, The Creator) — WINNER

    The Crux — William Wesley II, art director (Djo)

    Debí Tirar Más Fotos — Benito Antonio Martinez Ocasio, art director (Bad Bunny)

    Glory — Cody Critcheloe & Andrew J.S., art directors (Perfume Genius)

    Moisturizer — Hester Chambers, Ellis Durand, Henry Holmes, Matt de Jong, Jamie-James Medina, Joshua Mobaraki & Rhian Teasdale, art directors (Wet Leg)

    F*** U SKRILLEX YOU THINK UR ANDY WARHOL BUT UR NOT!! <3 — Skrillex

  • Grammys 2026: Tyla wins ‘Best African Music Performance’, beats Burna Boy, Davido, Ayra Starr 

    Grammys 2026: Tyla wins ‘Best African Music Performance’, beats Burna Boy, Davido, Ayra Starr 

    South African singer, Tyla has won the Best African Music Performance award at the 68th Annual Grammy Awards.

    She took home the prize for her song “Push 2 Start”, beating out Nigerian stars Burna Boy, Davido, and Ayra Starr, as well as Eddy Kenzo and Mehran Matin’s Hope & Love. who were all nominated in the category.

    READ ALSO: The men who ruined a republic

    This marks Tyla’s second win in the Best African Music Performance category, following her inaugural win in 2024 with “Water”.

    The category was introduced to spotlight African music on the global stage, and Tyla’s win highlights the growing influence of African music worldwide.

    The 68th Grammy Awards also honored legendary Nigerian musician Fela Anikulapo Kuti with a Lifetime Achievement Award, shining a light on the continent’s cultural impact.

  • Burna Boy loses Best Global Music Album at 2026 Grammys

    Burna Boy loses Best Global Music Album at 2026 Grammys

    Award-winning Nigerian singer Burna Boy was edged out of the Best Global Music Album category at the 2026 Grammy Awards.

    His project, No Sign of Weakness, lost to Brazilian music legends Caetano Veloso and Maria Bethânia, whose live album, Caetano e Bethânia Ao Vivo, clinched the award.

    READ ALSO: The men who ruined a republic

    Burna Boy faced strong competition in the category, which also featured Siddhant Bhatia’s Sounds of Kumbha, Youssou N’Dour’s Éclairer le monde (Light the World), and Anoushka Shankar’s Chapter III: We Return to Light.

    The loss capped a difficult night for the Nigerian star, who had earlier missed out on the Best African Music Performance award. That category was won by South African singer Tyla, whose track Push 2 Start triumphed over entries from Burna Boy, Davido, and Ayra Starr.

  • Aig-Imoukhuede calls for enhanced focus on agriculture

    Aig-Imoukhuede calls for enhanced focus on agriculture

    Chairman, Access Holdings Plc, Mr. Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede has called for a renewed focus on agriculture as Nigeria’s pathway to sustainable jobs, inclusive growth and long-term national resilience.

    He said Nigeria’s growth lies in deliberate reinvention of agriculture as a coordinated, system-driven engine of work.

    Aig-Imoukhuede spoke at the weekend at the 33rd Convocation Lecture of the Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta (FUNAAB), in Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    Speaking on the theme “Agriculture, the Future of Work, and the University as Catalyst,” Aig-Imoukhuede challenged policymakers, universities and graduates to look beyond traditional narratives of farming and recognise agriculture as Nigeria’s most scalable platform for dignified employment, innovation and national transformation, if properly governed and coordinated.

    The lecture formed a central intellectual pillar which has reinforced the university’s growing reputation as a global thought leader at the intersection of agriculture, governance and development.

    Aig-Imoukhuede noted that while global discourse on the future of work was dominated by automation and artificial intelligence, Africa’s more urgent challenge is the creation of productive, sustainable and large-scale employment for its youthful population.

    READ ALSO: The men who ruined a republic

    Agriculture, he argued, offers a unique comparative advantage.

    He said: “Agriculture is not merely about farming. It is a complex system encompassing science, engineering, logistics, finance, technology, regulation and trade. No other sector matches its capacity to create jobs across skill levels, income bands and rural–urban divides while strengthening food security and national resilience”.

    Drawing lessons from the biblical account of Joseph in Egypt and Brazil’s agricultural transformation, he emphasised that agriculture becomes truly transformative only when treated as an integrated system rather than a series of isolated interventions. Turning to Nigeria, he observed that despite vast arable land, human capital and a large domestic market, the country remained a net food importer due to weak coordination rather than a lack of ideas or effort.

    “Nigeria’s agricultural story is not one of failure,” he stated, “but one of unfinished architecture.”

    He urged graduates to see agriculture as a modern, technology-enabled and value-chain-driven career space, noting that the most significant employment opportunities lie beyond the farm gate, in storage, processing, logistics, quality assurance, branding and export markets.

    He also cautioned against over-reliance on technology without strong institutions and governance, stressing that enduring transformation required patient capital, credible systems and consistent leadership.

    Addressing the graduating class, directly, Aig-Imoukhuede called for adaptability, lifelong learning and civic responsibility, reminding them that Nigeria’s future depends on builders of systems, not spectators.

    Earlier, Vice-Chancellor of FUNAAB, Prof. Babatunde Kehinde, welcomed guests and described the Convocation Lecture as a celebration of excellence, learning and institutional pride.

    He noted that the lecture remained a defining intellectual tradition of the University, providing a platform for critical engagement with national and global challenges. He, however, expressed confidence in FUNAAB’s commitment to excellence, innovation and national development.

    The lecture was chaired by the Chairman of the Federal Civil Service Commission, Prof. Tunji Olaopa, who called for a fundamental rethinking of Nigeria’s University education system, particularly universities of agriculture.

    He urged such institutions to align more deliberately with national development priorities and the future aspirations of Nigerian youth. He raised concerns over youth unemployment and unemployability, warning of their implications for social stability and national cohesion.

    He advocated a balanced educational model that combines manpower development with character formation and urged universities to embrace emerging technologies, such as artificial intelligence, robotics, drones, GIS and the Internet of Things, to drive smart agriculture and innovative agribusiness. He also called for sustainability-driven research, innovation hubs and community-focused solutions, particularly for rural development.

    In his concluding remarks, Olaopa identified key reforms needed to reposition Nigeria’s university system, including greater institutional autonomy, improved funding through public-private partnerships and a more developmental approach to industrial relations.

    The 33rd Convocation Lecture thus underscored FUNAAB’s role as a global knowledge hub and catalyst for ideas capable of reshaping agriculture, governance and the future of work in Africa, while positioning the University at the forefront of debates shaping Nigeria’s long-term development trajectory.

  • Nigeria, Saudi Arabia deepen housing development

    Nigeria, Saudi Arabia deepen housing development

    As part of Nigeria’s investor engagement on the sidelines of the 2026 Real Estate Future Forum (RFF 2026) in Riyadh, the Minister of Housing and Urban Development, Ahmed Musa Dangiwa, held a high-level bilateral meeting with the Saudi Arabian Minister of Municipal and Rural Affairs and Housing (MOMRAH), Majed bin Abdullah Al-Hogail, alongside senior officials of the Ministry.

    During the meeting, Arc. Dangiwa presented Nigeria’s flagship Renewed Hope Housing Programme, highlighting its scale, structured delivery architecture, and strong alignment with private capital.

    He also showcased the Federal Government’s Building Materials Manufacturing Hubs initiative, aimed at accelerating local production, reducing construction costs, creating jobs, and strengthening Nigeria’s construction value chain.

    “Nigeria is positioning housing not just as a social good, but as a major driver of economic growth, industrialisation, and investment,” Dangiwa said.

    “Under the Renewed Hope Housing Programme, we are delivering homes at scale across income segments, supported by clear policies, bankable PPP frameworks, and strong demand fundamentals.”

    He added that Nigeria is actively seeking strategic partnerships with credible Saudi institutions and firms.

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     “We are keen to deepen collaboration with the Kingdom through MOMRAH and to be introduced to reputable Saudi developers, manufacturers, financiers, and technology partners who are ready to enter the Nigerian market. Our Building Materials Manufacturing Hubs, in particular, offer a compelling opportunity for Saudi investors to participate in local production and long-term value creation,” the Minister noted.

    In his response, Minister Al-Hogail welcomed Nigeria’s reform-oriented housing agenda and expressed openness to enhanced institutional cooperation between both countries.

     “Saudi Arabia recognises the scale of Nigeria’s housing demand and the seriousness of the reforms being undertaken to unlock private investment,” Minister Al-Hogail said. “There are clear areas of synergy between our housing and urban development objectives, especially in large-scale housing delivery, construction technologies, and local manufacturing.”

    He further noted that MOMRAH would support engagement with relevant Saudi stakeholders.

     “We see value in facilitating connections between Nigerian counterparts and reputable Saudi entities with the experience, capital, and technical capacity to contribute meaningfully to Nigeria’s housing and construction sector,” he added.

    The meeting reinforces Nigeria’s strategy of leveraging global platforms such as RFF 2026 to mobilise investment, share best practices, and forge strategic alliances that accelerate housing delivery and industrial development under the Renewed Hope Agenda.

    The Federal Ministry of Housing and Urban Development will continue follow-up engagements with MOMRAH and prospective Saudi partners to translate the discussions into concrete investment pathways and project-level collaborations in Nigeria.

  • Reforms, inclusion, technology reshaping capital market, says NGX Group

    Reforms, inclusion, technology reshaping capital market, says NGX Group

    Group Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group) Plc, Mr. Temi Popoola has said Nigerian capital market has been consolidating its position as a structured gateway to the African market.

    According to him, macroeconomic reforms, digital platforms, and expanding investor participation have seen the market scaling from milestones to milestones.

    Popoola highlighted how Nigeria’s ongoing reforms are translating into tangible investment opportunities, particularly for women and diaspora investors.

    Reflecting on Nigeria’s 2025 adjustment phase, he noted that difficult but necessary reforms, alongside improved price discovery, have laid the foundation for more sustainable growth in 2026.

    He pointed to the NGX All-Share Index’s 51.19 per cent gain in 2025, attributing the performance to improvements in corporate earnings, dividend consistency, and economic reforms, rather than speculative activity.

    He said: “Capital is becoming increasingly selective globally. What we are seeing in Nigeria is a market that has embraced reforms, strengthened transparency, and invested in resilient infrastructure. The focus is on building an investable platform that supports long-term economic growth”.

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    He underscored the role of inclusive participation in deepening market resilience, noting a growing proportion of women investors among new retail accounts.

    Referencing a recent telecommunications public offer in which women accounted for 76 per cent of more than 110,000 new investor accounts, Popoola said broader participation contributes to healthier markets through longer investment horizons, disciplined accumulation, and more risk-aware decision-making.

    “Women don’t just participate in markets; they help stabilize them,” Popoola said.

    Popoola spoke at Pan-African Investment Lounge hosted by Radiant Collective Capital (RCC). With the theme: “Global Economic Outlook 2026 & Overview of the Nigerian Stock Exchange: Opportunities and Market Structure,” the virtual session brought together women professionals, founders, and business leaders from across Africa and the diaspora.

    Looking ahead to 2026, Popoola identified five interconnected pillars shaping Nigeria’s investment landscape: global geopolitical shifts creating alternative supply-chain opportunities; strengthening macroeconomic stability with projected GDP growth of 4.4 per cent; renewed foreign portfolio investment driven by improved transparency and attractive yields; closer coordination between fiscal and monetary policy; and greater asset utilisation through new listings and infrastructure-linked instruments.

    He also emphasised that future market growth will increasingly be driven by technology, sustainability, and strategic partnerships. Digital platforms such as NGX Invest are expanding access and transparency across the primary market, while ESG-linked initiatives, including the NGX Net-Zero project, support long-term market resilience and risk management. Partnerships with regulators and key market stakeholders, he noted, remain central to sustaining investor confidence.

    Popoola said NGX Group plans to build on this engagement with targeted investor education initiatives in 2026, focusing on digital market access, sector-specific opportunities, and structured pathways for diaspora investment.

    The session set the stage for deeper collaboration between NGX Group and women-led investment networks across the continent.

  • Oando grows net profit to N241.3billion amid optimism on production

    Oando grows net profit to N241.3billion amid optimism on production

    Oando Plc grew its net profit to N241.3 billion in 2025 as the indigenous energy solutions group saw double-digit growths across crude and gas production.

     Key extracts of the interim report and accounts of Oando for the year ended December 31, 2025 showed 32 per cent increase in production by its upstream business, averaging 32,482 boepd.

    The growth was driven by 36 per cent increase in crude oil production to 11,269 bopd, 24 per cent increase in gas production to 19,982 boepd, and 715 per cent increase in NGL production to 1,231 bpd.

    The group attributed the production growth to the full-year consolidation of the NAOC JV interest, improved operational uptime resulting from the reactivation of previously constrained wells, and targeted infrastructure upgrades across operated assets.

    The report showed that profit after tax rose by 10 per cent to N241.3 billion in 2025 compared with N220.1 billion in 2024, supported by higher upstream production, impairment reversals, and favourable tax adjustments.

    However, revenue declined 21 per cent to N3.21 trillion from N4.09trillion in 2024, while gross profit decreased by 82 per cent year-on-year to N27.8 billion, down from N155.9 billion in 2024.

    According to the group, the decline in earnings reflected change in revenue mix as it scaled back high-turnover, lower-margin refined-product trading in favour of higher-margin crude and gas trading opportunities, as well as the impact of non-cash items.

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    Group Chief Executive, Oando Plc, Mr. Wale Tinubu, CON, 2025 was a year of relentless execution as the group successfully transitioned from the integration of the NAOC Joint Venture into operational delivery.

    “Over the year under review, we reinforced asset integrity, strengthened security across our operating areas, and materially improved uptime, delivering a 32 per cent year-on-year increase in total production. Operated Joint Venture production averaged approximately 80,545 boepd, translating to 32,482 boepd net to Oando, alongside a 30 per cent increase in crude oil liftings and a 59 per cent increase in gas sales volumes.

    “Building on this foundation, we launched our development drilling programme with the successful completion and start-up of the Obiafu-44 gas-condensate well. This well represents the first execution milestone within a phased 36-well development programme, designed to restore field deliverability, unlock incremental production and advance the Group’s medium-term growth objectives,” Tinubu said.

    According to him, within its trading business, the group recorded a 42 per cent increase in crude oil cargos traded, rising to 26 crude oil cargos (29.4 MMbbl) compared to 21 cargos (20.7 MMbbl) traded in 2024.

    “In our downstream trading business, we responded decisively to evolving market dynamics by deliberately rebalancing our portfolio away from gasoline importation toward higher-margin crude and gas opportunities. We expanded global exports and leveraged structured offtake and pre-export financing arrangements to support liquidity, cash-flow resilience, and effective production monetization for our clients,” Tinubu said.

    He noted that during the period, Oando deliberately paused premium motor spirit (PMS) trading in response to structural changes in Nigeria’s domestic downstream landscape, pointing out that while the rebalancing resulted in a short-term reduction in reported earnings, it aligns with the group’s longer-term focus on margin quality and capital efficiency.

    Looking ahead, Tinubu assured that with operational control firmly embedded and the foundations for growth clearly established, the group is focused on the diligent execution of its development programme to accelerate production growth, strengthen cash generation and enhance long-term value creation.

    “As we enter 2026, we will continue to allocate capital prudently, deepen operational resilience and build on the momentum achieved,” Tinubu said.

    The report showcased the company’s transition from asset integration following the acquisition to a decisive assumption of operatorship, evidenced by strong upstream performance.

    Capital expenditure increased significantly from 2024, with higher investment in upstream development, facility integrity, and infrastructure optimisation. This investment is strategic; production growth and increased revenue depend on these foundational capabilities being in place, and more importantly, it is evidence that the company is postured correctly for the future.

    In line with its group-wide optimisation strategy, the company realised $17.7 million in cost savings across key operating inputs through disciplined contract optimisation.

    During the period, retained earnings returned to a positive position, reflecting non-cash intra-group balance sheet realignments associated with ongoing capital restructuring. Collectively, these developments enhance the Company’s financial resilience and position it to deliver sustainable, long-term value as it enters its next phase of growth.

  • Israeli, Nigerian startups drive job creation

    Israeli, Nigerian startups drive job creation

    A surge in startup activity across Israel and Nigeria is generating substantial employment opportunities, with both nations leveraging technology innovation to address economic challenges and food security concerns.

    Israel’s high-tech sector has demonstrated remarkable resilience, according to Startup Nation Central’s report, which tracked $10.6 billion in funding and a 49 per cent rise in mergers and acquisitions. The ecosystem employs tens of thousands of professionals, with strength in cybersecurity and emerging agricultural technology sectors.

    According to reports, Israel’s agritech sector has shown robust growth in employment from 2019 to 2025, driven by innovation in precision agriculture, robotics, and water management amid global food security demands.

    By 2025, the industry employed over 15,000 professionals across more than 500 companies.

    The country’s agricultural technology sector has become a significant employment driver, now boasting over 500 companies employing more than 15,000 professionals as of 2026. The agritech industry generates over $2 billion in annual exports, with demand shifting from manual labor to specialized roles in AI, robotics, data analysis, and software engineering for smart farming systems.

    “The sector is projected to grow by 20–25 per cent annually through 2030, increasing demand for professionals in agronomy, data science, and international sales,” according to industry analysis.

    Specialised innovation hubs, such as the Beit Asher Food-Tech Quarter in the Galilee, are being established to create jobs in northern Israel and transform the place into an agritech and food-tech center.

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    In Nigeria, the Federal Government has unveiled fresh incentives aimed at attracting large-scale investment into the country’s agricultural sector. Vice President Kashim Shettima announced the measures are designed to expand irrigation, improve farmers’ access to credit, accelerate mechanization, and create millions of rural jobs under President Bola Tinubu’s economic reform agenda.

    Speaking recently at the Food and Agriculture Organisation’s National and Subregional Hand-in-Hand Investment Forum in Abuja, Shettima described hunger as “the great equalizer that exposes humanity’s vulnerabilities and fragility,” stressing that food security is as much a matter of global stability as it is of survival.

    The new approach will include single-window platforms for land registration, strengthened credit facilities for farmers, large-scale mechanization projects, and expanded irrigation schemes.

    “Strategic investment in irrigation alone could triple yields, free us from seasonal dependency, and fortify our resilience against climate shocks,” Shettima said.

    The Vice President pointed to the 2021–2025 National Development Plan, which seeks to lift 35 million people out of poverty, create 21 million jobs in rural communities, and guarantee food and nutritional sufficiency across the country. “Another major consideration today is the expiration of the National Development Plan 2021–2025 and the preparation of its successor, the Renewed Hope Plan 2026–2030. This, to us, is no ordinary transition. It is the bridge between lessons learnt and ambitions pursued. The Renewed Hope Plan will consolidate ongoing reforms, deepen policy continuity, and align our medium-term strategies with the long-term horizon of Nigeria Agenda 2050. It’s a practical roadmap towards a $1 trillion economy by 2030,” he said.

    Dean of Universal Learn Direct Academia (ULDA), Engr. Babatunde Faleye said the organisation is working to improve vocational training for workers in construction and other industries.

    According to him, the training is to help them improve job skills and achieve early adaptation to the industries.

    He explained that the goal to make available skilled professionals to service increasing demand and creating more and better jobs.

  • ‘Farmers lost N5trillion to poor weather forecasts’

    ‘Farmers lost N5trillion to poor weather forecasts’

    The Foundation for Peace Professionals (PeacePro) hinted that Nigerian farmers lost about N5 trillion productive capital between 2024 and 2025 to poor and misleading weather forecasts by the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMet) as well as policy-induced crashes.

    It declared that Nigeria’s agriculture sector is in a deep structural crisis.

    In a statement, the group’s Executive Director, Abdulrazaq Hamzat described the losses as direct agricultural capital destruction at the producer level, stressing that the estimate does not include secondary economic effects such as consumer inflation, GDP contraction, foreign exchange pressure, or security related costs.

     “Those impacts come later. What has already happened is the liquidation of farmer capital,” PeacePro said.

    He added that Nigeria did not successfully “control food prices between 202 and 2025. Instead, a combination of poorly timed policy interventions, price suppression mechanisms, weak market coordination, and unreliable weather forecasting by NiMet forced farmers to sell produce below cost, wiping out the capital required to sustain future production cycles.”

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     “This was not a market correction. It was a policy shock that transferred value away from producers.

    The statement said that while Nigeria has an estimated of between 38 and 40 million people engaged in agriculture, clarifying that the most severe damage was concentrated among market facing producers, not subsistence farmers.

    It added that “although subsistence farmers were also adversely affected, particularly by poor and misleading weather forecasts issued by NiMet.

    “The most affected group includes 6–8 million producers, small and medium scale commercial farmers, storage poor price taking producers, farmers engaged in grains, tubers, vegetables, and legumes.

    The group maintained that the scale of destruction is comparable to a financial sector collapse, with one critical difference.

     “This crisis did not happen in banks or stock markets.

    It happened quietly, in farms and rural communities, cautioning that depleted farmer capital will inevitably lead to reduced planting in 2026, lower domestic food supply, higher future food prices, increased rural poverty and social instability, the statement added.

    PeacePro therefore urged Nigerian authorities to publicly acknowledge the scale of agricultural capital destruction and immediately shift policy away from short term price suppression toward producer protection, capital preservation, and market stability.

  • Sterling Bank accelerates renewable energy transition

    Sterling Bank accelerates renewable energy transition

    Sterling Bank Limited has brought together stakeholders in the renewable energy industry to explore ways to accelerate action in the sector.

    The premier colloquium, held in Lagos on Monday, aimed to identify priority areas for action to increase energy access and drive economic growth in the quest to attain a one trillion-dollar economy.

    Managing Director, Sterling Bank Limited, Mr. Abubakar Suleiman, gave the charge in his address at the colloquium organized with the theme: Beyond The Grid; Unlocking New Frontiers in Renewable Energy.

    The   CEO,   who   was   represented   by   Dele   Faseemo,   Group   Executive, Corporate & Investment Banking, explained that Sterling Bank will be paying closer attention to policy actions in two or three key priority areas, especially regulation and financing.

    He noted that by focusing on these areas, the Bank can do more to   drive   progress and expand access to energy, which he described   as   essential   for   supporting   economic   growth   and   overall development.

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    In a keynote address titled Scaling Electrification in Nigeria, The REA Impact, Managing Director and CEO of The Rural Electrification Agency (REA), Dr. Abba Aliyu, spoke on the vision, mission and mandate of the agency.

    He noted that Nigeria requires about $26 billion to address its energy deficit. He said the energy transition in Nigeria is a strategic shift towards achieving universal, reliable and sustainable energy access by integrating the grid, mini-grid and off grid technologies while aligning with national development and climate goals.

    The CEO who was represented by Mr. Abba Hayatudden, Senior Advisor to the   MD,   said  “REA  is  strategically  expanding  and  optimizing  channels  to accelerate the adoption and sustainable growth of renewable energy acrossthe   country   in   the   areas   of   value   chain   development,   regulation enhancement,   funding   windows,   alternative   resources   and   technical standardization.”

    Minister   of   Power,   Adebayo   Adelabu,   commended   Sterling   Bank   for convening the conversation on renewable energy.

    He stated that the Federal Government has placed renewable energy and rural electrification at the heart of the Renewed Hope Agenda.

    The minister who was represented by Engineer Samuel Ayangeaor said, “The Federal   Ministry   of   Power   has   continued   to   expand   electricity   access   to underserved communities in a bid to drive economic growth, foster industrial activity and create jobs across the nation.”

    In his goodwill message, Mr. Biodun Ogunleye, Lagos State Commissioner for Energy   and   Mineral   Resources,   noted   that   the   current   administration   is implementing the most ambitious energy transformation ever undertaken.

    He highlighted the state’s efforts in renewable energy and sustainability, including the two-gigawatt Lagos grid scale solar project.

    The CEO of Sterling One Foundation, Mrs. Olapeju Ibekwe, emphasized the need for collective action. She urged participants not to allow the day’s deliberations   to   end   as   mere   conversations   or   points   documented   in   a communiqué.

    Instead, she encouraged everyone to leverage the strength of their   networks,   act   with   intention,   and   remain   focused   on   delivering meaningful impact.

    The colloquium featured two panel sessions on financing and scaling green energy solutions in Africa, among others.