Enugu Ready to Host Tech Giants for the 2026 Enugu Tech Festival

By CHIDIPETERS OKORIE

Enugu retains its trademark of calmness, peaceful avenues, unhurried traffic and a cadence of life distinct from Nigeria’s commercial bustle. But the city is no longer content to trade on nostalgia. For the past three year the state is undergoing a deliberate and far-reaching reinvention. Major arterial roads are being reconstructed, transport networks expanded and public services digitized; Smart Green Schools are rising across communities, hospitals are being upgraded, and critical infrastructure modernised under the administration of Governor Peter Mbah — programmes aimed at repositioning the state for long-term competitiveness and growth.

From 24 to 27 February, the city will transform into a hive of activity as global technology leaders converge at the Enugu International Conference Centre for the second edition of the Enugu Tech Festival in anticipation of nearly 50,000 participants within the four days — including startup founders, developers, venture capitalists, corporate technology leaders, academics, policymakers and students. Also delegations from across Nigeria, other African countries and international innovation ecosystems have confirmed attendance, reflecting rising confidence in Enugu’s trajectory.

Conceived as the flagship initiative of the Enugu State Ministry of Innovation, Science and Technology, and championed by its commissioner, Dr Prince Lawrence Ezeh, the festival aims to channel youthful energy into practical digital skills and enterprise. Its programming spans artificial intelligence, hackathons, blockchain, cybersecurity, robotics, fintech, data science, cloud computing, the Internet of Things, and software development — all sectors critical to building a resilient, knowledge-driven economy.

By the time His Excellency, Governor Peter Mbah steps up to declare the festival open on Tuesday, 24 February, his words will carry more than ceremonial weight. Delivered with a measured authority and a voice resonant with vision and conviction, his speech will transform the moment into a powerful affirmation of purpose. The opening will mark not just the second edition of a growing innovation gathering, but the bold consolidation of a strategy aimed at redefining Enugu — moving it beyond its historic identity as the Coal City to a vibrant, competitive digital hub at the heart of West Africa.

The theme for this year’s festival, “Coal to Code: Energy in New Form,” embodies the bold vision of Governor Peter Mbah, who has consistently articulated a future for Enugu as a knowledge-driven, digitally empowered economy. Under his leadership, the administration has prioritised digitisation across government services, education reform, technology incubation, and infrastructure development. Initiatives such as expanded broadband access, e-governance systems, and innovation-friendly policies are being established as lasting structural foundations, signaling a transformation that is deliberate, sustainable, and far-reaching rather than temporary or symbolic.

The inaugural 2025 edition was widely regarded within policy circles as a declaration of intent. It placed Enugu more firmly on Nigeria’s technology map and demonstrated its capacity to convene national stakeholders. But the more significant developments followed the applause.

Since ETF 2025, ten new technology hubs have emerged within the state, including a dedicated Blockchain Hub and the Risevest Hub. These centres are functioning as active spaces for product development, mentorship and venture incubation. Organisers say there has also been a relocation of technology communities into Enugu, strengthening collaboration between startups, investors and public institutions.

A defining feature of the 2026 edition will be large-scale digital skills training. For three consecutive days, more than 67,000 participants will receive free instruction in data analytics, software development, artificial intelligence and digital project management. Trainers from the United Kingdom, including partners from 1Goal Analytics, will deliver the sessions, with participants receiving foreign certification upon completion.

In a country confronting youth unemployment and skills gaps, such certification programmes carry substantial weight. They aim not only to equip participants with market-relevant competencies but also to align local talent with global standards.

The speaker line-up underscores the festival’s political and economic relevance. Governor Peter Mbah will formally declare the event open. Nigeria’s minister of communications, innovation and digital economy, Bosun Tijani, is expected to participate, alongside the minister of youth development, Ayodele Olawande.

International engagement will include Anna Westerholm, ambassador of the Kingdom of Sweden to Nigeria, reflecting the growing diplomatic dimension of technology collaboration.

Private-sector leaders are also prominent on the programme. Among them are Leo Stan Ekeh, founder and chairman of Zinox Group; Gossy Ukanwoke, managing director of Kingmakers; and Chioma Ekeh, chief executive of TD Africa. Regulatory and policy insights will come from Aminu Maida of the Nigerian Communications Commission and Kashifu Inuwa Abdullahi, Nigeria’s chief technology and information officer and 14 others speakers.

Panel discussions and workshops will explore artificial intelligence, fintech, agritech, healthtech, cybersecurity, renewable energy technologies and digital infrastructure — sectors widely viewed as central to Africa’s long-term competitiveness.

A key highlight will be the Startup Showcase and Investment Forum, where emerging entrepreneurs will pitch their innovations directly to investors and strategic partners. Selected startups will gain access to post-festival incubation support and advisory services, reinforcing the state’s focus on long-term business growth rather than short-lived publicity.

Government participation will be robust, with senior federal and state officials discussing enabling policies, innovation financing and ease-of-doing-business reforms. Development agencies and private sponsors have also aligned with the initiative, demonstrating the importance of collaboration between public leadership and private enterprise.

For Enugu, the stakes extend beyond hosting a successful conference. The ambition is to institutionalise innovation — to ensure that training translates into employment, that hubs mature into sustainable enterprises and that policy reforms endure beyond electoral cycles.

If coal once defined Enugu’s past, innovation is being positioned as its future energy source. Through the Enugu Tech Festival — its flagship innovation platform — the state is signalling that it is no longer content with historical significance. It intends to compete, collaborate and lead in Nigeria’s digital century.

Related Articles