HomeNewsNigeria's next-gen satellites set for 2028 launch

Nigeria’s next-gen satellites set for 2028 launch

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KEY POINTS


  • NIGCOMSAT-2A and 2B set for launch in 2028 and 2029.
  • Procurement concluded, program moves into financing and implementation.
  • Nigeria is West Africa’s only country with communication satellite.

Jane Nkechi Egerton-Idehen had good news for Nigeria’s space sector at the 2026 Satellite Week in Abuja. The managing director of NIGCOMSAT Limited said the country’s next-generation satellite program has cleared procurement and moved into financing and implementation, with NIGCOMSAT-2A and 2B on track for launch in 2028 and 2029.

The announcement came at an event themed “Harnessing Space for an Extraordinary Nigeria,” drawing government officials, industry experts and technology innovators to map out the country’s space and digital infrastructure ambitions.

Egerton-Idehen said the program will extend Nigeria’s reach in real-time communication, intelligence gathering and connectivity in areas where ground infrastructure barely exists, supporting precision agriculture, rural broadband expansion and security operations.

From approval to execution

“When operational, the satellites will strengthen security within Nigeria and neighboring countries, while supporting agencies with critical data and intelligence,” Egerton-Idehen said.

The launch signals a broader shift in how the sector is being managed. Communications Minister Bosun Tijani said the government has moved from approvals to delivery, backed by investments in fiber networks, towers and space infrastructure. He described the Nigeria satellite program as central to closing connectivity gaps and building national resilience.

Tijani also pointed to a distinction that carries strategic weight: Nigeria remains the only West African country with its own communication satellite, positioning it as a natural regional anchor for digital services in underserved communities.

Space as an economic engine

Beyond connectivity, both officials framed the Nigeria satellite program in terms of its broader economic payoff. Egerton-Idehen said the sector is entering a phase of accelerated growth, with space technology increasingly viewed as a foundation for sovereignty and national development rather than a standalone technical exercise.

Tijani added that the government’s focus extends beyond infrastructure to building an ecosystem around innovation, research and practical applications across sectors including agriculture, healthcare and commerce.

Nigeria has therefore spent years positioning itself as a continental leader in space technology. With procurement behind it and a firm launch window ahead, the next two years will test whether that ambition translates into orbit.

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