FG Launches Digital Economy Research Clusters
Essential Highlights
FG has launched National Digital Economy Research Clusters under Project BRIDGE. The plan links universities, research, and digital infrastructure.
- Project BRIDGE carries a $2 billion investment
- Over 90,000 km of fibre will connect universities
- Six focus areas include AI, skills, trust and safety
- Research is expected to support policy and jobs
- The plan also ties in with EIBIC, NgREN and 3MTT
The Federal Government has launched the National Digital Economy Research Clusters under Project BRIDGE. The move is aimed at repositioning Nigerian universities as centres for research, entrepreneurship, and global competitiveness.
The announcement places universities at the centre of a wider digital economy plan; the target is clear, and the scope is Large.
What the new research clusters are meant to do
The Honourable Minister of Education, Dr Maruf Tunji Alausa, said the initiative brings education, research, and digital infrastructure together to support Nigeria’s move to a knowledge-based economy.
That link matters. It places university research within a broader national plan for digital growth and economic development.
Project BRIDGE and the fibre plan
Dr Alausa said Project BRIDGE is a $2 billion investment.
He added that the project will deploy over 90,000 kilometres of fibre optic infrastructure to connect universities and other listed institutions across the country. The scale is wide; the message from government is that access and connection will support the work ahead.
Six priority areas for the clusters
The National Digital Economy Research Clusters will focus on six priority areas:
- connectivity
- digital public infrastructure
- digital skills
- digital economy
- trust and safety
- artificial intelligence
These areas form the core of the programme. They also show where the Federal Government wants research attention to sit.
What government expects from the research
The programme is designed to make research lead to practical results.
According to the statement, those results include policy solutions, new outputs, and job creation. The stress is on work that leads somewhere concrete, not research that stays on paper.
Link with current education and digital programmes
Dr Alausa said the initiative complements other reforms already under way. He named EIBIC, the Student Venture Capital Grant, and efforts to strengthen NgREN.
The Honourable Minister of Communications, Dr Bosun Tijani, also spoke on the role of research and local knowledge in digital change. He linked that work with the 3MTT Programme and the National AI Strategy.
What the launch signals
The Federal Government said it remains committed to using digital progress to support economic growth and national development.
With the launch of these research clusters, universities are being given a defined place in that plan; research, infrastructure, and entrepreneurship now sit in one frame.
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