Business
FG woos global investors to invest in 50 oil blocks under 2025 licensing round

By Udeme Akpan
The Federal Government, through the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), has urged global investors to capitalise on opportunities in Nigeria’s 2025 licensing round, offering 50 oil and gas blocks across diverse terrains.
The Commission Chief Executive, Mrs. Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan, made the call on Tuesday at the opening of the 10th anniversary of the Sub-Saharan Africa International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference (SAIPEC) 2026 in Lagos.
Eyesan said the licensing round is structured to unlock Nigeria’s upstream potential under the predictable and transparent regulatory framework established by the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021.
“To facilitate resource access, Nigeria has launched the 2025 licensing round, offering 50 oil and gas blocks across various terrains,” she said.
“This initiative reflects a targeted approach to responsible resource development. We invite capable investors to participate and help realise Nigeria’s promising upstream potential.”
She emphasised that reforms under the PIA have strengthened regulatory certainty, improved transparency and enhanced investor confidence in Nigeria’s upstream sector.
According to her, Nigeria is leveraging renewed global interest in Africa’s hydrocarbons to attract credible and technically competent investors.
Eyesan noted that Africa’s energy investment outlook has improved significantly over the past three years, with the continent now capturing a larger share of global capital expenditure.
“Of the $520 billion projected in worldwide capital investment this year, Africa expects to attract between $48 billion and $50 billion — over eight per cent of the total. This marks a significant rise from previous years when the continent accounted for less than four per cent,” she said.
She attributed the resurgence to renewed investor appetite for both frontier and established basins, particularly in Nigeria, Namibia, Mozambique and other prolific African plays.
Beyond foreign capital inflows, Eyesan stressed the importance of strengthening domestic and regional financing as a stabilising force for Africa’s energy future.
“As we work to draw in more external investment, encouraging capital formation within Africa remains essential. Domestic capital brings stronger commitment and stability, creating more opportunities for sustainable development,” she said.
She added that African independent operators are playing an increasingly prominent role in Nigeria’s upstream sector, driving project execution and capital deployment.
A major milestone in indigenous financing, she noted, is the establishment of the Africa Energy Bank, headquartered in Nigeria.
“The creation of the Africa Energy Bank, proudly hosted in Nigeria, is a milestone. Unified support from stakeholders will be crucial to its success,” she said.
Eyesan also highlighted the growing impact of regional cooperation, particularly in gas development, power infrastructure expansion and regulatory alignment.
“Beyond national efforts, regional cooperation is having a transformative effect,” she said, pointing to expanded gas and power infrastructure aimed at improving energy access, reliability and affordability across the continent.
She added that platforms such as the African Petroleum Regulators’ Forum (AFRIPERF) are strengthening Africa’s collective voice in global energy discourse.
The post FG woos global investors to invest in 50 oil blocks under 2025 licensing round appeared first on Vanguard News.
Business
FG increases domestic borrowing by 241%
By Elizabeth Adegbesan
As part of the Federal Government (FG) borrowing plan for the 2026 budget, the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, has issued Treasury Bills, TBs, to raise N5.8 trillion in the third quarter of 2026 (Q3’26).
This represents a 241 percent year-on-year (YoY) increase when compared to N1.76 trillion sold in Q3’25.
CBN disclosed this in its Nigeria Treasury Bills Issue programme for Q3’26.
Treasury Bills are short term (less than one year) debt instruments used by the apex bank to borrow money from the Nigerian public on behalf of the federal government. CBN also uses TBs to control money supply in the economy.
The TB issue programme commenced on July 1st, and ends on September 23rd, 2026. The settlement date began yesterday and ends on September 24th, 2026.
During the period, the apex bank will issue TBs worth N900 billion on 91 days tenor, N900 billion on 182 days and N4 trillion on 364 days.
A breakdown of the programme revealed that in July, the apex bank plans to issue N2 trillion worth of TBs, comprising N300 billion worth of 91 days bills, N300 billion worth of 182 days bills and N1.4 trillion worth of 364 bills.
In August, the apex bank issued N2.1 trillion worth of TBs, comprising N300 billion worth of 91 days bills, N300 billion worth of 182 days bills, and N1.5 trillion worth of 364 days bills.
In September, CBN plans to sell N1.7 trillion worth of TBs comprising N300 billion worth of 91 days bills, N300 billion worth of 182 days bills and N1.1 trillion worth of 384 days bills.
Business
EVs: Afreximbank wants Nigeria, other African countries to stop exporting Lithium
By Emma Ujah
President and Chairman of the Board of the African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank), Dr. George Elombi, has tasked African nations to stop the export of Lithium, the main raw material used in the production of electric vehicle (EV) batteries. Nigeria is a major exporter of Lithium in Africa, though most of the quantity is illegally exported.
Speaking at the bank’s Mid-Year Media Roundtable in Abuja on Wednesday, he said that rather than exporting raw lithium, African countries should use it to manufacture EV batteries on the continent.
He also said Afreximbank has sufficient funds to finance the production of EV batteries and is ready to provide the necessary funding to any individual or organisation willing to venture into the industry.
In his words, “African mineral resources must work for Africa’s development. EVs are the future of transportation, and the use of lithium to produce EV batteries is taking centre stage in the EV industry.
“Africa must take its position in the EV industry. We have lithium. We should produce EV batteries at home. We simply have to produce them here. There is enough money in Africa to manufacture batteries in Africa.
“If you know anyone who is interested in EV battery production, bring them to me. But if you see someone looking for funding to export lithium, don’t bring them to me.”
Dr. Elombi also said African leaders and institutions must work together to ensure that African funds held outside the continent are repatriated to support the region’s development.
Some rating agencies biased against Africa
Speaking on the bank’s credit ratings, Dr. Elombi, who advocated for African rating agencies, said some global rating agencies initially dismissed Afreximbank as too small and insignificant to drive Africa’s development, while questioning the bank’s trade finance mandate.
According to him, one agency’s 2014 assessment suggested that trade finance could not serve as a foundation for development and implied that the bank’s core mandate lacked relevance.
Business
INNOVATIONS: Enactus, NSE, NCDMB, others partner

By Ebunoluwa Sessou, Cynthia Alo & Precious Enaike
In a bid to accelerate the commercialisation of homegrown engineering solutions capable of addressing Nigeria’s development challenges, Enactus Nigeria, has established a partnership with several organizations and stakeholders to nurture young engineering talents to transform innovative ideas into practical solutions for national development through the Nigerian Engineering Olympiad (NEO).
The organizations in the partnership include the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE), Renaissance Africa Energy Company, First Exploration and Petroleum Development Company (First E&P).
The Olympiad was conceived to bridge the gap between engineering education and industry by transforming students’ innovations into commercially viable businesses.
Speaking at the maiden edition of the competition in Lagos recently, Country Director of Enactus Nigeria, Michael Ajayi, disclosed that 375 applications were received from 984 students across 80 tertiary institutions in Nigeria where only 30 teams qualified for the regional stage but only 12 institutions qualified for the grand finale.
At the end of the competition, students from Modibbo Adama University, Yola, Adamawa State, clinched the grand prize of N50 million and a fully furnished engineering building for their faculty with an innovation known as Ubuntu Sapphire, a community-powered rapid alert system that connects households through low-cost devices to instantly notify neighbours and emergency responders during crises.
The University of Ibadan emerged first runner-up, winning N30 million and engineering equipment worth N75 million for its faculty with Aurora Birth, a health-tech suite designed to reduce neonatal deaths resulting from birth asphyxia in low-resource settings.
The University of Jos secured third place with FarmAnchor, a solar-powered, AI-enabled device that helps smallholder farmers detect crop pests, diseases and soil deficiencies early through multispectral imaging and edge-based machine learning. The team received N20 million, alongside N50 million worth of engineering equipment for its faculty. Ajayi said Enactus Nigeria supports forward-thinking organisations in co-creating and implementing projects that respond to real community needs through data-driven solutions, sustainability principles and entrepreneurial thinking.
“We have remained steadfast in our mission to empower young people to use entrepreneurial action to solve the world’s greatest challenges, starting with those in their immediate communities,” he said.
Delivering a keynote address on behalf of the Executive Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure, NASENI, Mr. Khalil Suleiman Halilu, the Deputy Director of Engineering Infrastructure Department, Dr. Emmanuel Ajani, said countries that dominate the global economy are not necessarily those endowed with abundant natural resources, but those that continuously innovate, commercialise research and build technology-driven industries.
The post INNOVATIONS: Enactus, NSE, NCDMB, others partner appeared first on Vanguard News.
-
Sports2 days agoReal Reason Serena Williams Broke Strict Rule as $50,000 Fine Decision Made
-
Sports19 hours agoFIFA Release Statement After VAR Call During Portugal 2-1 Croatia
-
Sports18 hours agoPiers Morgan Slams BBC Commentators For Cristiano Ronaldo Treatment
-
Sports2 days agoVAR Expert Casts Clear Verdict on Folarin Balogun Red Card vs Bosnia
-
Sports17 hours agoCroatia’s Igor Matanovic Praised For Interview After Goal v Portugal is Ruled Out
-
Sports6 hours agoFIFA Set to Change England vs Mexico World Cup Kick-Off Time
-
Sports15 hours agoWhat Cristiano Ronaldo Told Croatia Star After Controversy in World Cup Game
-
Sports1 day agoUS Icon Brad Friedel Blasts Mexico Ahead of England Match
