Industrial Company, General Electric (GE), has called for ‘tailored’
innovations in the country that will ensure local development.
GE said localisation is important to meet specificities of local
needs, stressing that there is a need to
develop home-grown solutions
for Africa.
Speaking at the launch of Nigeria’s report of Global Innovation
Barometer Survey, President and CEO, GE Africa, Farid Fezoua, said
innovation and technology are fundamental for Africa to be able to
compete in a global framework.
Fezoua added that training programs like the GE Lagos Garage, aimed
at Nigerian entrepreneurs, help support local innovation in the country.
Discussing the GIB findings, Chief Communications & Public
Affairs Officer, GE Africa, Patricia Obozuwa, said multinationals
continue to take the lead in driving innovation, which conforms to the
global narrative.
Obozuwa stated that 36 per cent of Nigerian business executives said
multinationals drive innovation compared to the global figure of 23 per
cent. Likewise, SMEs are also viewed as a key driver of innovation
over-indexing against the global figure by 12 percentage points (Nigeria
23%, Global 11%).
Amongst other findings, the survey revealed that attitudes towards 3D
printing are positive in Nigeria. Almost nine in 10 business executives
believe 3D printing will have a positive impact on businesses (88%).
The results of the survey were further explored and discussed by a
panel of experts which included Dr Akintoye Akindele, Partner, Synergy
Capital Managers; Solape Hammond, Co-founder, Impact Hub; Thelma Ekiyor,
Co-Founder & CEO, Afrigrants and Olumbe Akinkugbe, Director, Ondo
State Information Technology Agency. The panel recommended several
strategies to encourage SME innovation in Nigeria including close
collaboration between the public and private sectors.
In his keynote, the Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, who was
represented by the Secretary to State Government, Mrs. Folasade Jaji,
said: “Through its activities, GE has supported economic growth in
Africa within a period spanning over 120 years. It has also been a key
partner in progress in Nigeria, where it has operated for over four
decades. We are delighted to note that GE is providing the support that
will enable us to leverage the emerging potentials of the 24/7 economy
of Lagos megacity and a location of the first choice for investors.”
Sanwo-Olu commended GE on the success of the GE Lagos Garage
initiative which, he noted, has empowered young people through training
and capacity building in areas of business development and advanced
manufacturing-based technology enterprise, among other skills.
“As our partner in progress, Lagos state government will continue to
collaborate with you, especially in the critical areas of power and
healthcare, as well as skills development” he added.
GE is leading efforts to drive the adoption of 3D printing in Nigeria
through its Lagos Garage, a hub for advanced manufacturing-based
innovation, strategy development, idea generation, and collaboration.
The Garage offers a year-round series of skills training programs
focused on building the next generation of Nigerian entrepreneurs. To
date, over 400 entrepreneurs have graduated the program having been
trained to use the latest in advanced manufacturing technologies; 3D
printers, CNC mills, and laser cutters as well as in business
development.
Some other top findings from the report include that since the GE GIB
2016, Nigeria has seen a one percentage point increase in the
innovation championship in 2018, compared to 0 per cent previously. This
places Nigeria in the 21st position, in-between Malaysia and Brazil.
92 per cent of business executives who are anti-protectionist, state
that protectionism will also create barriers to investment, which will
affect businesses and over indexes against a global average of 69
percent.
GIB found out that in Nigeria, business executives favoring
protectionism do it for business reasons, while almost three in four
business executives think that the government is not driving innovation
and is unable to keep up with the pace of innovation (74 percent).
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