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UNESCO has unveiled Nigeria’s first ethical AI readiness report, a milestone that the government hopes will position the country as a continental leader in governing artificial intelligence. The Artificial Intelligence Readiness Assessment report was presented in Abuja, offering a detailed look at how prepared Nigeria is to build and regulate AI responsibly.

What the ethical AI report measures
The report provides the first comprehensive assessment of Nigeria’s ability to develop, deploy and regulate AI in an ethical, inclusive and human-centred way. It examines the country’s strengths and gaps across five areas: governance, infrastructure, data, inclusion and ethics. The aim is to give policymakers a clear diagnostic tool rather than a simple ranking.
Nigeria recorded an AI readiness score of 47.9 and an ICT regulatory maturity ranking that pointed to strong potential. At the same time, the assessment flagged infrastructure and access to capital as major challenges that could slow progress if left unaddressed.
Building capacity for ethical AI
The launch was paired with practical training. UNESCO said it had begun capacity-building programmes, training more than 400 civil servants across six Nigerian states using AI literacy modules. The goal is to deepen public-sector understanding of emerging technologies so that officials can make informed decisions about adoption and oversight.
Officials say the readiness assessment will guide them in building governance structures, strengthening research and innovation, improving AI education and creating safeguards. Done well, that framework would let Nigeria capture the benefits of AI while limiting risks such as bias, job displacement and misuse of personal data.
Why ethical AI matters now
Artificial intelligence is moving quickly from laboratories into everyday services, from banking and healthcare to education and security. Countries that set clear rules early are better placed to attract investment, protect citizens and shape how the technology is used. Those that lag risk importing tools designed elsewhere, with little say over their effects.
For Nigeria, with its large youth population and growing tech sector, the stakes are high. The country has produced a steady stream of startups and developers, and AI could amplify that talent. But weak infrastructure, unreliable power and limited funding remain real constraints that the report does not gloss over.
Ethics sits at the heart of the exercise. AI systems can entrench discrimination if trained on poor data, or erode privacy if deployed without limits. By placing inclusion and ethics among its five pillars, the assessment signals that Nigeria wants to weigh fairness and rights alongside speed and innovation.
Analysts caution that a readiness report is only a starting point. Its value depends on whether the recommendations translate into laws, funding and institutions that endure beyond a single launch event. Sustained investment in skills, data systems and reliable infrastructure will determine how far the ambition goes.
For now, the report gives Nigeria a clearer map of where it stands on artificial intelligence, and a chance to lead the conversation on ethical AI across Africa. The next test will be whether government, industry and academia can act on its findings together rather than in isolation.