Manny Ita
The Federal Government, through the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund), has officially launched its 2026 intervention cycle, allocating a total of ₦6.452 billion to 271 public tertiary institutions across Nigeria. The Executive Secretary of TETFund, Arc. Sonny Echono, announced the disbursement guidelines during a strategic stakeholders’ workshop in Abuja on Tuesday, January 13, 2026. Approved by President Bola Tinubu under the “Renewed Hope Agenda,” the funding is designed to drive a massive transformation in infrastructure, academic research, and digital innovation within the nation’s higher education sector.
Under the approved 2026 framework, the disbursement is categorized into specific allocations for each type of institution:
- Universities: Each public university, regardless of its size or age, will receive ₦2,525,932,228.02.
- Polytechnics: Each polytechnic is allocated ₦1,871,059,920.53.
- Colleges of Education: Each college will receive ₦2,056,527,973.04.
A significant highlight of the 2026 cycle is the introduction of a new digital intervention line: the Nigerian Research and Education Network (NgREN). This initiative aims to integrate the Tertiary Education, Research, Applications and Services (TERAS) platform into a unified national network, providing students and faculty with high-speed internet and seamless access to global academic databases and research journals. Echono emphasized that 90.75% of the total 2026 allocation is dedicated to direct disbursements—split between annual (50%) and special (40.75%) interventions—while the remaining funds are reserved for stabilization and designated strategic projects, including the establishment of Centers for Robotics, Coding, and Cybersecurity.
To ensure accountability, TETFund has implemented a strict “utilization policy,” stating that institutions with unspent funds from previous years will not receive additional disbursements until existing resources are fully deployed. Furthermore, the Fund has committed to paying contractors within two weeks of milestone completion to prevent the “abandoned project” syndrome that has plagued the sector in the past. President Tinubu’s administration has praised the timely release of these funds as a critical step toward making Nigerian graduates globally competitive and stemming the “brain drain” of academic talent.
