Nigeria is generating billions of data points every day. But most of the intelligence built from that data… The post Nigeria is fueling the global AI economy butNigeria is generating billions of data points every day. But most of the intelligence built from that data… The post Nigeria is fueling the global AI economy but

Nigeria is fueling the global AI economy but capturing little of the value by Kelechi Ndieze

2026/03/10 20:32
5 min read
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Nigeria is generating billions of data points every day. But most of the intelligence built from that data is domiciled elsewhere. That is the quiet structural risk in our AI ambition. We are building AI-powered products on infrastructure we do not control, using models we do not own, priced in currencies we do not manage.

For now, that works. At scale, it becomes a constraint. 

Right now, we generate enormous amounts of data, payment data, mobility patterns, e-commerce behaviour, and digital identity signals. Yet the infrastructure that refines that data into scalable intelligence largely sits outside our borders. We are participating in AI. But mostly at its lowest-margin layer. That distinction will matter more over the next decade than whether your startup has an AI feature. 

Every Nigerian startup deck now has an AI slide. Investors ask about AI integration before revenue projections. Founders are racing to embed generative models into customer support,  credit scoring, fraud detection, and logistics optimisation. Regulators are discussing national  AI strategies. 

ai 101: Explaining basic AI concepts you need to knowImage source: Unsplash

As I write this, Startups are integrating generative AI into customer support and underwriting.  Banks are expanding machine learning use cases. The government has signalled great interest in a national AI strategy. Investors increasingly ask founders about AI integration. 

On the surface, momentum is building. Nigeria appears eager to participate in the AI economy. But beneath the excitement sits a structural issue: Nigeria participates heavily in the AI  economy’s input layer, and far less in the infrastructure and control layers where long-term value accumulates. That gap matters. My question is: where exactly does Nigeria sit in the AI  value chain? 

Nigeria Produces Data at scale, with over 120 million active internet subscriptions and one of  Africa’s most dynamic digital consumer markets. Digital payments processed through NIBSS  run into trillions of naira annually. Fintech, mobility, e-commerce, and social commerce platforms generate vast volumes of behavioural data daily.

Senate committee on ICT manipulated NITDA Bill report, dubiously trying to scale bill into law- Gbenga SesanNITDA Logo

According to NITDA, the digital economy is projected to contribute 21% of GDP by 2027-2030. This is an unprecedented volume of data. In short, Nigeria generates meaningful digital exhaust: transaction histories, credit patterns, logistics data, and consumption signals.  

These datasets are valuable inputs into modern AI systems. But data generation is only one layer of the value chain. Where the margin actually sits, AI value creation spans several layers, which include Data generation, Data processing and labelling, Compute infrastructure, Model training, Platform control and Application monetisation. 

Nigeria is strong in the first layer, which is data generation. In the others, especially in computing and foundational model development, dependence on foreign infrastructure is significant.

Most  Nigerian AI-enabled startups rely on: Offshore cloud providers, Dollar-denominated infrastructure, Foreign-owned foundational models and External APIs. That reliance is understandable. It is also structurally limiting. 

FX volatility becomes a technology risk. Pricing decisions made in Seattle, Delaware or Silicon  Valley affect Lagos-based unit economics. Access to advanced models depends on external policy and market priorities. 

Nigerian founders are building impressive AI-enabled products. But building on imported compute means that defensibility often sits at the application layer, not the infrastructure layer. For early-stage founders, that exposure may be manageable. At scale, it becomes strategic. That narrows the margin potential. It also makes local startups more sensitive to shifts in global AI pricing, regulation, and access policies.

See also: Artificial Intelligence to add $1 trillion to Africa’s GDP by 2035- AfDB report

In a capital-constrained environment, those variables matter. If Nigerian startups are to compete globally or even regionally, deeper participation in infrastructure layers will eventually become important. 

This reality does not diminish the ingenuity of Nigerian founders. In fact, the country’s startup ecosystem has shown remarkable ability to innovate under constraint. But structural exposure remains. I dare to write that the Nigerian Startup ecosystem is ahead of regulations. I think the compliance and regulatory bodies are trying to catch up. 

Nigeria has made progress on digital policy frameworks, from startup legislation to data protection. The next phase requires alignment between AI ambition and infrastructure investment. AI competitiveness depends on: Reliable, affordable power, High-capacity data  centres, Broadband density and low latency, Research collaboration between universities and  industry and Clear, predictable data governance 

Without investment in compute capacity and research ecosystems, Nigeria’s AI participation will remain consumption-driven rather than production-driven. Adoption alone does not guarantee value capture. This is not an argument for digital isolation. Global cloud integration has enabled the current wave of startup innovation. The question is about balance. 

As AI becomes embedded in credit scoring, logistics optimisation, fraud detection, health diagnostics, and public service delivery, countries that control more layers of the value chain will shape both economic and regulatory outcomes. Nigeria already contributes meaningfully to the data layer of AI systems. The next policy and investment conversation should focus on how to increase participation in compute, research, and platform ownership, not just application development. 

In the oil era, Nigeria exported crude and imported refined fuel. In the AI era, the pattern risks repeating itself in a different form: exporting behavioural data while importing refined intelligence. The AI economy is not only about building smarter products. It is about deciding where in the stack you want to compete. Right now, Nigeria competes strongly at the base. 

The long-term opportunity lies further up the chain.

Kelechi Ndieze is a Founder–Strategist working at the intersection of strategy, digital technology, brand, and communication with over 7 years of experience working providing solutions for the African, US and UK markets. He leads initiatives that help organisations design competitive positioning, build digital-first solutions, and communicate ideas that move markets and people.

The post Nigeria is fueling the global AI economy but capturing little of the value by Kelechi Ndieze first appeared on Technext.

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