On a bright Thursday morning in Abuja’s Idu Industrial Layout, the atmosphere at National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure Headquarters felt charged, not just with ceremony, but with shared purpose.
The Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Hasan Bala Abubakar, led a distinguished delegation of top brass from the Nigerian Air Force on a mission that went beyond courtesy.
They had come to renew a promise, one built on engineering, trust, and the relentless pursuit of national self-reliance.
Waiting to receive them was Mr. Khalil Suleiman Halilu, executive vice chairman/CEO of the NASENI, a man widely regarded as the architect of NASENI’s modern transformation.
Together with his management team, he welcomed the Air Force leaders like old comrades on a shared battlefield, the battle to build indigenous defense capabilities for Nigeria.
This wasn’t their first handshake. For years, NASENI and the Nigerian Air Force have worked side by side, pushing the boundaries of what Nigerian ingenuity could achieve in defense, aerospace, and advanced manufacturing.
But July 25, 2025, marked a new beginning, a formal renewal of their Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), tailored for deeper, more focused collaboration in the era of Renewed Hope.
Air Marshal Abubakar didn’t mince words as he praised NASENI’s critical role in some of the Air Force’s most ambitious projects.
Chief among them: the C5 Rocket Project, a symbol of Nigeria’s growing defense tech prowess. NASENI, he noted, had been instrumental in building the rocket bodies, structural components, and precision materials analysis, key elements once sourced from abroad.
But it wasn’t just the rockets. The Air Marshal highlighted the NASENI Northwest Technology Innovation Hub in Kaduna, strategically located at the Air Force Institute of Technology, a product of visionary partnership and NAF’s land grant.
Now, he said, it’s time for the Air Force to be more involved, not just as hosts or contributors, but as stakeholders.
He proposed co-ownership of the C5 Rocket Project and deeper collaboration in governance and execution of the innovation hub.
He also looked to the future, inviting NASENI to send its young talents to NAF’s new R&D training modules and explore joint capacity-building in Computer Numerical Control (CNC) machining, a critical area for defense manufacturing, using NASENI’s Centre of Excellence.
When Mr. Halilu took the podium, he didn’t just respond, he reconnected.
“This partnership,” he said, “is not just professional. It’s personal. Our collaboration with the Air Force has been one of our most seamless, and most fruitful.”
He outlined NASENI’s expanding frontiers, from Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) systems to drone pilot training, from asset recovery programs to a CNC infrastructure that rivals global benchmarks. And through it all, he emphasized a guiding principle: inclusiveness.
“We work with the private sector for efficiency, but we always keep the doors open to our military partners. That’s how we build smart, cost-effective innovation pipelines.”
The renewed MoU, Halilu revealed, is not just a formality, it’s a roadmap. This new version is streamlined, structured, and driven by results, in alignment with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.
Its focus? Joint research and development, local manufacturing of aerospace and defense components, human capital development, and a vibrant exchange of ideas and expertise.
With ink on paper and hands clasped in unity, the MoU signing ceremony wasn’t the end of a process, it was the ignition point for what comes next.
Together, NASENI and the Nigerian Air Force are not just building machines, they’re building the future of Nigeria’s defense and innovation ecosystem, one precision-engineered partnership at a time.