
FG urged to build innovation ecosystem to commercialise research - Peoples Gazette Nigeria
Peoples Gazette Nigeria· 315 words · 2 min read
Mr Shagu said this is the support system Nigerian researchers need to move their research outcomes from the shelf to the market.
An innovation analyst, Abel Shagu, has urged the federal government to build a national innovation ecosystem where patents are nurtured into prototypes, funded into start-ups, and scaled into consumer products.
Mr Shagu said in Abuja on Monday that this is the support system Nigerian researchers need to move their research outcomes from the shelf to the market.
He said the support gap in Nigeria was a robust commercialisation ecosystem.
According to him, universities lack strong industry linkages, funding pipelines, technology transfer offices, and government-backed innovation policies that can turn patents into market-ready products.
"Without these, research remains academic rather than entrepreneurial,'' he said.
While identifying gaps in Nigeria's research-to-market pipeline, the expert said that weak technology transfer infrastructure, limited industry-academia collaboration, and a funding and venture capital deficit stood out.
He said others included policy and regulatory barriers, a lack of tax breaks or innovation credits, gaps in entrepreneurial skills, and the absence of incubation programmes.
Mr Shagu advised the government to establish well-funded technology transfer offices (TTOs) in every major university nationwide and create innovation hubs linking academia, start-ups and industry.
He said the government should also provide commercialisation grants and tax incentives to firms that adopt university patents.
The expert also suggested that researchers needed training on entrepreneurship and product development, as well as strengthening intellectual property enforcement to protect and encourage licensing.
"In the US, universities like MIT or Stanford have strong TTOs that manage thousands of patents and generate billions in licensing revenue.
"In Nigeria, most universities either lack TTOs or have underfunded, inactive ones, so patents remain unused instead of becoming consumer products.
"In short, TTO is the commercialisation engine of a university. Without it, research often ends up as a thesis on a shelf,'' Mr Shagu said.