Tag: Nigeria

  • Maiduguri’s floods, Belém’s forests: Nigeria’s climate test at COP30

    Maiduguri’s floods, Belém’s forests: Nigeria’s climate test at COP30

    By Abdullah Adeyanju Binuyo

    When world leaders gather in Belém, Brazil this November for COP30, history will be made. For the first time, the UN climate summit will take place in the Amazon, the lungs of our planet and home to one in ten known species. 

    Belém is not a backdrop but a statement. The Amazon is where the fight for climate stability may be won or lost.

    For Nigeria, Belém is a mirror. The Amazon is to Brazil what mangroves, savannas, and deltas are to Nigeria: ecosystems of immense value but under relentless threat from short term economics and weak governance. The parallels are striking. 

    In Brazil, deforestation advances despite global concern. In Nigeria, climate disasters are already here.

    Maiduguri’s flooding, triggered by the Alau Dam overspill and worsened by ignored warnings, buried homes and livelihoods. Alongside the nationwide floods of 2022 that displaced more than a million people, these events show how fragile ecosystems and fragile governance combine to devastating effect.

    The Climate Change Act of 2021 was meant to close this gap. Hailed as Nigeria’s climate constitution, it created the National Council on Climate Change (NCCC) to coordinate ministries, set carbon budgets, and guide Nigeria’s 2060 net zero pledge. 

    Yet four years later, the Council is remembered less for leadership than for absence. Absence of continuity, absence of budgetary stability, and absence of integration across sectors. The gap between ambition and action mirrors the gap between bold declarations and submerged communities in Borno State.

    Into this vacuum steps Temi Majekodunmi, the newly appointed Director General of the NCCC. An expert in climate finance, she inherits a fractured institution. Her task is formidable: restore credibility to Nigeria’s climate governance and present a coherent agenda at COP30. 

    The urgency is not abstract. It is written in the floods of Maiduguri, the dunes of the north, the collapsing coastlines of the south, and the fragile infrastructure tested by every storm.

    The Act was ambitious, mandating carbon budgets, a Climate Change Fund, and alignment with the Energy Transition Plan. But instability derailed it. Three leadership changes created confusion, and the statutory Council meeting has never been convened.

    Ministries pushed conflicting agendas: one advancing gas monetization, another renewable energy targets, another struggling with adaptation. The crisis deepened in December 2023 when the Budget Office misclassified the Council and cut its federal allocation. 

    Climate governance was sacrificed to short term priorities, influenced by political settlement theory, just as the United States once exited the Paris Agreement, yielding to the consensus of the elite. Meanwhile, Nigeria’s Energy Transition Plan, unveiled in 2022 with global acclaim and requiring ten billion dollars annually, remains without financing.

    These shortcomings carry immense stakes because Nigeria is not marginal in the climate story. It is both vulnerable and strategically central. Advancing desertification in the north drives migration and insecurity, testing the absorptive capacities of forced host communities. 

    Erratic rainfall in the central belt undermines food production. Rising seas threaten southern cities and oil infrastructure. In the Niger Delta, saltwater intrusion and floods displace entire communities. Climate change in Nigeria is not a distant prospect but a daily crisis.

    This is why Majekodunmi’s appointment carries such weight. Her role is less about technical detail and more about influence, securing presidential attention, negotiating budgets, and pushing climate action across government.

    Nigeria’s problem is not ambition but execution: the ability to turn pledges into bankable projects, attract finance, and deliver resources where needed. She must restore credibility by convening overdue meetings, reconciling overlapping legal frameworks, and building financial pathways that unlock domestic and global funds. Without these shifts, Nigeria will keep producing polished but hollow climate plans while droughts, floods, and displacement intensify.

    Belém itself offers both caution and opportunity. Brazil’s proposed Tropical Forest Forever Facility, a 125 billion dollar plan to reward forest conservation, could reshape climate finance. Nigeria should pay attention. Its mangroves, savannas, and forests are also vital carbon sinks yet remain undervalued. 

    If Brazil can mobilize billions for the Amazon, Nigeria must design similar mechanisms for its ecosystems. But contradictions persist.

    Brazil promotes climate leadership while expanding oil drilling. Nigeria mirrors this paradox, promoting gas as a transitional fuel while pledging net zero. The answer is not concealment but transparency, channeling hydrocarbon revenues into renewables, adaptation, and resilience while aligning strategies with global sustainability.

    What Nigeria needs is not piecemeal fixes but a Governance for Sustainability Reform Framework. This must embed climate considerations into development planning, compel ministries to align under the Council’s authority, tie federal allocations to climate responsive budgeting, strengthen accountability across all levels, and ensure civil society, private sector, women, and youth have a voice. Such reforms would make Nigeria a credible partner capable of attracting finance, building resilience, and restoring trust.

    COP30 will test Nigeria’s credibility. For too long, the country has been present at summits but absent in delivery. The world now expects evidence: restored funding for the NCCC, progress on the Energy Transition Plan, and clear mechanisms for adaptation finance.

    Belém could be a turning point, but only if Nigeria arrives not as a petitioner but as a leader of the Global South, demanding financiers honor their pledges while proving that its own institutions can absorb and deploy funds effectively.

    If COP30 is remembered as the Amazon COP, Nigeria must ensure it is also remembered as the summit where Africa’s largest economy reclaimed its climate credibility. The Amazon may provide the lungs of the Earth, but Nigeria must show it has the political will and institutional muscle to protect its people. The floods of Maiduguri and the overspill of the Alau Dam remind us that climate change is not theory but a lived national emergency.

    As the world counts down to Belém, Nigeria counts down too, not just to a summit but to a test of whether its new climate captain can steady the ship and chart a course from vulnerability to resilience.

    Dr. Adeyanju Binuyo, (adeyanju@teranpico.com), a techpreneur, strategist, and expert in climate and sustainable development, writes in from Abuja.

  • Nigeria leads call for regional energy integration to curb $120bn import bill at Africa Oil Week 2025

    Nigeria leads call for regional energy integration to curb $120bn import bill at Africa Oil Week 2025

    The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Oil), Sen. Heineken Lokpobiri, has reaffirmed Nigeria’s commitment to driving Africa’s energy security and regional integration.

    Speaking at the 2025 Africa Oil Week (AOW) Ministerial and CEO Leadership Forum, the Minister emphasised the importance of collaboration in tackling the continent’s energy challenges.

    In a statement released by his Special Adviser on Media and Communication, Nneamaka Okafor, Lokpobiri argued that deeper integration through shared infrastructure, unified standards, and collective technical expertise is key to ending energy poverty across Africa.

    “Africa spends over $120 billion annually on hydrocarbon imports,” he revealed.

    “That’s capital flight. These funds should be invested within Africa to drive our own development.”

    He stressed that the real barrier to progress is not the lack of capital but the absence of consistent regulatory and fiscal frameworks across the continent.

    “Investors want stability and predictability. To attract and retain investment, Africa must harmonize its energy policies,” Lokpobiri said.

    Read Also: Ex-lawmaker: stop negative remarks on Nigeria, Tinubu

    As part of Nigeria’s leadership strategy, the Minister announced the launch of the West African Reference Market (WARM), a new initiative aimed at leveraging Nigeria’s expanding refining capacity to supply petroleum products across the West African region and beyond.

    On the issue of global energy transition, Lokpobiri pointed out that the Paris Agreement does not mandate a complete abandonment of fossil fuels, but rather a focus on reducing emissions.

    “Africa contributes just 3% of global CO₂ emissions. We can’t lead the energy transition when many of our people still lack basic access to energy. Our priority must be the responsible use of our resources to power development,” he stated.

    He closed with a call for unity and a renewed continental vision: “Africa has the population, the market, and the natural resources. What we need now is to retain value within the continent and fund our own energy future.”

  • Batista’s sack casts doubts on Venezuela’s Friendly with Nigeria

    Batista’s sack casts doubts on Venezuela’s Friendly with Nigeria

    Fernando Batista’s turbulent reign as head coach of the Venezuelan national team came to a dramatic end on Wednesday, barely hours after La Vinotinto’s humiliating 6-3 home defeat to Colombia in the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifiers.

    The Argentine tactician, who had been under mounting pressure following a string of poor results, was dismissed by the Venezuelan Football Federation (FVF) as the team’s qualifying campaign collapsed. Batista’s final two games in charge saw Venezuela concede nine goals—losing 3-0 to Argentina before the crushing setback against Colombia in Caracas.

    His dismissal leaves Venezuela in disarray just as they prepare to face Nigeria’s Super Eagles in an international friendly scheduled for November 14, 2025, at Shell Energy Stadium in Houston, Texas. The match was confirmed by MLS side Houston Dynamo earlier this week, although the Nigeria Football Federation has yet to issue a statement.

    For Venezuela, the timing could not be worse. Without a substantive head coach, La Vinotinto must regroup quickly to avoid further embarrassment when they square up against an African powerhouse still battling for a World Cup ticket.

    Read Also: Polo royals brace for 2023 Kano Polo Tournament

    The upcoming clash will mark Nigeria’s return to Houston for the first time since their 2-2 draw with Mexico in 2013, and their debut at Shell Energy Stadium, home of the Houston Dynamo and Houston Dash. It will also be the nations’ second-ever meeting—the first came in Miami in November 2012, when Nigeria ran out 3-1 winners courtesy of goals from Brown Ideye, Nosa Igiebor, and Ogenyi Onazi.

    Batista, who took charge of Venezuela in 2023, had been tasked with revitalising the team and steering them toward their first-ever World Cup qualification. Instead, his tenure ends with widespread disappointment and uncertainty over the team’s future direction.

    As tickets for the friendly go on sale this week, the Venezuelan federation now faces the urgent task of finding a new head coach to steady the ship before La Vinotinto take on Nigeria in Houston.

  • Nigeria eyes mining, agriculture to balance trade with South Africa

    Nigeria eyes mining, agriculture to balance trade with South Africa

    For Nigeria to balance trade with South Africa, there is need for diversification in the non-oil sector such as mining, agriculture and others, Deputy High Commissioner, Alexander Temitope Ajayi said yesterday. 

    Ajayi stated this while playing host to the Media Innovation Programme (MIP) cohorts, representatives of MTN and Pan-Atlantic University (PAU), who have been in South Africa on a study tour.

    According to Ajayi, there was need for Nigerian businesses to expand their presence in South Africa as both country continue to work collaborate under the Bi-National Commission (BNC). 

    He said there were a lot of gains for Nigeria to tap from South Africa’s advanced mining expertise, especially as the government of President Bola Tinubu was committed to diversification of the economy through solid minerals, Blue and Digital economies. 

    Alexander Temitope Ajayi

    Ajayi said Nigeria last year held its first critical minerals investment roadshow in Johannesburg, seeking South African partnerships to develop its underutilised mining sector. 

    Read Also: South Africa hold Nigeria to 1-1 draw in crucial World Cup Qualifier

    Noting how South African companies across sectors were entrenched in Nigeria’s economy, the envoy regretted that the reverse was the case in South Africa with only Dangote Group and recently Access Bank as big Nigerian corporations operating in that country. 

     “We need more Nigerian businesses in South Africa. When you quantify it, you discover that there are many South African businesses across different sectors operating in Nigeria but only a handful of Nigerian firms, like Dangote and Access Bank, have entered the South African market,” he said.

    The envoy also pointed to gaps in the non-oil trade balance, explaining that although Nigeria records a favourable overall trade position with South Africa, it was largely due to crude oil exports. 

     Citing President Cyril Ramaphosa’s December 2024 call for stronger two-way trade, Ajayi said: “When you disaggregate the figures, you find that in the non-oil sector we are not doing well. That is where we need to promote more Nigerian goods on South African shelves.”

    Speaking on the forthcoming G20 Summit slated for South Africa in November, Ajayi said Nigeria was playing a critical role and would host a high-level meeting in Abuja on Industrialisation and Agriculture on October 21–22.

    He said the meeting was facilitated by South Africa’s G20 presidency and both countries’ drive to ensure that the African continent was well represented. 

    According to him, the meeting will bring together ministers of industry and agriculture from G20 countries and Africa to explore new frameworks for industrial growth, trade, and food security.

    Ajayi also dismissed claims that it was difficult for foreigners to obtain Nigerian visa from the mission, noting that the process has been streamlined to ensure that applicants without issues are granted approval within 48 hours. 

    The Nation reports that the Defence Adviser for South Africa, Botswana, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mauritius and Kingdom of eSwatini, Commodore Ibrahim Gwaska, as well as other principal staff officers of the mission were in attendance. 

  • Nigeria to face Venezuela in Houston in preparation for AFCON 2025

    Nigeria to face Venezuela in Houston in preparation for AFCON 2025

    Nigeria will take on Venezuela in Houston this November as part of their final preparations for the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco.

    The international friendly is scheduled for Friday, November 14, at the Shell Energy Stadium, marking the Super Eagles’ first-ever appearance at the venue. The fixture is regarded as a crucial tune-up before the continental showpiece kicks off in December.

    For Venezuela, it will be a swift return to Houston, where they previously settled for a goalless draw against Guatemala earlier this year. Coach Fernando Batista’s side heads into the clash on the back of an inconsistent qualifying campaign that included heavy defeats to Argentina and Colombia, leaving defensive concerns to address.

    Nigeria, meanwhile, sees the match as more than a routine international test. With World Cup qualification fixtures already concluded by then, Eric Chelle’s men will use the encounter to fine-tune tactics, test squad depth, and allow fringe players to push for AFCON selection.

    Read Also: Eaglets battle Burkina Faso, Benin in WAFU B U17 AFCON qualifiers

    The Super Eagles, who are drawn in Group C alongside Tunisia, Uganda, and Tanzania, are under pressure to deliver after finishing runners-up to Senegal in the last edition. The Houston showdown offers Chelle a final chance to experiment before the tournament begins

    The game will also revive memories of the nations’ only previous meeting in November 2012, when Nigeria triumphed 3-1 in Miami thanks to goals from Brown Ideye, Nosa Igiebor, and Ogenyi Onazi. Twelve years later, both sides will clash again on the same date—this time with preparation and fine-tuning the clear priority.

  • Nigeria’s crude oil losses fall to 16-year low of 9,600 barrels daily – NUPRC

    Nigeria’s crude oil losses fall to 16-year low of 9,600 barrels daily – NUPRC

    The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) has announced that crude oil losses dropped to 9,600 barrels per day in July 2025, the lowest level in nearly 16 years, close to the 8,500 barrels per day recorded in 2009.

    In a statement issued on Thursday by its Head of Media and Strategic Communications, Mr. Eniola Akinkuotu, the Commission said the decline reflects a “dramatic turnaround” in the upstream sector, as theft and metering issues are being curbed.

    According to NUPRC, crude losses between January and July 2025 stood at 2.04 million barrels, averaging 9,600 barrels per day.

    The development, it said, underscores its sustained efforts to eliminate leakages across Nigeria’s oilfields and pipelines.

    This marks a clear departure from the high-loss years that have long plagued the industry.

    By comparison, the entire 2024 calendar year recorded 4.1 million barrels lost at a daily average of 11,300 barrels. Remarkably, in just the first seven months of 2025, losses were cut by 50.2%, with only 2.04 million barrels lost over the period.

    The figures for the period ending July 2025 also represent a dramatic 94.57% drop in crude oil losses compared to the full year of 2021, when Nigeria lost a staggering 37.6 million barrels at a daily average of 102,900 barrels.

    So far in 2025, only 2.04 million barrels have been lost, which is a reduction of 35.56 million barrels compared to the 37.6 million barrels lost in 2021, underscoring the scale of progress made in just four years.

    Crude oil losses in 2021 were the highest recorded in nearly 23 years, making it the peak year between 2002 and July 2025.

    Read Also: Crude oil refiners hold summit

    Since the implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act in 2021, Nigeria has recorded steady progress in reducing crude oil losses. In 2021, losses stood at 37.6 million barrels, averaging 102,900 barrels per day. By 2022, this dropped to 20.9 million barrels at a daily average of 57,200 barrels.

    The downward trend continued in 2023, with losses reduced to 4.3 million barrels at 11,900 barrels per day. Even more progress was made in 2024, as losses were further contained to 4.1 million barrels, averaging 11,300 barrels per day.

    The Commission has adopted a balanced mix of kinetic and non-kinetic strategies in tackling oil losses. On the kinetic front, the Commission has continued to collaborate closely with security agencies, operators, and communities.

    On the non-kinetic front, NUPRC has implemented strategic regulatory measures to close systemic loopholes. One key initiative is the metering audit across upstream facilities to ensure accurate measurement of production and exports. 

    To further strengthen control, NUPRC approved 37 new crude oil evacuation routes to combat oil theft. 

  • Nigeria’s Ajayi, 16 others jostle for DG chemical weapons control seat 

    Nigeria’s Ajayi, 16 others jostle for DG chemical weapons control seat 

    Amb. Eniola Ajayi will be jostling with 16 other candidates for the position of Director General, Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW).

    OPCW was established in 1993 and came into force on 29 April 1997 as the world’s first multilateral disarmament agreement.

    The Convention aims to eliminate an entire category of weapons of mass destruction by prohibiting the development, production, acquisition, stockpiling, retention, transfer or use of chemical weapons by States Parties within a time frame. 

    As of today OPCW has 193 Member States, who are working together to achieve a world free of chemical weapons.

    President Bola Tinubu has been lobbying fellow African, Asian and other leaders for their support for the Nigeria nominee alongside the candidacy of Dr. Olufemi Elias who has also been nominated for the s International Court of Justice (ICJ) at The Hague, Netherlands, for the term running from 2027 to 2036.

    Ajayi, a Doctor of Optometry, (Eye Doctor) if elected will be the first woman to lead the organisation. 

    The envoy, who was at different times Nigeria’s Ambassador to Hungary and Netherlands.

    While in the Netherlands she also served as the Permanent Representative of Nigeria to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons. 

    Ajayi said that her priority would be to ensure that all the countries sign-up to the convention against chemical weapons.

     Ajayi, who spoke in Abuja, said one of the main things she would do if she emerged as the Director General of OPCW is to ensure that all the countries of the world sign up to the convention, so as to have a universal convention.

    She lamented that right now we live in a very polarized world. 

    She therefore said “I will see how I can be a bridge builder, bringing everybody together to focus on the core reason why the convention came about in the first place. Which is to rid the world of chemical weapons.

    “So that chemical weapons will not be used by anyone at any time and anywhere in the world going forward. So I would ensure that there’s proper collaboration. There’s less polarization within the organisation.

    “And see how we can build a consensus around the issues that matter regarding the prevention, prohibition of chemical weapons.”

    Read Also: Injured Ajayi ruled out of World Cup qualifier

    She also added: “Then, not in the order of priority, I intend to be able to use artificial intelligence in an ethical manner while serving as DG OPCW. They currently use it in the OPCW, but I would further look into how we can use artificial intelligence to our advantage.”

    Amb. Ajayi promised to pay attention to emerging threats for women and ensure focus is paid on forward-thinking leadership for OPCW and promote global cooperation amongst the state parties.

    While noting that there are 193 countries accredited to OPCW right now with four countries Israel, Egypt, South Sudan and North Korea, not yet on board, the envoy said she would encourage them to get enrolled.

    She said: I don’t know what’s going on within their country and why they’ve chosen not to participate. We can only speculate and imagine. So for me, I would say that I hope to get Egypt and Israel to work simultaneously.

    “To be able to achieve the goal of signing up and ratifying the convention together. So that no one is left behind in the process. Then the issue of South Sudan is that they’ve actually shown a desire to join.

    “But they’ve had some limitations because of the war going on there. And I know that there are state parties who have also told me that they’re willing to support their quest to be part of this organisation. And part of what I aim to do for them is to go through the African Union and also ask the state parties who have shown desire to assist in the process of ascension to the convention to come up and let’s do it together.

    “Then for North Korea, North Korea is a country I hope to be able to reach through China because of their relationship. So this is how I intend to go about it. It’s going to be a deliberate and real intentional effort to get them on board.”

  • REEV Africa expo to spotlight renewable energy, electric vehicles in Nigeria

    REEV Africa expo to spotlight renewable energy, electric vehicles in Nigeria

    Nigeria’s renewable energy and electric vehicle sector will take centre stage in November as the REEV Africa Expo 2025 holds in Lagos.

    The event, organized by EV Planet Ltd, is expected to bring together experts, investors, innovators, and policymakers to deliberate on the future of sustainable energy and transportation in the country. 

    It will also provide a platform for showcasing new technologies and building partnerships in an industry many believe holds the key to Nigeria’s energy transition.

    Organizers say the expo comes at a time when the country is increasingly exploring alternatives to fossil fuels amid rising global calls for cleaner and more sustainable energy solutions. 

    Read Also: ARISE TV goes live in South Africa, nine other countries

    “REEV Africa Expo is designed to spark conversations and collaborations that will position Nigeria at the forefront of renewable energy and electric mobility in Africa,” the organizers said.

    The five-day event will feature exhibitions, product launches, workshops, and conferences where thought leaders in the sector are expected to share insights on the evolving market. 

    Industry watchers say it could serve as a turning point for both local businesses and international investors seeking to tap into Nigeria’s growing renewable energy and EV landscape.

    With the global energy industry shifting rapidly towards sustainability, stakeholders believe the REEV Africa Expo could play a decisive role in shaping policies and opportunities that will determine how Nigeria navigates its energy future.

  • Nigeria’s killer touts

    Nigeria’s killer touts

    • By Kene Obiezu

    Sir: A couple of days ago, touts within the Federal Capital Territory chased a man and his wife to their death as they went about their business in the heart of  Nigeria’s capital. The touts, operating on their usual lawless and rudderless frequency, which unfortunately has some imprimatur of authority, fought for the control of the couple’s vehicle. The struggle that ensued led to an accident that instantly killed the couple. An irate mob promptly burnt two of the touts to death.

    Every other day, Nigerians die carelessly in circumstances that lend credence to the fragility of life in the country. The fact that many of these deaths are preventable but are never really prevented speaks volumes. It explains Nigeria’s ever plummeting life expectancy. It explains the fact that insecurity ravages the land, destroying the confidence of investors and sentencing locals to a life of constant fear and uncertainty.

    Nigeria has always had a problem with touts and thugs. The Nigerian landscape is indeed littered with touts and thugs. Empowered by the powerful to tighten their grip on power, these touts are used to rig elections, intimidate opponents, or serve as informal state actors. The fact that they blur the lines between state actors and criminals shows the multifaceted threats they pose.

    Read Also: 23 terrorists killed, 26 kidnap victims rescued in Katsina

    Many times, they behave like criminals. At other times they are actual criminals who do what they want to while acutely aware that there are too many cracks in the Nigerian system that they can escape through.

    Alarmingly, these touts and thugs, who sometimes operate in the full view of Nigeria’s security personnel, consider themselves part of the security structure. But rather than secure Nigerians and make Nigerians feel more secure, they terrorize Nigerians.

    As a country, Nigeria remains a society where civility, dignity, and decorum, especially in public, remain in scandalously short supply.  Many Nigerians have a problem with doing the right thing, and as a result of this, anything goes, many times with deadly consequences for all involved.

    The presence and proliferation of thugs and touts, especially in Lagos and Abuja, is a tear in the image of a country that has the kind of grand aspirations Nigeria has.  It is a shame that such criminals are allowed to rule the roost in many parts of the country.

    While Nigerians generally need reorientation in how to be better citizens of their country, the authorities must do something about thugs and touts all over the country. Many of them are no different from criminals and do all the things that criminals do. They kill, rape, disrupt, and threaten innocent citizens and inflict grievous bodily harm.

    But it is doubtful that the authorities here can really do anything about them. After all, they are helpful and are useful tools in the hands of many of those in power, especially during elections.

    •Kene Obiezu,

    keneobiezu@gmail.com

  • Platform to make learning more affordable in Nigeria

    Platform to make learning more affordable in Nigeria

    Coursera, Inc., a global online learning platform, has announced a course preview experience and localised pricing to make world-class content and AI-powered tools more accessible and affordable for learners in Nigeria. The launch is a step towards Coursera’s aim to help learners master the right skills to grow careers.

    Replacing the previous audit experience, this model gives learners access to the first module of nearly every course on Coursera for free  — with graded assignments, video content, and AI-powered support features like Coursera Coach. This deeper, more interactive preview allows learners to explore content before committing to a full course.

    Coursera’s localised pricing in Nigeria includes professional certificates and specialisations up to 60 per cent less expensive,  Coursera Plus monthly subscription at 60 per cent less expensive and Coursera Plus yearly subscription at 60 per cent less expensive.

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    Coursera Plus provides learners with access to more than 10,000 courses and professional certificates from more than 350 university and industry partners. Learners interested in an individual course can still enrol for up to 35 per cent less expensive.

    “As a fastest-growing learner markets, Nigeria is at the heart of our mission,” said Greg Hart, head of Coursera. “The preview experience makes learning more engaging, offering learners a richer content, while our localised pricing ensures it’s more accessible.”

    Learners will also have free access to Community Impact Courses that address urgent social needs – such as mental health, refugee support, and public health. Eligible learners can continue to apply for financial aid.

    This launch is part of a global rollout across more than 100 countries. Early tests show that access to the full suite of course features, including assignments and AI tools, drives stronger engagement and completion rates. With 2.9 million learners, Nigeria is Coursera’s largest market in Sub-Saharan Africa, with GenAI course enrollments surpassing 119,000 to date.