Opinion
DELTA-2: Why Nigeria Must Invest in the Future Before It Imports It

Nations do not become global powers simply because they possess natural resources or large populations. They rise because they master technology and create the innovations that shape the future. In today’s world, the countries that lead are those that design the next generation of products, build the next wave of industries, and own the intellectual property that powers the global economy. For Nigeria to secure its rightful place in history, it must move from being primarily a consumer of technology to becoming a creator of it.
This is why the PICTT flagship initiative, the DELTA-2 Programme is considered a strategic investment in Nigeria’s future. Established as a bilateral Research, Development and Innovation (R&D&I) partnership between Nigeria and the Czech Republic, DELTA-2 is deliberately designed to solve one of the country’s greatest development challenges: the inability to convert brilliant ideas and academic research into market-ready technologies and commercially viable businesses.
With a funding envelope of $21.7 million, jointly supported by the Technology Agency of the Czech Republic (TA CR) and Nigeria through PICTT and NASENI, the programme is creating a practical pathway for technology transfer, applied research and industrial collaboration. It brings together government, universities, research institutions and the private sector to ensure that innovation does not end in laboratories, but becomes products, services and technologies that create jobs and wealth.
The significance of DELTA-2 also lies in its philosophy. For a project to be considered, it must demonstrate originality, scientific rigour and, crucially, the potential for commercialisation. Of course, many projects and products appear good in face value, but do they solve a problem? Do they address a human need? And crucially are they commercially viable?
The expected outputs are patented software solutions, pilot plants, certified methodologies and new technologies that can be manufactured, deployed and exported. By this thinking, the programme addresses the long-standing disconnect between research and economic productivity.
The response from Nigeria’s innovation ecosystem has already demonstrated the country’s untapped potential. The first call for proposals attracted 285 submissions from companies, universities and research institutions across the country. Proving that Nigerians have indeed an abundance of ideas and talent. What has often been missing is a structured mechanism to fund, nurture and commercialise innovation. DELTA-2 provides exactly that.
By supporting innovation in agriculture, mining, manufacturing and other technology-driven sectors, the programme strengthens local industry, promotes economic diversification and reduces dependence on imported technologies. At the same time, collaboration with Czech institutions gives Nigerian researchers and entrepreneurs access to global expertise, advanced technologies and international research networks, helping to build the technical skills and capabilities required for sustained industrial growth.
Perhaps most importantly, the PICTT’s DELTA-2 is helping to cultivate a culture where innovation becomes an economic asset rather than an academic exercise. It creates opportunities for researchers, engineers, technicians and young innovators, while fostering an ecosystem where knowledge is translated into enterprise and enterprise into national prosperity.
History shows that no nation has achieved lasting development without making a deliberate commitment to science, technology and innovation. The countries that dominate the twenty-first century are not merely those with the largest markets, but those that create the technologies on which others depend. Nigeria’s ambition to become one of the world’s leading economies cannot be realised through consumption alone; it must be built on invention.
By investing in technology transfer, commercial research and local innovation today, the country is laying the foundations for a future in which Nigerian ideas, Nigerian patents and Nigerian-made technologies help shape the world. This is how nations earn their place in history.
– Frederick Oki is a technology developer, in Lagos




