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World Bank, NUC sign $65 million deal to benefit 24,000 Nigerians

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The National Universities Commission (NUC) says no fewer than 24,000 Nigerians will benefit from a new $65 million funding phase under the World Bank-supported Sustainable Procurement, Environmental and Social Standards Enhancement (SPESSE) project.

The signing of the performance contracts for the additional financing took place on Wednesday in Abuja during a formal ceremony attended by key stakeholders, according to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

The SPESSE project is a World Bank-backed initiative aimed at strengthening Nigeria’s institutional and human capacity in procurement, environmental management, and social standards across both the public and private sectors.

What they are saying
The Executive Secretary of the NUC, Abdullahi Ribadu, said the additional funding phase was designed to build on the gains already recorded under the initial $80 million SPESSE programme launched in 2021.

He explained that the initiative was introduced to tackle the shortage of skilled professionals in key governance and development sectors, especially in procurement processes, environmental management, and social safeguards.

Ribadu noted that six centres of excellence had been established across Nigeria’s six geopolitical zones to ensure regional inclusiveness and provide long-term professional training in the targeted sectors.
He added that the participating universities emerged through a competitive selection process that evaluated their institutional readiness, sustainability plans, and quality assurance systems.
Ribadu said three of the six centres had already commenced PhD programmes, while the remaining centres are expected to begin similar programmes by July 2026.

Under the new funding phase, he said the commission aims to produce at least 60 PhD graduates, attract 60 foreign students, facilitate staff internships, and expand student exchange programmes with international institutions.

“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.
More insights
Also speaking, Adebowale Adedokun, Director-General of the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP), said the SPESSE initiative had already trained more than 2,700 officers from both the public and private sectors to strengthen procurement standards and competence nationwide.

Adedokun said the next phase of the programme would support the implementation of Nigeria’s electronic procurement system and expand online training opportunities for policymakers and small businesses involved in managing public funds.

Meanwhile, the World Bank Task Team Leader for SPESSE, Ishtiak Siddique, said the original phase of the project had trained more than 40,000 participants, with over 4,000 persons receiving certification in procurement, environmental, and social standards.
He noted that the fresh funding would focus heavily on strengthening the capacities of federal, state, and local government institutions to improve development outcomes across the country.

What you should know
The latest financing builds on the success of the initial $80 million SPESSE project, which became operational in 2021.

In July last year, Nairametrics reported that the World Bank approved an additional $65 million credit facility for Nigeria under the SPESSE initiative, raising the project’s total funding to $145 million.

The project has become one of the Federal Government’s major capacity-building programmes focused on improving governance standards, procurement systems, environmental management, and social safeguards across public institutions.

https://nairametrics.com/2026/05/13/world-bank-nuc-sign-65-million-deal-to-benefit-24000-nigerians/

Wait, Ribadu said they want to attract 60 foreign students? Into Nigerian universities? In this 2026? Unless the PhD is in ‘Survival Skills,’ I want to see the marketing pitch they’ll use to bring them here.

The World Bank loves lending to Nigeria for ‘Soft Projects’ (training, standards, consultancy). They know it’s hard to track. Give us money for ‘Hard Projects’ like power plants if you really want to help.

Another $65 million loan from the World Bank. At this rate, our grandchildren will be born with a ‘debt-to-World-Bank’ certificate instead of a birth certificate. We need to start funding our own education.

NUC should focus on the quality of the ‘Centers of Excellence.’ Don’t let them become ‘Centers of Maintenance Culture’ where the AC doesn’t work and the toilets are locked.

E-procurement is the real goal here. If we can move everything online and remove the ‘human element’ that likes to collect 10%, Nigeria might actually save billions.

PhD in Procurement? Imagine the thesis: ‘The Socio-Economic Impact of Over-Invoicing in West African Democracy.’ I’d actually read that one!

Staff internships and international exchange programs… I see a lot of people using this as a ‘Japa’ route. Once they finish the exchange in Europe, half of them won’t come back to implement the ‘Social Standards’.

SPESSE sounds like a fancy name for ‘Governance 101.’ We’ve been doing ‘Capacity Building’ since 1960, yet the capacity never seems to be full. Let’s hope this phase is different.

60 PhD graduates? Abeg, we have thousands of PhD holders roaming the streets or teaching as adjuncts for peanuts. We need jobs and industries, not just more titles and ‘Dr.’ in front of names.

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