The federal government is seeking Nigerian-born experts who are living in the country and diaspora to help create its National Artificial Intelligence (AI) Strategy.
The minister of Communications, Innovation, and Digital Economy, Dr. Bosun Tijani, who disclosed this on Monday via his X platform (formerly Twitter), urged Nigerians to share details of any top researcher that they know about.
The Minister averred that the government was building on existing work done by the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) to develop a National Al Strategy, hence, it was expanding its co-creation approach to engage and include top Al researchers of Nigerian descent globally.
“We are curating a list of the top researchers of Nigerian descent from all over the world to join us in co-creating a National AI Strategy. The strategy will help shape our approach to building innovative tech solutions to our most pressing national problems. If there are any researchers you know, Nigerian and non-Nigerian, who have done some work on the Nigerian market, please share in the comments,” Tijani stated.
Also, in a press statement obtained by LEADERSHIP, the Nigerian government noted that AI has become a multi-purpose technology transforming production and service delivery, with the potential to significantly impact economic growth and social progress.
The statement added that recent research showed that Al could contribute up to $15.7 trillion to the global economy by 2030, with $3 trillion from increased productivity and $9.1 trillion from new products and services (PwC, 2018).
“The International Finance Corporation projects that the strategic adoption of Al could add up to $234 billion to Africa’s GDP by 2030. Nigeria in this loop is considered to have a fast-growing technology start-up ecosystem (having attracted 25% of the $1.3 billion funding to African tech start-ups in 2021) and with proactive leadership, is well-positioned to leverage Al for economic diversification and inclusive growth. As an innovation leader on the African continent, Nigeria needs to develop a national strategy to harness the power of Al for sustainable development.
“However, along with the opportunities, Al governance also poses some complex socio-technical challenges. As algorithms are deployed in high-stakes domains like healthcare, finance, and security, concerns are emerging around ethics, bias, transparency, job automation, and privacy. Both policymakers and researchers are of a consensus that a human-centred approach is essential to ensure Al systems are fair and accountable to all, across gender, ethnic and socioeconomic groups.
“A National Al Strategy for Nigeria to responsibly steer the Al revolution towards achieving national goals around job creation, social inclusion, and sustainable development becomes imperative. With collaborative leadership, Nigeria seeks to pioneer ethical and inclusive Al innovation that improves welfare and expands opportunities for all its citizens,” it stated.