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IFC, ASR Africa boost women-led enterprises with $4m financing, 1,000-founder expansion

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The International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group, in partnership with the Abdul Samad Rabiu Africa Initiative (ASR Africa), has announced a major scale-up of the She Wins Africa programme, expanding its reach from 100 to 1,000 women entrepreneurs across Sub-Saharan Africa.

The announcement was made at the She Wins Africa closing event held recently in Lagos, following strong performance from the inaugural cohort, which collectively mobilised more than $4 million in startup financing.

Over the past year, the programme supported women-led small and growing businesses across multiple African markets, delivering measurable improvements in business growth, investment readiness and access to finance.

She Wins Africa is a comprehensive investment-readiness initiative designed to empower women entrepreneurs through targeted technical assistance, investor linkages and strategic advisory support. The programme aims to bridge the persistent financing gap faced by women-led enterprises while promoting inclusive economic growth and gender equality across Africa.

Speaking on the programme’s expansion, IFC’s Senior Operations Officer and Regional Gender Hub Lead for Africa, Marieme Niang Camara, said the success of the pilot phase made scaling imperative.

“Starting with 100 women was a successful pilot, but for a region like Africa, 100 is only the beginning. The impact we saw—in access to capital, markets and investment readiness—clearly showed this was a programme worth scaling,” she said.

“We are now expanding to 1,000 women entrepreneurs through a strategic segmentation approach, supporting startups, growth-stage and scale-up businesses with tailored technical assistance, investment-readiness support and direct access to capital through funds and IFC-backed banks.”

Camara disclosed that participating startups collectively raised over $4 million, with 17 women-led enterprises securing external financing, surpassing the programme’s initial targets. She added that She Wins Africa delivered technical assistance at scale, including 123 hours of targeted support, tailored advisory services for 22 startups, 275 investor connections across regional and international markets, and the mobilisation of 100 mentors across Africa.

On his part, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of ASR Africa, Ubon Udoh, described She Wins Africa as one of the continent’s most impactful entrepreneurship programmes.

“This initiative goes beyond individual countries; it strengthens Africa’s entire economy. We are scaling from 100 women entrepreneurs across 23 countries to 1,000 women across the continent, increasing both geographical reach and long-term impact,” Udoh said.

“The lessons from the first phase are being applied to ensure the success of this next phase, driving business growth, job creation and stronger entrepreneurial ecosystems.”

Udoh also noted that the collaboration with IFC has prompted ASR Africa to review and strengthen its own mentorship programmes for young female entrepreneurs, while highlighting the hybrid model of combining knowledge support with access to capital as a key driver of Phase One’s success.

Beyond financing, She Wins Africa provides business coaching, masterclasses and investment-readiness training, helping founders refine business models, strengthen operations and attract private capital. A core pillar of the programme is catalytic funding designed to crowd in private investment for women-led enterprises.

Through an initial catalytic grant of approximately $100,000, the programme helped mobilise nearly $400,000 in follow-on investment, working with regional and local investment partners including Octerra Capital, IMEX, Sahel Capital, Nubia Capital and Convergence Advisory.

These funds supported critical operational investments such as expanding production capacity, upgrading infrastructure and hiring additional staff, while reducing investor risk and accelerating growth.

The inaugural cohort included women-led businesses at varying stages, from early-stage startups to more established enterprises, allowing for stage-appropriate support across the entrepreneurial journey. This inclusive model strengthened the pipeline of investment-ready businesses and demonstrated the effectiveness of tailored financing approaches.

The expansion marks the first of four projects envisioned under the She Wins Africa umbrella. IFC and ASR Africa say the next phase will deepen regional reach, prioritise scale-ready ventures, and continue supporting early-stage businesses, building a stronger and more resilient pipeline of women-led enterprises positioned to drive inclusive economic growth across Africa.

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Business

Dangote expands industrial ambition to steel, power, ports

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President of the Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, has unveiled plans to enter steel manufacturing, electricity generation and port development, marking what could become the conglomerate’s most consequential diversification since the launch of its $20 billion refinery complex.

Dangote said the expansion forms part of a long-term strategy to accelerate Africa’s industrialisation, deepen manufacturing capacity and reduce structural dependence on imports.

The group, which already operates across cement, sugar, salt, fertiliser and petrochemicals, recently commenced full operations at the Dangote Petroleum Refinery & Petrochemicals, now producing approximately 650,000 barrels of refined products per day. According to Dangote, output is expected to scale up further over the next three years as optimisation and expansion plans progress.

But refining, he noted in a recent interview with The New York Times, represents only one layer of a broader industrial blueprint.

“We have to industrialise Africa,” Dangote said, outlining steel production, expanded power generation and new port infrastructure as the next strategic pillars.

Industry analysts say the proposed entry into steel manufacturing could significantly alter Nigeria’s industrial ecosystem. Steel remains foundational to construction, transport infrastructure, housing and heavy manufacturing — sectors critical to economic diversification.

Investment in power generation is equally strategic. Chronic electricity shortages have long constrained Nigeria’s productivity, forcing manufacturers to rely heavily on self-generation at high cost. Vertical integration into power could lower operating risks while improving competitiveness.

Port development, meanwhile, is expected to address logistics bottlenecks that inflate trade costs and undermine export capacity. With large-scale manufacturing expansion, integrated port access would enhance supply chain efficiency and reduce turnaround time for imports of raw materials and exports of finished goods.

Dangote cited India’s Tata Group as a model for diversified industrial expansion, describing its multi-sector footprint as evidence that indigenous conglomerates can anchor economic transformation in emerging markets.

Beyond scale, employment generation remains central to the strategy. With Nigeria projected to require between 40 and 50 million new jobs by 2030, Dangote argued that large industrial platforms are essential to absorbing the country’s expanding youth population.

The refinery currently employs about 30,000 workers, roughly 80 per cent of them Nigerians. Expansion into steel, power and port infrastructure is projected to lift total group employment to about 65,000.

Dangote also disclosed plans to list the refinery on the Nigerian Exchange, broadening domestic investor participation and deepening local capital market involvement in large-scale industrial assets.

Despite progress, the group continues to face structural constraints, including crude supply inconsistencies and logistics inefficiencies within the oil value chain. Dangote has repeatedly called for improvements in feedstock security and regulatory alignment to ensure optimal refinery utilisation.

Nevertheless, he reaffirmed the group’s commitment to sectors capable of retaining value within Africa and reducing import dependence.

“Nobody dared to do it, so we did it,” he said, underscoring his belief that transformative private capital deployment remains critical to reshaping Nigeria’s industrial architecture.

With cement operations across several African countries and a refinery reshaping Nigeria’s downstream market, Dangote’s next pivot into steel, power and ports signals a new phase in Africa’s industrial consolidation drive.

 

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Oil & Gas

NEITI backs Tinubu’s executive order mandating direct remittance of oil revenues

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By Ambrose Nnaji

The Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) has applauded President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for issuing Executive Order 9, directing that all revenues accruing to the Federal Government from tax oil, profit oil, profit gas, royalty oil, and other government entitlements under production sharing, profit-sharing and risk service contracts be remitted directly into the Federation Account.

The Executive Order, signed on February 13, 2026, is designed to safeguard oil and gas earnings, curb leakages and eliminate wasteful expenditure by ensuring that all operators transfer statutory revenues straight to the constitutionally recognised Federation Account.

In a statement, NEITI’s Executive Secretary, Musa Sarkin Adar, described the directive as “a bold and strategic milestone” in Nigeria’s ongoing fiscal reform agenda aimed at strengthening transparency, accountability and revenue mobilisation.

According to him, the presidential order aligns squarely with Section 162 of the Constitution, which mandates that all revenues collected by the government be paid into the Federation Account for equitable distribution among the federating units.

“For over two decades of our oversight work, NEITI has consistently recommended the full remittance of all revenues due to the Federation Account in line with constitutional provisions,” Sarkin Adar stated. “This directive reflects the realisation of that long-standing reform objective.”

He recalled that NEITI’s 2017 special report titled Unremitted Funds, Economic Recovery and Oil Sector Reform uncovered over $20 billion in revenues owed to the Federation but yet to be remitted at the time — a development that significantly strained government finances and triggered high-level engagements between the executive, legislature and oversight bodies.

The NEITI boss said the new order marks a critical step in addressing systemic revenue gaps and consolidating reforms introduced under the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), which remains the principal legislation governing Nigeria’s oil and gas sector.

While affirming NEITI’s longstanding advocacy that contributed to the enactment of the PIA, Sarkin Adar urged the National Assembly and relevant stakeholders to expedite amendments to align certain provisions of the law with emerging fiscal reforms and current operational realities.

“The core objectives of transparency, efficiency and accountability that shaped NEITI’s advocacy for the PIA are being advanced through this directive,” he noted.

He reiterated the agency’s commitment to collaborate with anti-corruption institutions, development partners and other stakeholders to deepen reforms and ensure the transparent, accountable and efficient management of Nigeria’s extractive resources for the benefit of all federating units and citizens.

Analysts say the Executive Order, if effectively implemented, could significantly boost government revenues, reduce opacity in oil remittances and improve fiscal stability at a time when Nigeria is intensifying efforts to strengthen its public finance framework.

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Oil & Gas

Oil industry regulator expands local content drive into healthcare

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By Ambrose Nnaji

The Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) has commissioned a state-of-the-art Clinical Skills and Simulation Laboratory at Bayelsa Medical University (BMU), Yenagoa, in a landmark intervention aimed at strengthening local capacity and aligning medical training in Nigeria with global standards.

Fully funded and equipped by the Board, the hi-tech facility features high-fidelity adult and paediatric patient simulators, laparoscopic training systems, and obstetric trainers, advanced life support mannequins, consultation cubicles, and integrated audio-visual learning systems. University authorities said the equipment will enable students to acquire hands-on clinical experience in a zero-risk environment — allowing them to learn, make mistakes, and perfect life-saving skills before attending to real patients.

Speaking during the commissioning at the university’s Clinical Skills Acquisition Centre, the Executive Secretary of NCDMB, Engr. Felix Omatsola Ogbe, underscored the broader philosophy driving the intervention.

“Capacity building is not just about oil and gas; it is about ecosystems,” he said, noting that industries such as healthcare, education, engineering and logistics are intrinsically linked to the oil and gas value chain.

Represented by the Acting Director, Planning, Research and Statistics, Ene Ette, Ogbe described simulation-based learning as the global benchmark in modern medical education. According to him, it enhances clinical competence, sharpens decision-making, and builds professional confidence in a controlled and safe environment.

He commended the management of BMU and partner organisations for what he termed a strategic collaboration that translates policy into measurable developmental impact, describing the upgraded laboratory as a deliberate investment in human capital development.

The Vice Chancellor, Professor Dimie Ogoina, in his welcome address, described the event as more than the unveiling of a building or medical equipment.

“This is about securing the future of healthcare in Bayelsa State, the Niger Delta and Nigeria at large,” he said.

Ogoina expressed deep appreciation to the NCDMB, recalling that upon assuming office in 2025, he unveiled the A.S.P.I.R.E. Agenda — a strategic vision to transform BMU into a globally recognised leader in medical education, research and innovation powered by technology and excellence.

“Today, we are seeing that vision come alive,” he said, noting that the facility would directly contribute to reducing medical errors, improving patient safety and producing highly skilled indigenous healthcare professionals capable of serving both communities and industries.

“We are not just training doctors for today; we are nurturing digital-age physicians ready to compete globally,” he emphasised.

The Vice Chancellor also acknowledged the support of Bayelsa State Governor, Douye Diri, as well as the Commissioners for Health and Education, for creating an enabling environment for strategic partnerships.

The Provost of the College of Medicine, Professor Philip Eyimina, said the laboratory played a pivotal role in the university’s recent accreditation verification exercise, affirming its readiness to deliver quality medical education in line with national standards.

“In this laboratory, our students will master essential competencies — from history taking and physical examination to suturing, intravenous access, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, obstetric procedures and emergency response — while developing critical thinking, teamwork and communication skills,” he stated.

Representing Governor Diri, the Commissioner for Education, Gentle Emelah, described the facility as remarkable and aligned with the university’s ambition to become a leading institution in medical education globally.

The Pro-Chancellor, Tarilah Tebepah, thanked the NCDMB for its foresight and generosity, urging the Board to sustain its partnership with the institution as it continues to address resource constraints.

The ceremony was complemented with a guided tour of the facility, including its Virtual Reality Station, Paediatric and Airway Management Stations, ECG and Patient Monitoring Station, IV Fluids Administration and Cannulation Station, and a fully equipped Demonstration Hall — underscoring a new chapter in technology-driven medical training in the Niger Delta.

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