By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Tribune OnlineTribune OnlineTribune Online
  • Home
  • News
  • Columns
  • Editorial
  • VIDEOS
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Health
  • Opinions
  • SPORTING TRIBUNE
Reading: From Lagos traffic to UK clarity: Victoria Adepoju’s story of technology advancement
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Tribune OnlineTribune Online
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • News
  • Columns
  • Editorial
  • VIDEOS
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Health
  • Opinions
  • SPORTING TRIBUNE
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy
  • Advertise
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2025 African Newspapers of Nigeria Plc.. All Rights Reserved.
Latest News

From Lagos traffic to UK clarity: Victoria Adepoju’s story of technology advancement

Tribune Online
August 14, 2025
Share
SHARE

Victoria Adepoju, Nigerian-born tech expert, has recounted how distance opened her eyes to the technological in her home country.

Adepoju, who identified challenges bedevilling the country and promising Nigerians who are desperately rewriting the narrative of the country tech-wise, disclosed that with adequate partnership not charity from the United Kingdom, there is hope in sight.

———–

I still remember my friend Kemi crying after another failed job interview in Victoria Island. An IT graduate from Federal University of Technology, Minna, she had searched for work for eighteen months. That same week, I read about a 19-year-old in Kaduna who joined Boko Haram because “they offered me ₦50,000 monthly when no legitimate job would take me.”

Writing this from UK, where I relocated in 2023, these memories feel more vivid than ever. Distance has given me clarity about both Nigeria’s enormous potential and our tragic waste of it.

The Reality Behind the Numbers

While the National Bureau of Statistics reports youth unemployment at 7.2%, this masks a deeper crisis. When you include underemployment, around 33% of Nigeria’s youth are either jobless or stuck earning survival wages. With over 60% of our 220 million people under 30, we’re talking about 25-30 million young people with limited opportunities.

Yet Nigeria’s tech sector tells a different story. When Stripe acquired Paystack for over $200 million in 2020, it created over 500 direct jobs and thousands more in the ecosystem. This proved Nigerian talent can compete globally when given the right platform.

Living in the UK has shown me what’s possible when infrastructure works. Here, young developers don’t budget millions for diesel generators or plan their day around power outages. They just build great products, a luxury Nigerian entrepreneurs rarely have.

The Infrastructure Crisis

The numbers are stark. Nigeria generates 4,000-5,000 megawatts for 220 million people, less than 25 watts per person. The UK generates 75,000 megawatts for 67 million people over 1,100 watts per person. Before leaving Nigeria I knew companies spending ₦2 million monthly on generators, money that could hire six developers.

Our 51.9% internet penetration often means expensive, slow mobile data costing more than unlimited fibre broadband costs here in UK. I pay £26 monthly for unlimited fibre and never think about electricity costs. The productivity difference is staggering.

From Unemployment to Insecurity

The correlation between youth unemployment and insecurity isn’t academic when you’re receiving WhatsApp videos of violence from home. The #EndSARS protests were fuelled by economic frustration, young people who should be building careers were confronting security forces instead.

I’ve met former Nigerian classmates now working at tech companies in the UK. Their AI and cybersecurity expertise could transform Nigeria’s security apparatus. Instead, they’re optimizing ads for British companies while Nigeria struggles with basic digital infrastructure.

The Partnership Opportunity

This isn’t about aid, it’s about mutual benefit. Nigeria’s population will hit 400 million by 2050, creating the world’s third-largest consumer market. British companies investing in Nigeria’s tech infrastructure today are positioning themselves in tomorrow’s largest market worth $472 billion and growing.

The UK needs data scientists and software engineers skills Nigeria produces abundantly but cannot absorb. British investment in Nigerian fintech already reached $500 million in 2023, proving what’s possible with genuine partnership.

What Must Happen

For Nigeria: The ₦23.4 trillion budget for capital expenditures should prioritize power and broadband alongside roads. Create special economic zones with guaranteed electricity and internet even if starting with just one per state.

For the UK: Establish billion-dollar infrastructure funds and fast-track visas for Nigerian tech talent with incentives to return home and build local capacity.

For Private Sector: Nigerian banks should dedicate percentages to tech lending. British companies should build African headquarters in Nigeria, creating jobs and knowledge transfer.

The Urgency of Now

Every month, I watch young British developers solve problems that Nigerian developers could tackle equally well if they had infrastructure support. Nigerian innovations should be represented at AI conferences, but our brightest minds either can’t afford to attend or have already emigrated.

My friend Kemi eventually became a successful freelance graphic designer, earning more than peers in traditional jobs. But she overcame infrastructure barriers that shouldn’t exist in 2024.

The choice is stark, invest in technology infrastructure and youth employment today, or continue managing the consequences of neglect. The statistics may show 7.2% youth unemployment, but millions of brilliant minds are wasting away or emigrating to places like UK where their talents flourish.

Nigeria doesn’t need charity from the UK, it needs partnership. Our youth aren’t a burden to manage they’re an asset waiting to be unleashed. The question isn’t whether we can afford these investments, but whether we can afford to keep losing our brightest minds.

From UK, the view is clear. Nigeria’s moment is now, but the window won’t stay open forever.

ALSO READ TOP STORIES FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE


WATCH TOP VIDEOS FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE TV

  • Back to School, Back to Business A Fresh Start

  • Relationship Hangout: Public vs Private Proposals – Which Truly Wins in Love?

  • “No” Is a Complete Sentence: Why You Should Stop Feeling Guilty

  • Relationship Hangout: Friendship Talk 2025 – How to Be a Good Friend & Big Questions on Friendship

  • Police Overpower Armed Robbers in Ibadan After Fierce Struggle


    Get real-time news updates from Tribune Online! Follow us on WhatsApp for breaking news, exclusive stories and interviews, and much more.
    Join our WhatsApp Channel now


TAGGED:tech industryUnited Kingdom (UK)
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print
Previous Article 60% of Boko Haram conflict-affected persons are youths International Youth Day: UNODC inaugurates peace champions in Bayelsa
Next Article Kwara insecurity Kano man on electoral reform kidnapping case on seven-year-old Adamawa LG chairmen on boat accidents Afriland fire on Brigade on universities Simon Ekpa’s conviction Abuja tragedy nationwide lockdown passengers’ luggage The Abuja-Kaduna train Osun Oba graduation parties federal hospitals CHAN Eagles AfroBasket triumph SSCE students Badeggi radio Hausa natives still on bandits Drug test for soldiers’ withdrawal Susan Njoki courier operators baby business Edo businessman murdered by employees Nigerian Tribune Editorial, Mobi Oparaku clergymen Nigerian environment reign of terrorists mother over land Governor Diri's proposal Abuja hotel extremist ideology Makinde on sports Ken Saro-Wiwa Governor Kihika criminal activities youths in drug abuse Cocoa House Cocoa House Nigeria’s borders Kano DPO arms suppliers to terrorists Okubajo’s allegations Ngugi wa Thiong’o of Africa ECOWAS challenges call for foreign students rapist in Abia State use of drones by Boko Haram Nigerian women trafficked to Côte d’Ivoire, South-East Polytechnic Bello Turji’s audacious order 2025 UTME results Nigerian workers Nigeria’s malnourished children, Senate’s needless security summit, Tinubu’s ‘Nigeria First’ mantra porous borders and terrorist killings, Owa Obokun’s good gesture The reign of motor park Jigawa killer groom and his gang, death penalty for kidnapping, Gombe Christian procession deaths, The healing water The Ogun man who killed son during fight The UI egg donation Nigerians’ loss to CBEX, Au revoir Chairman Chukwu The shameful parade of policemen collecting money Terrorists’ takeover of Plateau Benue Director Michael Adesiyan’s General Tsiga’s ordeal and these billionaire brutalised returnee from South Africa, The outcry over Imo police’s The bill to jail Nigerians who don’t vote The Uromi killings The premature campaigns for 2027

Frontpage Today

Subscribe to e-Paper

E-Vending, e paper, pdf, e-paper, Tribune
WOMEN

Xquisite
Xquisite Food
Xquisite Style
Wondrous World of Women

MORE

Business Coach
Education
Event Digest
Crime & Court
Do It Yourself
Ecoscope
Property & Environment
Energy
Maritime
Aviation
Brands & Marketing
Agriculture
Info Tech
Labour
Leadership & Management
Achievers
Arewa Live
Arts & Culture
Arts & Reviews
Campus Beat
Politics
Health News
MORE

Mum & Child
Natural Health
Sexuality & Health
Special Report
Sports
Tourism
Travelpulse & MICE
Tribune Business
Weekend Lagos
Youth Speak
Book Review
Thursday Tales
EDITORIAL

Editorial
Opinion
Letters
News Extra

BUSINESS

Capital Market
Money Market
Economy

ENTERTAINMENT

Friday Treat
Entertainment
Razzmattaz

REGIONS

South West
Niger Delta
Arewa

RELIGION

Tribune Church
Church News
Muslim Sermon
Eye of Islam
Islamic News

COLUMNS

Anike's Diary
Aplomb
Ask The Doctor
Autoclinic With The Mechanic
Awo's Thought
Borderless
Crucial Moment
Empowered For Life
Festus Adebayo's Flickers
Financewise
Gibbers
Intimacy
Language & Style
Leaders' Forum
Leadership & Management
Lynx Eye
Monday Lines
Mum & Child
Natural Health
Notes from Atlanta with Farooq Kperogi
On The Lord's Day
PENtagon
Political Panorama
Veritatem With Obadiah Mailafia
Voice of Courage
Whatsapp Conversation
You and Eye
Your Life Counts

© 2025 African Newspapers of Nigeria Plc. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?