By Danjuma Amodu | April 13, 2026
NIGCOMSAT Ltd., Nigeria’s state-run satellite firm, is staking a central role in the nation’s industrialisation drive, channelling support to more than 50 startups and scaling up digital skills programmes to convert satellite bandwidth into real economic leverage.
Managing Director/CEO Jane Egerton-Idehen disclosed the scale of the intervention at the SOYUZNIK Alumni National Congress in Abuja on Saturday, where she framed satellite infrastructure not merely as a communications tool but as a catalyst for production, innovation, and national competitiveness.
In a keynote delivered on her behalf by Acting Director of Technical Services, Engr. Ikechukwu Amalu, Egerton-Idehen said the agency’s Space Accelerator Programme — now in its third cohort — has quietly evolved into a pipeline for nurturing technology-driven enterprises, particularly in underserved segments of Nigeria’s digital economy.
Nigeria’s digital economy contributed 17.68% to real GDP in Q4 2024, according to the National Bureau of Statistics, yet youth unemployment remains above 40% and industrial output lags regional peers. State actors are under pressure to link infrastructure investment to jobs and production, not just access.
The intervention comes amid growing concern that Nigeria’s innovation ecosystem, though vibrant, remains weakly linked to industrial output. NIGCOMSAT’s approach seeks to close that gap by pairing startup support with hands-on technical training and expanding connectivity to areas historically left out of the digital economy.
Across states including Adamawa, Jigawa, Cross River, and Enugu, the agency’s VSAT training programmes are equipping young Nigerians with practical, market-ready skills, targeting employability and enterprise creation rather than theoretical knowledge.
Egerton-Idehen argued that such interventions are critical if Nigeria is to transition from a consumption-driven economy to a production-led one.
“Connectivity is no longer a luxury — it is the foundation of modern economic systems,” she said, stressing that countries that fail to build strong digital infrastructure risk being locked out of the next phase of global industrial competition.
She pointed to ongoing projects such as the 774 Connectivity Initiative, which has so far extended digital access to dozens of local government secretariats, as part of efforts to deepen governance, improve service delivery, and stimulate economic activity at the grassroots.
Beyond infrastructure, she called for a structural reset in Nigeria’s education system, urging stronger alignment with emerging technologies including artificial intelligence, data science, and satellite communications.
According to her, the real challenge is not a lack of talent, but the absence of systems that convert knowledge into measurable economic output.
She also warned that innovation ecosystems cannot thrive without deliberate collaboration between academia, industry, and government, backed by sustained investment in research and clear regulatory frameworks that protect intellectual property.
The SOYUZNIK Alumni — comprising graduates of Russian and former Soviet Union institutions — were urged to leverage their international exposure to drive technology transfer and localisation of innovation within Nigeria.
In his welcome remarks, Abuja chapter chairman Agu Collins Agu described the congress as a convergence of technical expertise with the potential to influence national development outcomes.
As Nigeria grapples with sluggish industrial growth and rising youth unemployment, NIGCOMSAT’s expanding role signals a strategic shift — one that places digital infrastructure, innovation, and skills development at the centre of the country’s economic transformation agenda.
