As Nigeria positions itself as a key hub for Africa’s digital transformation, Schneider Electric said it is leading an effort to professionalise local data centre engineering, addressing a critical operational challenge in the country’s rapidly growing IT infrastructure.
The expansion of the company’s Data Centre and Critical Infrastructure EcoXpert programme aims to equip Nigerian firms with the skills to manage high-demand facilities efficiently. The initiative certifies local engineers and system integrators in advanced infrastructure management, merging digital monitoring with electrical systems to reduce energy waste and maintain uptime.
“Software is no longer a background tool for data centres in Nigeria,” the Country President of Schneider Electric Anglophone Africa, Ajibola Akindele, said in a note to The PUNCH.
The urgency for specialised expertise has intensified with the rise of artificial intelligence workloads, which demand higher rack densities and generate heat levels beyond traditional cooling capacities.
Local banks and telecommunications companies are increasingly integrating AI for fraud detection and analytics, making the reliability of domestic data centres critical.
“It is the intelligence that allows operators to anticipate changes in demand, optimise energy use, and ensure resilient performance even in the face of power constraints.”
Nigeria’s regulatory environment further underscores the need for robust local expertise. The Nigerian Data Protection Commission mandates that citizens’ data remain within the country, creating a requirement for data centres that are not only secure but also maintained by certified local professionals who understand the region’s unique operational challenges.
The EcoXpert programme is designed to fill this gap, training Nigerian engineering firms in advanced cooling, power management, and real-time infrastructure monitoring. By strengthening local capacity, Schneider Electric hopes to ensure that Nigeria’s data centres can meet the demands of AI-driven services while maintaining operational efficiency.
With multi-billion-dollar investments flowing into the sector and subsea cables landing along the coast, Nigeria’s data centre landscape is poised for significant growth. Experts say that the next phase of the country’s digital evolution will depend less on the number of servers and more on the ability to run them efficiently, a challenge that local engineers are now being trained to meet.
