No fewer than 24,000 Nigerians are expected to benefit from a fresh $65 million financing package approved under the World Bank-supported Sustainable Procurement, Environmental and Social Standards Enhancement (SPESSE) project, the National Universities Commission (NUC) has disclosed.
The Executive Secretary of the NUC, Prof. Abdullahi Ribadu, said the additional funding would deepen capacity building in procurement, environmental management and social standards across Nigeria’s public and private sectors.
Ribadu spoke on Wednesday in Abuja during the signing of performance contracts for the new phase of the SPESSE project, which is being implemented in partnership with the World Bank.
According to him, the latest intervention builds on the gains recorded under the initial $80 million SPESSE project that became operational in 2021 and was aimed at addressing the shortage of skilled professionals in critical governance and development sectors.
“With the support of the World Bank and under the coordination of the NUC, six centres of excellence were established across the six geopolitical zones to provide sustainable capacity building in these critical sectors,” he said.
He added that the centres were ensuring inclusivity across all regions of the country.
Ribadu said the participating universities were selected through a rigorous and competitive process that assessed institutional readiness, quality assurance and sustainability.
He said the institutions were already playing key roles in producing skilled manpower to support transparency, environmental responsibility and inclusive development.
The NUC boss described the contract signing as a renewed commitment to accountability, sustainability and institutional excellence.
He added that the centres had recorded milestones including the development of specialised academic programmes, ranging from short courses to postgraduate and undergraduate degrees, as well as investments in digital learning infrastructure and research facilities.
Ribadu disclosed that three of the six centres had commenced PhD programmes, while others were expected to begin by July 2026.
Under the new phase, he said the commission targets at least 60 PhD graduates, enrolment of 60 foreign students, staff internships and expanded student exchange programmes with international institutions.
Also speaking, the Director-General of the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP), Dr Adebowale Adedokun, said the project had trained over 2,700 public and private sector officers to strengthen procurement competence nationwide.
He said the next phase would support the rollout of Nigeria’s electronic procurement system and expand online capacity-building for policymakers and SMEs handling public funds.
The World Bank Task Team Leader for SPESSE, Mr Ishtiak Siddique, said more than 40,000 participants had been trained under the original project, with over 4,000 certified in procurement, environmental and social standards.
He said the additional funding would prioritise capacity building for federal, state and local government agencies to accelerate development impact.
Siddique added that sustainability remained central to the project to ensure continuity beyond donor support.
The Vice-Chancellor of the University of Lagos, Prof. Folasade Ogunsola, reaffirmed institutional commitment to strengthening professional capacity under the SPESSE framework.
She pledged to deepen postgraduate training, institutional ownership and international collaborations.
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