Innovation Deficit: Why Nigeria’s Traditional Industries Remain Frozen in Time!

Innovation Deficit: Why Nigeria’s Traditional Industries Remain Frozen in Time!

Reported by Marian Opeyemi Fasesan | Sele Media Africa

Despite decades of development rhetoric, many of Nigeria’s most iconic traditional industries — including palm oil milling, aso-oke weaving, and staple food processing like Garri, Fufu, and Elubo — have barely evolved. The tools, methods, and production models remain largely the same as they were generations ago.

What We Know:

  • Palm Oil: Nigeria, once a global leader, now lags behind countries like Malaysia and Indonesia, whose mechanisation and research investments transformed their industries.
  • Aso-Oke Weaving: Hand looms still dominate, with little standardisation, digital patterning, or access to global fashion markets.
  • Staple Food Processing: Garri and Elubo are still largely processed manually, with limited adoption of scalable mechanisation or hygienic packaging techniques.

Why It Matters:

  • The lack of innovation limits productivity, export potential, and youth engagement in these sectors.
  • Traditional industries are crucial for rural livelihoods, yet without reinvention, they risk extinction or irrelevance.

Expert Insight:

Economist Bismarck Rewane notes, “You cannot build a modern economy with medieval tools. Until we treat tradition as a foundation — not a ceiling — growth will remain cosmetic.”

Citations:

  1. National Bureau of Statistics – www.nigerianstat.gov.ng
  2. UNIDO Report on Agro-Industrialisation in Nigeria – www.unido.org
  3. Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) – www.nesgroup.org

About The Author


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Marian Opeyemi Fasesan

Marian Opeyemi Fasesan is a dynamic journalist and editorial leader committed to excellence in news reporting and storytelling. As the Managing Editor of Sele Media Africa, she ensures daily operations run smoothly while upholding the highest editorial standards. With a strong eye for detail and deep understanding of audience engagement, Marian coordinates content across platforms, guiding teams to produce compelling, timely, and credible news. Her leadership reflects the heart of Sele Media Africa’s mission—to inform, inspire, and elevate voices across the continent.

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