Opinion
The Possibility Blueprints: I AM Possible!
Published
3 years agoon
By
Eric
By Tolulope A. Adegoke
“I need to reiterate here that when it comes to this noble task; nothing is impossible! Only change is constant in life. Everyone can improve at anything and at whatever level, provided that he or she is willing enough to undergo the required processes of development. My point is that your life can experience a revolutionary change, as long as you are ready to learn, follow the footsteps of champions and apply other essential life-changing principles from the Holy Scriptures and other relevant sources. This, will equip you with the “possible-abilities” for possibilities beyond measures, even beyond mortal comprehension.” – Tolulope A. Adegoke
The example of Japan is pertinent here. In the aftermath of the Second World War, Japan’s two largest economic cities, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, were bombed to the ground. Several lives and properties were lost. To put it simply, Japan was reduced to nearly nothing, economically and politically.
Yet, because the Japanese believe so much in their individual and national potentials, they have rebuilt their economy to be one of the best in the world. In fact, in the early 2000s, a Prime Minister of the country, while speaking at the anniversary of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombing, said that even if Japan were to be placed in a desert, the Japanese would rebuild their nation to become the second largest economy in the world in a short time.
The truth of that statement can be seen all around – especially with the quality and quantity of products manufactured in Japan. In fact, even though Japan currently does not have enough steel to produce vehicle bonnets, nor does it have enough silicon to produce side-mirrors or even enough rubber to produce steering-wheels, yet the country is the highest exporter of cars in the world.
My point is that Japan rose to be an economic giant from being reduced to zero. Despite the odds and pains, it ascended the ladder of greatness among the nations of the world. This teaches us the power of resilience. Every zero status can be reversed if dutifully worked upon.
The wealth of any individual or nation is not found under the feet but in-between the “ears” – that is, the contents of their brain and character. Let’s apply this to Nigeria as a nation, especially to re-orientate its leaders and citizens, the young ones in particular. The real wealth of Nigeria is not in the creeks of the Niger-Delta or anywhere else in the country. It is neither in the abundance of crude oil nor in the vast mineral resources all over the country. The real wealth lies in the country’s heterogeneous population. Yes, let me repeat it – It is the very citizens of the Nigerian nation that are usually considered the least of its resources (the zero resources) that are its hope and future. This is because right in them lie the ability, acumen and determination to harness and utilise the various natural, mineral and petroleum resources of the nation in line with God’s purpose for its existence.
In truth, the so-called valuable resources that people often jostle and sometimes tussle to get from the ground are not the real resources of any nation; the true resources are the citizens – the often overlooked treasures who have several divinely-endowed potentials in them. Sadly, many of these die daily, before their time, and go the grave with their potentials in them. No wonder the late Myles Munroe said that the richest place on earth is the cemetery!
Pertinent Reassurance
Before proceeding to the next phase in which we shall be exploring detailed principles on positively empowering our zeroes, I need to reiterate here that, when it comes to this noble task, nothing is impossible! Only change is constant in life. Everyone can improve at anything and at whatever level, provided that he or she is willing enough to undergo the required processes of development.
My point is that your life can experience a revolutionary change, as long as you are ready to learn, follow the footsteps of champions and apply other essential life-changing principles from the Scripture and other relevant sources.
Let me illustrate this truth with the experience of D.W Ghent who was said to have participated in Dale Carnegie’s public speaking programme in Philadelphia. Shortly after the opening session, Ghent had invited Carnegie to lunch with him in the manufacturers’ club. Ghent was a middle-aged man and had always led an active life; he was head of his own manufacturing establishment and a leader in church work and civic activities. While they were having lunch that day, he leaned across the table and said: “I have been asked many times to talk before various gatherings, but I have never been able to do so: I get so fussed, my mind becomes an utter blank: So I have side-stepped it all my life. But I am now on a board of college trustees. I must preside at their meetings. I simply have to do some talking…Do you think that is possible for me to learn at this late date in my life?”
“Do I think, Mr Ghent?” Carnegie replied. “It is not a question of my thinking. I know you can, and I know you will if you only practise and follow the directions and instructions.”
Mr Ghent wanted to believe what Carnegie had said, but it seemed too rosy, too optimistic. So he said, “I am afraid you are just being kind; you are merely trying to encourage me.”
After Mr Ghent had completed his training, he and Dale Carnegie lost touch with each other for a while.
Some years later, however, they met again and lunched together at the Manufacturers’ Club. They sat in the same corner and occupied the same table that they had on the first occasion. Reminding Ghent of their former conversation, Carnegie asked him if he really had been too optimistic then. Ghent took a little red-backed notebook out of his pocket and showed him a list of talks and dates for which he had been booked. “And the ability to make these,” he confessed, “the pleasure I get in doing it, the additional service I can render to the community – these are among the most gratifying things in my life. Not only have I given countless public speeches, but just recently I was chosen from all the community leaders in this city to give the introduction when David Lloyd George (then the Prime minister of Great Britain) addresses a mass meeting in Philadelphia.”
Yet, this was the same man who had sat at the same table less than three years before and solemnly asked Carnegie if he would ever be able to talk in public!
We find another amazing proof that nothing is impossible when it comes to transiting from a zero to a hero in the case of the biblical David. The inspiring story of his rise from a despised shepherd boy to a renowned warrior and revered king begins from I Samuel 16. Here, we are told how God, who had seen his commitment to duty and passion for service in the loneliness of the mountains and valleys where he cared for his father’s sheep, sent Samuel to anoint him Israel’s next king, following the rejection of Saul. Being the family’s zero, however, nobody had initially considered presenting David as one of the sons of Jesse – yet the Almighty God who rewards enthusiasm for greatness found him out and he was anointed. It was after this that he killed Goliath before the Philistines and the Israelites. He became a military general of Israel at the very tender age of 17.
David eventually ascended the throne, despite various attempts by Saul to kill him. He started as a zero but eventually emerged a hero! He diligently went through the rough but refining and toughening process of his transition through his strength of character, fear of God, unwavering courage and undaunted self-belief.
I tell you, friend, you too can rise from your present level to an exceedingly glorious and influential one. This is the will of God for you.
Dr. Tolulope A. Adegoke is an accredited ISO 20700 Effective Leadership Management Trainer.
E-mail: adegoketolulope1022@gmail.com;
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Opinion
From 55,000 TB a Year to 1.4 Million a Month: Nigeria’s Data Boom is Overwhelming the System
Published
4 hours agoon
June 15, 2026By
Eric
By Osita Odafi
In late 2025, this writer projected that Nigeria’s data traffic would surpass 13.2 million terabytes (TB) by year-end. It did—closing at 13.25 million TB. What has happened since makes that milestone look modest.
Consider two numbers. In 2020, Nigeria consumed 1,538,000 TB of data across an entire year. In March 2026 alone, the country consumed 1,422,764 TB. One month. Nearly the same volume. That is not just a statistic. It is a structural shift.
But even that comparison understates the transformation.
In 2015, Nigeria’s entire annual data consumption stood at just 55,000 TB. Today, that volume is exhausted in little more than a single day. What took twelve months to generate a decade ago now moves across networks in roughly 24 hours. This is not just growth. It is compression—of time, of scale, and of how an economy functions when connectivity becomes its operating layer.
Between 2015 and 2025, Nigeria’s data traffic expanded from 55,000 TB to 13.25 million—an increase of more than 24,000 percent, achieved without a single year of decline. Even within the more recent window, the acceleration is stark: traffic rose 761 percent between 2020 and 2025 alone. Q1 2026 added another 4.07 million TB, putting the full year on course to surpass 16 million.
By March, Nigerians were consuming an estimated 45,900 TB every day—up from about 41,000 TB per day just four months earlier. That daily increment alone—roughly 5,000 TB—would have been a meaningful national average not long ago. At current run rates, monthly traffic is set to cross 1.5 million TB by June 2026—levels that once defined an entire year.
Nigeria is already a data-driven economy. The real question is whether the system behind it can keep up.
A decade without deceleration
The shift did not begin in 2021. It has been building, uninterrupted, for a decade.
From 55,000 TB in 2015—when broadband penetration stood at just 10 percent—consumption doubled to 93,000 TB in 2016, then to 148,000 TB in 2017. In 2018, it surged 114 percent to 316,000 TB. In 2019, another 106 percent to 651,000 TB. By 2020, it had crossed 1.5 million TB—more than doubling again in a single year. Every year. No reversals. No plateau.
The pandemic did not create this trajectory. It accelerated one already running at extraordinary pace. Between 2020 and 2021, data traffic more than doubled again—rising 109.6 percent to 3.22 million TB—as remote work, e-learning, digital payments, and streaming all surged simultaneously. Many of those behaviours became permanent, raising the floor from which subsequent growth has compounded.
What followed was not a spike, but a new baseline. Traffic climbed to 5.45 million TB in 2022, before settling into a still-aggressive 33–36 percent growth band between 2023 and 2025. Consumption reached 7.27 million TB in 2023, 9.76 million in 2024, and 13.25 million in 2025. This is not a slowdown. It is scale.
In 2021, Nigeria added roughly 1.7 million TB of new traffic. By 2025, it was adding about 3.5 million annually—twice the volume, even at lower growth rates. The base has expanded. Compounding has taken over. The story is no longer annual. It is monthly.
What is driving the surge
The forces behind Nigeria’s data growth are structural and self-reinforcing: cheaper smartphone financing schemes, wider mobile internet access, rising video consumption, cloud adoption, and the steady digitisation of services and business operations.
They were present in 2015 when consumption was 55,000 TB. They are present now as the country approaches 1.5 million TB a month. The decade between those two figures is what happens when structural forces compound without interruption.
Nigeria’s demographics amplify all of it. With a median age of around 18, the country has one of the most digitally native populations globally. As this cohort enters the economy—opening accounts, launching businesses, consuming content, and accessing services—each new participant adds materially to monthly traffic.
One milestone stands out. In November 2025, broadband penetration crossed 50 percent for the first time. Half the country now has access to broadband. The traffic numbers show what happens when that access is fully used.
This is not occurring in isolation. Africa is the fastest-growing region globally for international bandwidth, expanding at a 38 percent CAGR between 2021 and 2025. Nigeria sits at the centre of that expansion.
Seasonality is now structural
December has quietly become the system’s stress test. In 2023, December traffic exceeded November by 67,794 TB. In 2024, by 94,502 TB. In 2025, by an estimated 150,000 TB, driven by travel, streaming, and e-commerce activity. Month-on-month growth of roughly 10–12 percent is now a recurring feature.
For operators, it is a capacity test. For analysts, it is a demand signal. For the system, it is pressure that never fully resets.
Infrastructure is falling behind
Demand is compounding. Supply is struggling to keep up. The turning point on the supply side came with pricing. A tariff adjustment in early 2025 freed up much-needed investment capital in an industry that had been financially constrained.
Operators have since responded at scale. Last year, MTN invested over ₦900 billion in infrastructure upgrades; Airtel committed roughly $500 million; and Globacom expanded network capacity. The regulator has complemented this with stronger enforcement and accountability. A quarterly Industry Performance Report—covering consumer trends, 5G performance, rural–urban gaps, and network quality—alongside mandatory airtime refunds for service shortfalls, has materially increased the cost of underperformance.
But policy pressure alone is not closing the gap. Operators have agreed to upgrade approximately 12,000 sites in 2026—but that effort is running against deeper structural constraints.
Project BRIDGE, the 90,000-kilometre national fibre rollout, requires faster execution. Right-of-way bottlenecks and multiple taxation persist. Grid instability adds another layer of cost and complexity, forcing operators to run diesel-dependent sites whose economics deteriorate as fuel prices rise. Security risks compound the problem further: nearly 5,000 theft incidents and 49 cases of vandalism were recorded last year, alongside an estimated 70 fibre cuts daily.
None of these constraints is new. All of them are more urgent.
What the numbers signal to investors
A country consuming 1.4 million TB in a single month—up from 55,000 TB a year just a decade ago—is structurally undersupplied in data infrastructure. The case for fibre, data centres, and edge computing is no longer speculative. It is immediate.
For digital businesses, the message is clear: the addressable market is expanding rapidly. Data consumption is increasingly a proxy for economic activity—how Nigerians communicate, transact, learn, and build.
At this scale, the digital economy is not a layer on top of the real economy. It is the connective tissue of it.
The bottom line
There is something almost vertiginous about what ten years has compressed into a single data point. In 2015, 55,000 TB was a year. In 2020, 1.5 million TB was a year. In March 2026, 1.4 million TB was a month. Nigeria now consumes its entire 2015 annual data volume in little more than a day.
This is no longer a story about growth. It is a story about scale—a decade of it, unbroken and still accelerating. The question is not whether Nigeria will consume more data. It will. The question is whether the infrastructure, policy and investment behind it can scale fast enough to support what comes next.
Osita Odafi, a digital economy analyst, writes from Lagos.
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Opinion
Democracy and Prosperity of Nigerian Citizenry: Foundations for Deciding a Fruitful Future
Published
2 days agoon
June 13, 2026By
Eric
By Tolulope A. Adegoke PhD
Democracy, at its best, represents far more than periodic elections or formal institutions of government. It is a living covenant between the state and its people — one that promises participation, accountability, justice, transparency, and the genuine opportunity for collective advancement. In Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and a key actor on the global stage, the interplay between democracy and the prosperity of its citizens remains central to the nation’s future. When democracy is nurtured with sincerity and competence, it becomes a powerful driver of human development, economic growth, social cohesion, and national stability. When it falls short, it risks breeding disillusionment, inequality, and unrest. This write-up examines this vital relationship, reflecting on Nigeria’s democratic journey, its impact on citizen well-being, persistent obstacles, and realistic pathways toward a more secure, prosperous, and hopeful future for all Nigerians.
The Promise and Practice of Democracy in Nigeria
Nigeria’s return to civilian rule in 1999 ushered in the longest stretch of uninterrupted democratic governance in the country’s post-independence history. The 1999 Constitution, despite its imperfections, enshrines core principles such as separation of powers, fundamental human rights, federal character, and regular elections. For millions of Nigerians, democracy symbolises the chance to have a voice in shaping their destiny and to benefit from responsive governance.
True democratic prosperity goes beyond economic statistics. It encompasses improved access to quality education, healthcare, security, infrastructure, decent employment, and equal opportunities. When citizens experience tangible improvements in their daily lives as a result of democratic processes, public trust in institutions grows stronger. Conversely, when prosperity remains elusive for large segments of the population, democratic legitimacy weakens.
Nigeria has recorded notable achievements within its democratic framework. The liberalisation of the telecommunications sector, banking reforms, the rise of the creative economy (Nollywood, music, and digital content), and increasing participation in regional trade agreements such as the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) all occurred in a democratic environment that enabled private enterprise and innovation.
Persistent Challenges on the Path to Prosperity
Despite these gains, significant gaps remain between democratic aspirations and lived realities. Nigeria continues to grapple with high rates of multidimensional poverty, youth unemployment, and widening inequality. Many citizens, particularly in rural areas and among vulnerable groups, feel disconnected from the dividends of democracy.
Key challenges include:
- Insecurity: Persistent threats from insurgency, banditry, kidnapping, and communal conflicts continue to destroy lives, displace communities, and discourage investment.
- Economic Structure: Over-reliance on oil revenue, weak industrial base, and limited value addition in agriculture and solid minerals constrain broad-based prosperity.
- Institutional Weaknesses: Corruption, uneven policy implementation, and limited coordination across government levels often undermine development efforts.
- Human Capital Deficits: Inadequate investment in education, healthcare, and skills development leaves many young Nigerians unprepared for the demands of a modern economy.
- Electoral and Governance Issues: Concerns about electoral integrity, political patronage, and policy inconsistency sometimes erode public confidence.
These issues are not unique to Nigeria. Many democracies worldwide, especially in developing contexts, face similar tensions between democratic ideals and developmental outcomes.
Practical Pathways to a Deciding and Fruitful Democratic Future
For democracy to truly assure prosperity for the Nigerian citizenry, deliberate and sustained actions are required across multiple fronts:
1. Strengthening Institutions and Accountability Independent and well-resourced institutions — particularly the judiciary, anti-corruption agencies, and electoral bodies — are essential. Transparent appointment processes, adequate funding, and robust oversight mechanisms can significantly reduce impunity and enhance public trust.
2. Inclusive Economic Transformation Nigeria must accelerate economic diversification by investing heavily in agriculture, technology, manufacturing, renewable energy, and the creative industries. Policies should deliberately target small and medium enterprises, women, and youth. Human capital development through quality education, vocational training, and digital skills must become a national priority.
3. Security as a Foundation for Prosperity A holistic security strategy that combines effective law enforcement with community engagement, intelligence-led operations, and massive socio-economic interventions in affected regions is vital. Addressing the root causes of conflict — poverty, unemployment, and marginalisation — is as important as tactical responses.
4. Youth and Women Empowerment With a predominantly youthful population, Nigeria’s greatest resource is its people. Deliberate investments in youth entrepreneurship, innovation hubs, sports, and leadership development can transform demographic pressure into a powerful dividend. Similarly, gender-inclusive policies that enhance women’s access to education, finance, and political participation will accelerate national progress.
5. Deepening Democratic Culture and Participation Civic education, responsible media, and active citizen engagement beyond election periods are crucial. Citizens must be empowered to demand accountability while contributing constructively to nation-building.
6. Leveraging Regional and Global Opportunities Nigeria should continue to play a leadership role in ECOWAS and the African Union while attracting responsible foreign investment and technology transfer. Successful democratic governance and economic progress in Nigeria can serve as a beacon for other African nations.
Relevance to the Wider-World
Nigeria’s democratic experience offers valuable lessons for other nations navigating the complex relationship between democracy and development. It demonstrates the resilience of democratic ideals even in challenging contexts, the power of a vibrant civil society, and the potential of a youthful population. At the same time, it highlights the universal truth that democracy must deliver tangible results to remain legitimate and sustainable.
Conclusion: Democracy as an Assurance of a Fruitful Future
Democracy remains the most credible pathway to sustainable prosperity for the Nigerian citizenry. While challenges persist, they should not overshadow the progress achieved or the immense potential that still lies ahead. The deciding factor for a fruitful future lies not in abandoning democracy, but in deepening, refining, and perfecting it.
This requires visionary and ethical leadership that prioritises the common good, active and responsible citizenship that demands accountability, and institutional reforms that translate democratic promises into tangible improvements in people’s lives. When democracy truly works for the people — delivering security, opportunity, justice, and dignity — it becomes the strongest assurance of a stable, prosperous, and hopeful future.
Nigeria stands at a critical crossroads. The choices made by leaders and citizens today will determine whether the promise of democracy translates into widespread prosperity or remains an unfulfilled aspiration. With courage, wisdom, collective commitment, and sustained effort, Nigeria can build a democracy that not only endures but genuinely serves the aspirations of its people — offering inspiration to many nations facing similar journeys around the world.
The future of the Nigerian citizenry can be brighter — if democracy is well defended, strengthened, and made to work for all.
Dr. Tolulope A. Adegoke, AMBP-UN is a globally recognized scholar-practitioner and thought leader at the nexus of security, governance, and strategic leadership. His mission is dedicated to advancing ethical governance, strategic human capital development, resilient nation building, and global peace. He can be reached via: tolulopeadegoke01@gmail.com, globalstageimpacts@gmail.com
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Opinion
GLO and the Democratization of Communication in Nigeria
Published
2 days agoon
June 13, 2026By
Eric
By Dr. Sani Sa’idu Baba
Glo, the “Digital Oxygen” of Nigeria’s Democracy
As Nigeria marked Democracy Day on June 12, it is important to celebrate not only our democratic journey as a nation, but also institutions whose values and contributions reflect the very essence of democracy.
In Nigeria’s telecommunications industry, Glo stands out as arguably the most democratic network. Democracy thrives on inclusion, accessibility, equal opportunity, participation, and the empowerment of the people. Since its inception, Glo has consistently demonstrated these ideals through its commitment to making communication affordable and accessible to millions of Nigerians.
By pioneering competitive tariffs, affordable data services, and innovative products tailored to the needs of ordinary citizens, Glo helped break barriers to communication and brought connectivity within reach of people across different social and economic backgrounds. In doing so, it democratized access to information, knowledge, and opportunities in an increasingly digital world.
This commitment has been tested in recent times. Following the Nigerian Communications Commission’s approval of a 50 percent tariff adjustment across the telecommunications industry in 2025, operators were compelled to review their pricing structures. Yet Glo’s response reflected a people-first philosophy even amid economic pressure. Through generous data bundles, rollover benefits, value-back offers on MiFi devices, and bonus data packages, the company sought to cushion the impact on subscribers. While the industry generally moved toward higher costs, Glo worked to ensure that communication remained within the reach of ordinary Nigerians, staying true to the democratic principle that access should never be reserved for a privileged few.
Glo’s democratic approach extends beyond pricing to infrastructure development. Its 2025–2026 network modernization programme, which involved the deployment of over a thousand new 4G LTE sites, spectrum expansion, and the reconstruction of critical fibre routes, has been particularly noteworthy for its focus on underserved rural communities as well as densely populated urban centres such as markets and educational institutions. Democracy is not merely about serving those already at the centre of power; it is about extending opportunity to those at the margins. By expanding connectivity to communities that have historically been overlooked by telecommunications infrastructure, Glo has quietly been democratizing not only communication but also access to the digital future.
A key pillar of any true democracy is the protection and promotion of freedom of speech and expression. Through its reliable and affordable network, Glo has empowered millions of Nigerians to express their views, share ideas, engage in public discourse, and connect with others without being constrained by cost or access. This is not an abstract principle. It is reflected daily in the WhatsApp groups, Facebook communities, online forums, and citizen-led conversations that increasingly shape Nigeria’s political and social discourse. From grassroots town hall engagements to real-time reactions during elections and national debates, Glo provides a platform through which citizens exercise one of the most fundamental rights in a democratic society.
Furthermore, Glo’s unwavering support for local content, Nigerian talents, sports, entertainment, and entrepreneurship reflects its belief in creating opportunities for people to succeed and contribute meaningfully to national development. From its long-standing sponsorship of football competitions to its investment in Nigerian music, Nollywood, and homegrown entrepreneurial initiatives, Glo has consistently amplified Nigerian voices and celebrated Nigerian excellence. This commitment to empowering individuals mirrors the democratic principle of broad participation and shared progress.
As we honour the heroes of June 12 and reflect on the sacrifices that paved the way for democratic governance in Nigeria, Glo deserves recognition as a corporate institution that has consistently advanced the values of inclusion, accessibility, empowerment, and freedom of expression. In many respects, Glo has done for communication what democracy seeks to do for governance: place power in the hands of the people.
As Nigeria celebrates Democracy Day, Glo stands not merely as a telecom provider but as a symbol of inclusion, accessibility, and empowerment. In connecting millions of Nigerians to one another and to the world, it has helped deepen democratic participation and amplify the voices of ordinary citizens. It is more than a network. It is more than “unlimited.” It is “digital oxygen” that keeps Nigeria’s democratic conversation alive.
Happy Democracy Day, Nigeria.
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