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Peter Mbah: Redefining Governance and Setting a New Benchmark in Enugu State

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In less than three years in office, Governor Peter Ndubuisi Mbah has emerged as one of Nigeria’s most visionary and results-oriented State leaders. Through a blend of innovation, technology, fiscal discipline, and bold reforms, Mbah is steadily transforming Enugu State from a once “civil service economy” into a thriving hub of productivity, smart economy driven by technology, and inclusive growth.

His leadership style which is rooted in measurable goals, performance-driven governance, and technological disruption of the status quo has redefined what it means to govern in the 21st century.

A Governor with a Vision and a Plan

From the onset, Mbah made his intentions clear, he told Ndi’Enugu that he wants to grow Enugu’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) from $4.4 billion to $30 billion within eight years, and that he wants to make Enugu State number one on the Performance chart of State Governments. Unlike political rhetoric, this vision was backed by a detailed development blueprint emphasizing innovation, infrastructure, and human capital development.

Today, Enugu’s trajectory under Mbah is unmistakably upward. His approach to governance is systematic, strategic, and data-driven, these and more are the qualities that have earned him admiration across political and economic circles.

Breaking Barriers Through Disruptive Governance.

Governor Mbah’s mantra, “Disruptive Innovation in Governance,” isn’t a slogan, it’s a governing philosophy.
He has dismantled old bureaucracies and built new systems of transparency and efficiency. The Enugu Geographic Information Service (ENGIS), for instance, has digitized over 80% of land titles, cutting approval times from months to just days and eliminating corruption-prone manual processes.

This “business unusual” approach has made Enugu one of Nigeria’s easiest States for investors to operate in.

Solving a 20-Year Water Crisis.

Perhaps one of the most tangible testament to Mbah’s results-oriented leadership is the restoration of Enugu’s long-abandoned water system. For nearly two decades, residents of the State capital survived on tanker water and boreholes. Within his first year, Mbah revived the 9th Mile and Oji River Water Schemes, raising production from just 2 million to over 120 million litres per day.
Today, taps are flowing again across the metropolis, a milestone many thought impossible.

Economic Reforms and Revenue Revolution.

Under Mbah’s fiscal stewardship, Enugu’s Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) soared from about ₦37 billion in 2022 to ₦144.7 billion by late 2024, an increase of nearly 300%.
Interestingly, this was achieved without imposing new taxes. Instead, the administration widened the tax net, digitized revenue systems, and encouraged formalization of small businesses.

With stronger finances, Enugu is now funding large-scale infrastructure and social projects without borrowing, a rarity in today’s Nigeria.

Education and Human Capital as Cornerstones.

Mbah’s focus on education is sweeping and futuristic. His administration is constructing 260 Smart Green Schools, one per ward, each equipped with digital whiteboards, robotics labs, and high-speed internet. The initiative aims to groom a generation of students who are globally competitive and technologically literate.

In Healthcare, a matching project is ongoing, the Peter Mbah administration is building, and in some cases upgrading a total 260 Primary Health Centres, ensuring that no community is more than a short walk from quality medical services.

Urban Renewal and the Birth of a Smart City.

The New Enugu City Project, sprawling across over 10,000 hectares, exemplifies Mbah’s ambition to turn Enugu into a smart, sustainable, and modern metropolis. The development will host residential estates, business districts, and green corridors designed to accommodate over 300,000 residents, and this clearly is a bold leap toward future-ready urbanization.

Power, Security, and Digital Transformation.

Enugu was among the first States in Nigeria to domesticate the power decentralization Act. Mbah’s government enacted the Enugu State Electricity Law 2023, making Enugu one of the first States to regulate its own power market under the national decentralization policy. Simultaneously, the State has deployed an AI-powered Command and Control Centre with drones, CCTV, and facial-recognition systems, drastically improving safety and emergency response thus making Enugu State one of safest in the Country.

Fiscal Discipline.

A key pillar of the administration is not to borrow irresponsibly but to expand state capacity and revenues.

Budget estimates grew from ₦166 billion in 2023 to ₦521.5 billion in 2024, with about 79% allocated to capital expenditure, signalling development focus.

Agriculture, Industry And Job Creation.

Agriculture: Large-scale mechanised farming, revitalisation of moribund Agro-industries (e.g., Palm production), and farm-estate development across the 17 local government areas mark key interventions.

Industry: Legacy firms such as Sunrise Flour Mills and United Palm Products Ltd. are being revived, while new industrial parks and a tractor-assembly plant are being developed.

Transport And Aviation: In a bold move, the state inaugurated its own state-owned airline, “Enugu Air”, and is building modern public transport terminals and CNG-bus fleets.

The mass-transit system (Bus shelters, terminals, CNG buses) strengthens intra-city mobility, reduces congestion and supports the liveability of the State capital.

Digital And Institutional Reform.

Governor Mbah’s team recognizes that bricks and mortar must be matched with systems and governance.

A vast fibre-optic rollout (nearly 380 km of cables) and high-tech command-control and surveillance systems underscore the State’s move into the digital era.

Land titling, business registration and tax/revenue systems have been revamped using digital platforms, reducing red-tape and boosting internally-generated revenue (IGR) significantly.

Institutional restructuring: For example, in July 2025 the government created a new Ministry of Energy & Mineral Resources and conducted a cabinet re-shuffle to sharpen capacities.

Looking Ahead: The Next Steps.

Going into the third year of his term, Governor Mbah has signalled his intent to consolidate gains and deepen reforms. And he is apparently committed to creating more jobs. Transport hubs, Agro-industrial estates, Logistic terminals, and Skill Acquisition Centres across the State.

Scaling Investor Attraction: With new institutions and digitized processes, the State hopes to continue to attract local and foreign direct investment.

Peter Mbah’s administration in Enugu State is nothing if not ambitious. With a clear blueprint, rapid execution of infrastructure and governance reforms, and a focus on transforming systems, the blueprint is visible. Whether the full vision ditto turning Enugu into a US $30 billion economy will be realised depends on sustained execution, private-sector leverage and inclusive growth. And evidently the “Talk-And-Do Governor”, as referred to by several commentators, reflects the tone he has set and the momentum he has generated.

In the sequel to this series, I shall furnish you with further data and details regarding this young man and Governor who is MAD (Making A Difference) in governance, and increasingly transforming and redefining leadership in Nigeria.

Prof Chris Mustapha Nwaokobia Jnr
Convener COUNTRYFIRST MOVEMENT. A Good Governance Advocacy Group.

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NCC clamps down on illegal signal boosters, fines telcos ₦45 million

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Nigeria’s telecoms regulator has removed more than 450 illegal signal boosters and fined operators a combined ₦45 million as it intensifies enforcement efforts to improve network quality across the country.

The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) disclosed the actions in a formal response to Nigeria’s minister of communications and digital economy, Bosun Tijani, detailing steps taken in 2025 to strengthen oversight, improve consumer experience, and sanction defaulting operators.

According to the regulator, enforcement teams dismantled over 450 unauthorised signal boosters across the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) in 2025. While often deployed by individuals and businesses to improve indoor coverage, the devices were found to interfere with surrounding network cells, degrading service quality for other users.

The NCC said follow-up analysis showed immediate improvements. At least 70 network sites recorded measurable performance gains after the boosters were removed, based on operator data, crowdsourced network information, and a noticeable drop in related consumer complaints.

Quality of service remains a major pain point for Nigerian telecoms users, and the commission said addressing it will stay central to its regulatory agenda in 2026. The focus, it added, will be on greater transparency, faster response times, and outcomes consumers can directly feel.

As part of that transparency push, the NCC said it has expanded public disclosures to pressure operators into improving service quality. One such move was the approval of tariff adjustments in January 2025, which the regulator described as a “calibrated intervention” to keep the industry financially viable while enabling continued network investment.

Those investments appear to be flowing. The NCC said Nigeria’s telecoms sector attracted more than $1 billion in fresh capital in 2025, alongside the rollout of over 2,850 new and upgraded network sites nationwide.

On consumer protection, the regulator said it adopted a more targeted approach to complaint management, focusing on the most common issues reported by subscribers: poor service quality, rapid data depletion, and refunds for failed transactions.

Operators are now required to notify customers ahead of major outages and maintenance activities. In addition, a Major Outages Reporting Portal on the NCC’s website provides real-time information on network disruptions, their geographic scope, and steps being taken to resolve them.

In October 2025, the commission also launched a crowdsourced National Coverage Map, allowing users to compare operator performance across locations using anonymised, near real-time data. Quarterly industry performance reports, broken down by state and region, are now being published as well.

To tighten enforcement, the NCC said it now receives daily, granular performance data from mobile network operators and infrastructure providers. It also reinstated nationwide drive tests in 2025—its first in nearly a decade—covering both urban and rural areas to independently verify operator-reported data.

Addressing widespread complaints about data depletion, the regulator pointed to tariff simplification guidelines issued in November 2024, which required operators to reduce the number of tariff plans and standardise disclosures to make pricing easier for consumers to understand.

Routine audits and spot checks continue. A fourth-quarter 2025 audit of 965 base stations in the FCT uncovered 5,557 infractions, with the NCC saying 81% were resolved before the end of the year.

On failed airtime and data recharges, the commission said refunds exceeding ₦10 billion have already been facilitated in collaboration with the Central Bank of Nigeria, telecom operators, and financial institutions. A formal refund framework is expected to be launched in March 2026.

The NCC confirmed that Globacom, Airtel, and infrastructure provider IHS were fined a combined ₦45 million in October 2025. Additional enforcement cases, carrying potential liabilities of ₦12.4 billion, are still undergoing regulatory review.

Beyond enforcement, the regulator said it approved several spectrum trades and reassignments, reallocating about 50 MHz of underutilised spectrum. The reassignment of an additional contiguous 10 MHz to Globacom helped boost its average 4G download speeds to around 15 Mbps by late 2025, up from roughly 9.5 Mbps previously.

The commission also revealed that Nigeria’s first Spectrum Roadmap, covering 2025 to 2030, has been drafted and is expected to be released by March 2026, pending board approval.

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NCC To Launch Spectrum Roadmap 2026 – 2030, For Improved Connectivity in Nigeria

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The Nigerian Communications Commission, NCC, has commenced consultative engagements with critical stakeholders prior to the launch of its National Spectrum Roadmap 2026 — 2030, as well as the opening of new spectrum bands in support of President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda for a trillion dollars digital economy.

The proposed National Spectrum Roadmap 2026–2030 will drive Nigeria’s digital future through transparency and predictable spectrum regulation.

The Executive Vice Chairman, Dr Aminu Maida, disclosed this on Monday at a Spectrum Roadmap stakeholders’ consultation forum in Abuja.

Mr Maida said the initiative includes the Spectrum Roadmap 2026–2030 and guidelines for opening the lower 6GHz and 60GHz licence-exempt bands.

Represented by the Head of Spectrum Administration, Atiku Lawal, he said the measures aim to improve quality of service nationwide.

Mr Maida said: “Our national ambitions are growing. We want faster speeds, wider coverage, better service quality, stronger innovation and greater inclusion.

“This roadmap creates a transparent, predictable regulatory environment supporting investment, encouraging innovation, expanding access and improving service quality for all Nigerians.”

He said the lower 6GHz and 60GHz guidelines would unlock new capacity for high-speed, affordable and reliable connectivity.

“Spectrum is behind everything digital we do. Though invisible, it is indispensable to mobile, broadband, satellite, emergency and smart technologies,” Mr Maida said.

He added that every video call, online classroom, digital transaction and connected device in Nigeria relies on spectrum.

“We are preparing Nigeria for future data demands across homes, campuses, businesses, healthcare facilities and public spaces,” he said.

The Executive Commissioner, Technical Services, Abraham Oshadami, said spectrum resources must serve every community.

“Today’s engagement reaffirms our commitment to expanding wireless broadband through foresight, fairness and national development goals,” Oshadami said.

Earlier, Atiku Lawal described the roadmap as more than a technical document, calling it a strategic blueprint for Nigeria’s digital future.

Speaking for Huawei, Dr Lola Fafore said the roadmap would drive innovation, boost broadband penetration and contribute significantly to national GDP.

The two-day forum will deliberate on initiatives shaping Nigeria’s digital future.

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NCC Unveils 2026–2030 Spectrum Roadmap, Moves to Open New Bands for Wi-Fi Expansion

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The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has signaled a major shift in how radio spectrum will be managed in the country over the next five years, as it unveiled plans for a new Spectrum Roadmap (2026–2030) and proposed guidelines for opening the lower 6GHz and 60GHz bands for unlicensed use.

Speaking on January 19, 2026, at the Stakeholders’ Consultative Forum on Spectrum Roadmap 2026–2030 and Guidelines for Opening Lower 6GHz & 60GHz Bands in Abuja, the NCC’s Executive Vice Chairman (EVC), Dr. Aminu Maida, described the initiatives as critical to Nigeria’s digital future. He said the frameworks are designed to make spectrum management more predictable, transparent, and investment-friendly while supporting innovation and wider digital inclusion.

Welcoming industry players, government agencies, and technical experts to the forum, Maida said the discussions would shape policies that affect everything from mobile broadband and satellite services to financial technology, emergency communications, and smart infrastructure. He underscored the centrality of spectrum to modern digital life, noting that “spectrum may be invisible, yet it is indispensable,” as it powers mobile phones, broadband networks, and connected devices across the country.

The EVC warned that spectrum is a finite resource, even as demand continues to surge due to cloud computing, artificial intelligence, Internet of Things (IoT) applications, and data-heavy services. According to him, this makes smarter planning and more flexible regulation imperative. The new Spectrum Roadmap, he said, aims to balance growing demand with national development priorities while improving service quality and network coverage.

Beyond the roadmap, the NCC is also proposing to open the lower 6GHz and 60GHz bands for license-exempt use, a move expected to significantly expand Wi-Fi capacity in Nigeria. Maida explained that this would enable faster indoor broadband, multi-gigabit wireless systems, and better connectivity in homes, schools, hospitals, businesses, and public spaces.

He noted that globally, Wi-Fi already carries a significant share of internet traffic, and Nigeria must position itself to benefit from this trend. Opening these bands, he said, would prepare the country for future data demands beyond traditional mobile networks.

While emphasizing that the regulatory frameworks provide a strong foundation, Maida stressed that private sector investment, innovation, and stakeholder feedback would ultimately determine their success. He linked the initiative to the Federal Government’s Renewed Hope Agenda and President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s ambition of building a $1 trillion digital economy by 2030.

The EVC also reiterated the Commission’s commitment to consultative and evidence-based policymaking, urging participants to contribute actively to the deliberations. He framed the forum as a collaborative effort to build a more innovative, resilient, and inclusive digital ecosystem for Nigeria.

The consultative forum is expected to inform final policy decisions on spectrum allocation, unlicensed access, and future licensing strategies as the NCC moves toward implementing its new roadmap.

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