The National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI) has been highlighted as a key driver in efforts to strengthen Nigeria’s industrial value chain through a structured innovation-to-market approach aimed at reducing import dependence and boosting local manufacturing capacity.
Industry observers say countries such as Japan, China, Singapore and Vietnam have successfully advanced their industrial development by capturing high-value segments of production, including research and development (R&D), engineering design, branding and after-sales services, while also investing heavily in advanced manufacturing, automation and skilled labour.
These economies, they noted, have strengthened their industrial ecosystems through backward integration—developing local suppliers for components and machinery—and forward linkages that enhance value addition through processing and branding. The approach has enabled them to retain more value domestically while competing globally on technology, quality and innovation rather than low-cost production alone.
In Nigeria, however, analysts say industrial growth has been constrained for decades by a persistent gap between research outputs and commercial production. While innovations are developed in universities and research institutes, only a limited number progress into full-scale manufacturing and market adoption.
NASENI is seeking to close this gap through what it describes as a complete value chain system that moves technologies from concept development through prototyping, pilot production and eventual commercial deployment.
The agency operates a network of development institutes and advanced manufacturing centres designed to translate research into practical industrial products. A core part of its approach involves reverse engineering and technology adaptation, where existing foreign technologies are studied, redesigned for local conditions and prepared for domestic production.
According to the agency’s framework, the process is structured into a five-stage pipeline covering research and adaptation, prototype development and testing, pilot production, technology transfer and licensing, and finally market deployment with after-sales support.
Under this model, NASENI identifies high-demand capital goods typically imported into the country and adapts them for local production. These include agricultural machinery such as multi-grain threshers and rice milling equipment, renewable energy systems like solar-powered irrigation pumps and home solar units, as well as transport solutions including electric tricycles and related industrial technologies.
Prototypes are first tested for durability, efficiency and compliance with national standards before being introduced into small-scale pilot production. This stage is designed to reduce investment risk and provide industry stakeholders with access to tested designs and technical documentation.
The agency also offers licensing agreements and joint venture arrangements to qualified private sector partners, enabling manufacturers to begin production without establishing full-scale research and development departments.
NASENI further disclosed that its advanced manufacturing centres are equipped with CNC machines, 3D printers, testing laboratories and precision engineering tools, which can be accessed by partners on a shared-cost basis. The facilities are intended to support small and medium enterprises seeking to upgrade production capacity without heavy capital investment.
Experts say the model provides significant advantages to industry players, including faster time to market, reduced production costs—estimated at between 30 and 60 per cent in some sectors—and lower technical risk, as early-stage development is handled by NASENI before commercial rollout.
They also note that products developed under the framework are aligned with Nigeria’s local content requirements, improving eligibility for government procurement opportunities and public sector projects.
Several NASENI-developed technologies have already moved into licensing and deployment stages, including solar irrigation systems for farmers, electric tricycles for urban transport and components used in the power sector. Each product is supported by technical manuals, design specifications and training materials for manufacturers.
Through partnerships with distributors, cooperatives and government agencies, the agency says it is working to ensure wider market penetration while also providing maintenance and technical support to end users.
Stakeholders in the sector argue that the success of the initiative will depend on stronger collaboration between government, private manufacturers and investors to scale production and deepen industrial capacity.
NASENI maintains that the infrastructure, technical expertise and tested technologies are already in place, adding that the next phase of Nigeria’s industrial development will depend on increased participation from industry players to expand production and strengthen the “Made-in-Nigeria” brand



















































