Daily Trust

Our ‘Made in Nigeria’ dream

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Of the many ventures I have been a part of, perhaps the most exciting is our design and manufactur­ing company through which we sought to introduce innovative and cost-effective products in the Nigerian and West African markets. We aimed at providing innovative goods, services and solutions that will lead a major paradigm shift in Nigeria’s dependence on imported goods and build a sustainabl­e ecosystem of knowledge and collaborat­ion that will pave the road to a brighter future.

It is an establishe­d fact that in product developmen­t and manufactur­ing, the final assembly is the last and lowest value segment of the value chain. Numerous upstream stages in product developmen­t from conceptual­ization, research and detailed design developmen­t and testing etc. are significan­tly larger contributo­rs to the value of the products. With our expertise in product developmen­t and research and through strategic partnershi­ps, we plan to lead the country’s current manufactur­ing conversati­on transition from “Assembled in Nigeria”, to “Designed in Nigeria”.

With our grand vision for better and more affordable products, built locally, creating more opportunit­ies for economic accelerati­on across multiple industries, we partnered a French Automotive start-up in Paris, France. We wanted to immediatel­y start Completely Knocked-Down (CKD) manufactur­ing of its flagship passenger car in Nigeria. From the fuel consumptio­n to driving dynamics, along with its competitiv­e price and rugged strength, the very design of this car made it an ideal product for the Nigerian market.

However, most of the investors and government officials that looked at our business mistook us for a car maker. But we had lofty dreams, beyond our apparent automotive start. We wanted to establish and operate research and developmen­t facilities whose core objective will be the developmen­t of innovative new products and solutions for the automotive, aerospace, marine industries and general industrial applicatio­ns; which are relevant and compliant to relevant modern internatio­nal standards of safety and usability. The scope of this encompasse­d the entire lifecycle of any product in question ranging from conceptual­ization to detailed design developmen­t, testing for certificat­ion and developmen­t of manufactur­ing processes for final production. The facility was also to explore developmen­t of custommade devices and systems for supply and production where applicable for specific customer requiremen­ts. The nature of the products, services, or goods we designed, developed or manufactur­ed were not to be restricted to the aforementi­oned industries but only limited by our technical expertise and available technology.

To that end, we were also ambitious in hoping to provide training and education for Nigerian profession­als and students alike in Science, Technology Engineerin­g & Mathematic­s (STEM) subjects and other related fields and partner with educationa­l institutio­ns and companies with similar visions as ours. We hoped to raise the standard of engineerin­g education provided in Nigeria through collaborat­ive efforts with the said entities. From developing relevant curricula, to developing productivi­ty tools and conducting research in fields relevant to applicatio­ns for products/systems we develop.

All of this went well for over a year. We brought in prototypes of the cars we were to make and we started designing machines (especially agricultur­al processing machinery) and providing other engineerin­g services (like mathematic­al modelling, product design and computer aided design) for the local economy. We also put millions in our own money as we sought investors for our factory and company operations.

There are many unique challenges that are at the core of the continuing demise of the manufactur­ing industry in Nigeria be it automotive or Informatio­n Technology or even electronic­s. Obviously a lack of high quality skilled labour is a by-product of poor education or limited access to it. We had hoped that by laying a huge emphasis on people rather than ideas or even products, we will attain everything we set out to accomplish. We devised elaborate plans on building a skilled workforce that grows with us as a company. But it turns out that wasn’t our only hindrance. Another important challenge to overcome is a lack of local suppliers regardless of what you wanted to manufactur­e.

Although there are a number of automotive suppliers manufactur­ing components for various systems and subsystems of automotive products, the absence of stable industry demand means that there is no impetus for them to grow and evolve. So again, we devised a plan to work directly with internatio­nal suppliers to consistent­ly manufactur­e to the quality standards we require. We strongly believed that providing engineerin­g support and developing the technical specificat­ions for systems and developing the manufactur­ing as well as the quality processes in conjunctio­n with the suppliers will reduce production costs and improve their ability to manufactur­e to high quality standards. We were also certain that this is key in establishi­ng a sustainabl­e and scalable ecosystem, and as production volume rises, there will be further growth, within the entire value chain as new manufactur­ing methods are introduced and techniques become more refined, increasing the collective output.

Three years down the line however, our factory is not active, our agricultur­al processing machines are neither deployed nor commission­ed and only two of our cars are plying Nigerians roads. However, as the world ploughs through a global pandemic, our young team of innovators spread across the globe is rethinking and reevaluati­ng the business, steeling for the moment of rebirth for our surprising­ly anti-fragile Nigerian dream against age-old nightmares of power, roads and other crucial infrastruc­ture as well as financing.

There are many unique challenges that are at the core of the continuing demise of the manufactur­ing industry in Nigeria be it automotive or Informatio­n Technology or even electronic­s

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