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Home » From Lab to Market: NASENI’s Role in Transforming Nigeria’s Industrial Value Chain

From Lab to Market: NASENI’s Role in Transforming Nigeria’s Industrial Value Chain

Instead of waiting for imported equipment, NASENI’s engineers dissect foreign technologies, redesign them for Nigerian operating conditions, and prepare them for local manufacturing.

Peter Oluka by Peter Oluka
June 11, 2026
in Market Analysis
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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NASENI and Imose Zedon X-Pro laptop

NASENI Zedon X-Pro laptop

Asian countries like Japan, China, Singapore and Vietnam add value to their industrial chains by controlling the high-margin stages of research and development (R&D) design, engineering, branding and after sales services while using advanced manufacturing, automation, and skilled labour to convert raw materials and imported inputs into differentiated high-quality finished goods.

They strengthen backward integration by developing local suppliers for components and machinery; build forward linkages through processing and branding to capture more of the final product value, and invest heavily in skills, standards, and innovation ecosystem that enable firms to move up the value chain. The strategy helps keep more value jobs and profits domestically while competing on technology and quality rather than just cost.

Nigeria for some decades has struggled to improve on its industrial outputs, but growth has been hampered by a single bottleneck: the gap between research and commercial production. Ideas are generated in labs and universities, but few make it to factories, markets, and the hands of Nigerian consumers.

The National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI) is closing that gap by building a complete value chain, from concept to prototype, from pilot production to market-ready products that industries can adopt today.

Revamping Nigeria’s Industrial Value Chain
Revamping Nigeria’s Industrial Value Chain: NASENI’s Role from R&D to Market

From Lab Bench to Factory Floor

NASENI’s mandate goes beyond research. The Agency operates a network of Development Institutes and advanced manufacturing centres designed to translate research into tangible products. At the heart of this system is reverse engineering and technology adaptation as well as commercialisation.

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Instead of waiting for imported equipment, NASENI’s engineers dissect foreign technologies, redesign them for Nigerian operating conditions, and prepare them for local manufacturing.

This approach has already produced working models in renewable energy, agriculture, transportation, and capital goods.

The goal is simple: reduce Nigeria’s dependence on imports, cut foreign exchange drain, and create products that are cheaper to buy, easier to maintain and built for local use and create jobs for Nigerians.

The R&D to Market Pipeline

NASENI’s process follows a deliberate 5-stage pipeline that private sector partners can plug into at any point. They are as follow:

1. Research & Adaptation

NASENI identifies high-demand capital goods products that Nigeria imports heavily. Engineers adapt designs using locally available materials and skills. These capital goods products cut across the key sectors of the economy.

NASENI batteries
NASENI batteries

They include Multi-grain Thresher, Rice Milling and Destoning Machines, Solar-powered Irrigation Pump, Oil Extraction System/Oil Expeller, Solar Water Dispensers, Home Solar Energy units, Energy Street Lights, Lithium Batteries, Hybrid and Electric Vehicles, Electric Tricycles, NASENI Laptops, Tablets, and many more.

NASENI-DAY - Solar panels
Solar panels on display during NASENI DAY

2. Prototype Development & Testing

Prototypes are built and tested in NASENI’s laboratories for durability, efficiency, and compliance with Nigerian standards. Testing reduces risk for partners who want to licence the technology.

3. Pilot Production

Small-batch production validates cost, quality, and scalability. This is where NASENI de-risks the investment for industry. Stakeholders can inspect pilot lines, assess quality, and negotiate licencing before committing to large-scale production.

4. Technology Transfer & Licencing

NASENI laptop
NASENI laptop
NASENI Smartphone and other Products
NASENI Phone

NASENI offers licencing agreements, joint ventures, and technical support to qualified partners. This means industries can start manufacturing NASENI-developed products without building R&D departments from scratch.

5. Market Deployment & After-sales Support

Through partnerships with distributors, cooperatives, and state governments, NASENI products reach end-users. The Agency also provides training for maintenance and troubleshooting, protecting the partner’s brand reputation.

Where Industry Gains

The value for stakeholders is in speed, cost, and reduced risk.

Speed to Market: A partner licencing a NASENI design bypasses 2–4 years of independent R&D. Production can begin once licencing and training are completed.

Cost Savings: Products adapted for local materials and labour cut import costs by 30%–60% in sectors like solar components, agricultural machinery, and electrical equipment.

Data point to source: Comparative cost analysis of NASENI solar panels and imported equivalents are available at the NASENI Energy Directorate.

Risk Reduction: NASENI absorbs early-stage R&D risk. Partners enter at the pilot or licencing stage with proven prototypes and technical documentation.

Local Content Compliance: Products developed under NASENI meet Nigerian local content requirements, making them eligible for government procurement and preferential treatment in public projects.

Real Products, Real Impact

Several NASENI technologies have passed through the licencing stage. Examples include Solar Irrigation Pumps designed for smallholder farmers, Electric Tricycles for urban transport, and Transformer components for the power sector.

NASENI CNG Commissioning 2
From right: Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris Malagi; President of the Senate, Goodswill Akpabio and Executive Vice Chairman, National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI), Khalil Suleiman Halilu explaining a point on CNG vehicle during the commissioning of NASENI CNG Reverse Engineering Centre, Utako, Abuja on Friday May 31, 2024.

Each product comes with a technical package: design files, bill of materials, supplier list, and training manual. For industries, this means immediate opportunities.

An agricultural equipment dealer can licence a NASENI Thresher and begin assembly in-house. A renewable energy firm can integrate NASENI’s solar components into its existing projects at lower cost.

A manufacturing small and medium enterprise (SME) can use NASENI’s CNC and machining centres to produce parts without buying expensive equipment. There are a number of active licencing agreements, SMEs trainings, and jobs created through NASENI technology transfer programmes from 2023–2026.

The Infrastructure Advantage

Nigeria, NASENI operates advanced manufacturing centres equipped with CNC machines, 3D printers, metrology labs, and testing rigs.

Partners can use these facilities on a fee-for-service basis, avoiding millions in capital expenditure.

This shared infrastructure model is critical for SMEs and mid-sized firms that want to move up the value chain but lack the capital for heavy equipment. It also ensures quality control, as all licenced products are tested against NASENI’s standards before market release.

Partnership Model: How It Works

NASENI’s engagement with industry is structured for clarity and mutual benefit. NASENI assesses technical fit and readiness. The following are how it works.

Agreement & Training: Licencing terms are agreed, and partner staff receives hands-on training.

Production & Rollout: Partner begins production with ongoing technical support from NASENI.

Market Feedback Loop: NASENI collects user feedback to improve future iterations. The model is designed to be flexible. Partnerships range from single-product licencing to joint ventures for large-scale manufacturing plants.

Call to Action:

Nigeria’s industrial transformation will not come from imports alone. It will come from Nigerian companies producing Nigerian solutions, using Nigerian talents and infrastructure.

NASENI Clean Energy
L-r: Chairman, Presidential Implementation Committee on Technology Transfer, Dr. Mohammed Dahiru; Executive Vice Chairman/CEO NASENI, Mr. Khalil Suleiman Halilu; Honorable Federal Ministry of Industry Trade and Investment, Dr. Jumoke Oduwole; and the Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Industry Trade and Investment Dr. Chris Osa Isokpunwu presenting NASENI clean energy Cook Stove to a beneficiary during the NASENI Sustainable Empowerment Programme held in Kano state, recently

NASENI invites manufacturers, investors, distributors, and state governments to partner in building this value chain. If you operate in agriculture, energy, transportation, or manufacturing, there is a NASENI technology ready for adoption.

For existing or new partner of the Agency, the following steps are available: Review NASENI’s current technology catalogue on the Agency’s website and at zonal offices; Request a technical briefing and factory tour to assess production readiness; Engage NASENI’s Investment and Partnership Directorate to discuss licencing, joint venture (JV) and co-production terms; and Join upcoming NASENI Industry Stakeholder Forums for direct access to engineers and project managers.

NASENI is currently playing a critical role through its indigenous technologies in building Nigeria’s industrial value chain.  The infrastructure is in place.

The designs are tested. The market is waiting. The next step is for industry to step in, scale production, and make “Made-in-Nigeria” the standard.

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Peter Oluka

Peter Oluka

Peter Oluka (@peterolukai), editor of Techeconomy, is a multi-award winner practicing Journalist. Peter’s media practice cuts across Media Relations | Marketing| Advertising, other Communications interests. Contact: peter.oluka@techeconomy.ng

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