As Nigeria moves deeper into its digital transformation drive, technology leaders and policymakers are set to examine how the country can turn digital public infrastructure plans into effective systems that improve governance, security and economic growth.
The conversation will take place at ITGOV 2026, the annual IT Governance Conference organised by Tranter IT Infrastructure Services Limited and powered by ManageEngine, scheduled to hold on July 15, 2026, at Abuja.
The conference, themed ‘Building Nigeria’s Digital Public Infrastructure for Economic Growth, Security, and Governance Efficiency’ comes at a critical period as the Federal Government advances its digital public infrastructure framework, expands the Nigerian Data Exchange and pushes for broader integration of national identity systems across sectors.
Industry experts has said Nigeria’s next phase of digital transformation will depend less on technology adoption alone and more on whether institutions can build the governance structures, security frameworks and operational capacity required to sustain large-scale digital systems.
Emmanuel Ayoola, chief executive officer of Tranter IT Infrastructure Services Limited, said Nigeria is entering a decisive stage where strategic choices around digital infrastructure will determine the country’s ability to compete in the digital economy.
“Nigeria’s digital infrastructure agenda is no longer theoretical. Institutions are making foundational decisions right now and the margin for misalignment is narrow.
“ITGOV 2026 exists to ensure that the people driving those decisions have the context, the peer engagement and the clarity of thinking that this moment demands,” Ayoola said.
The one-day conference will bring together senior government officials, technology executives, regulators and policy experts for discussions around digital governance, cybersecurity, data exchange, infrastructure resilience and the future of public service delivery.
The organisers said the event is designed to shift attention from policy discussions to implementation challenges, including how institutions can build secure and interoperable systems that support citizens and businesses.
Nigeria’s digital public infrastructure agenda has become very important as governments globally adopt digital identity systems, data-sharing platforms and technology-enabled public services to improve efficiency and inclusion.
However, experts have continued to highlight challenges around cybersecurity risks, fragmented systems, institutional readiness and the need for stronger coordination among stakeholders.
Abel Edoka, communications manager at Tranter IT Infrastructure Services Limited, said ITGOV 2026 will focus on helping stakeholders identify practical approaches to building reliable digital infrastructure.
“The goal is to create a platform where decision-makers can exchange ideas, share experiences and explore solutions that will help Nigeria build digital systems capable of supporting economic growth and effective governance,” Edoka said.
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The conference is expected to attract chief information officers, government technology leaders, regulators, enterprise technology professionals and other stakeholders shaping Nigeria’s digital ecosystem.
As major digital projects move from planning into execution, industry stakeholders believe the success of Nigeria’s digital transformation will depend on how effectively institutions collaborate, govern technology and deliver systems that work at national scale.
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