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Business & Economy

Blue Economy TV Nigeria: Can Africa’s First Maritime Channel Drive Growth, Transparency and Accountability?

Dr. Desmond Ekeh
Last updated: April 16, 2026 4:24 pm
Dr. Desmond Ekeh
April 16, 2026
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12 Min Read
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Nigeria has launched what it describes as Africa’s first dedicated blue economy broadcast platform, a move that signals both ambition and a certain urgency. As the country searches for new growth frontiers beyond oil, the unveiling of Blue Economy Television, BETV, in Lagos suggests that policymakers and industry actors are beginning to take seriously the economic, ecological and strategic value of water.

The new channel, conceived by the Blue Economy Academy, is positioned as a specialised media platform focused on maritime resources, coastal tourism, fisheries, shipping, and sustainability. At its unveiling, stakeholders framed the initiative less as a conventional television launch and more as a shift in economic consciousness. For a country with over 180 kilometres of coastline and more than 140 kilometres of inland waterways, the argument is that Nigeria has long underpriced and underreported its aquatic assets.

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Emmanuel Oluwadamilola, General Manager of the Lagos State Waterways Authority and Special Adviser to the Governor on Blue Economy, captured this sentiment with unusual clarity. Nigeria’s waters, he argued, are not merely scenic but strategic. They carry over 70 per cent of international trade, yet have remained marginal in public discourse and economic planning. Blue Economy TV, in this sense, is designed to correct a narrative deficit as much as an economic one.

From resource abundance to narrative scarcity

The idea of a blue economy is not new. Globally, it refers to the sustainable use of ocean and water resources for economic growth, improved livelihoods and environmental health. Countries such as Norway, Indonesia and the Netherlands have long leveraged maritime ecosystems as engines of prosperity, integrating policy, infrastructure and communication in ways that reinforce both growth and sustainability.

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Nigeria, by contrast, has historically approached its waterways in a fragmented manner. Oil exports dominate maritime thinking, while fisheries, coastal tourism, marine biotechnology and inland water transport remain underdeveloped. This is not simply a policy failure; it is also a storytelling failure.

Media, as scholars of political economy often argue, does not merely reflect economic realities; it helps construct them. When sectors are invisible in public discourse, they struggle to attract investment, talent and policy attention. Blue Economy TV is therefore an attempt to reposition maritime activity within Nigeria’s economic imagination.

Ubong Essien, founder of the Blue Economy Academy, frames the initiative as an extension of a broader knowledge project. The academy itself was established to provide practical, industry-driven training across segments of the blue economy. The television platform, in turn, becomes a vehicle for scaling that knowledge, translating technical potential into public awareness.

The economic promise: jobs, trade and diversification

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At its most optimistic, Blue Economy TV could play a catalytic role in unlocking new economic value. Nigeria’s coastal and inland water systems offer opportunities across multiple sectors.

Fisheries and aquaculture could significantly enhance food security in a country grappling with rising food prices and supply chain disruptions. Water transportation, if efficiently developed, could reduce pressure on congested road networks while lowering logistics costs. Coastal tourism, largely untapped, holds potential for foreign exchange earnings. Marine services, including shipbuilding and maintenance, could stimulate industrial activity.

The challenge has never been the absence of opportunity. It has been the absence of coordination, visibility and sustained investment. A dedicated media platform could, in theory, bridge some of these gaps by connecting policymakers, investors, entrepreneurs and the public within a shared narrative ecosystem.

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There is also a generational dimension. Nigeria’s youth population, often excluded from formal employment, could find new pathways in maritime industries. By spotlighting career opportunities and success stories, the channel could influence labour market perceptions and encourage skill acquisition in areas aligned with the blue economy.

Lessons from global precedents

Specialised economic broadcasting is not without precedent. Channels focused on finance, agriculture and technology have, in various parts of the world, shaped sectoral growth by providing information, analysis and visibility.

Yet maritime-focused broadcasting remains relatively niche. Where it exists, it is often embedded within broader economic or environmental programming rather than operating as a standalone channel. This makes Nigeria’s initiative both pioneering and precarious.

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The experience of sector-specific media elsewhere offers useful lessons. First, credibility is paramount. Audiences quickly disengage from platforms perceived as promotional rather than analytical. Second, sustainability depends on diversified revenue streams, including advertising, partnerships and possibly subscription models. Third, relevance requires continuous adaptation to audience needs, particularly in an era of digital media fragmentation.

Editorial mandate: between advocacy and accountability

The most consequential question facing Blue Economy TV is not technological but editorial. Will it function as a platform for critical inquiry or as an extension of government and industry messaging?

The blue economy, like any resource-based sector, is not immune to governance challenges. Issues such as illegal fishing, environmental degradation, port inefficiencies and regulatory opacity have long plagued maritime systems across Africa. In Nigeria, concerns about corruption, rent-seeking and institutional weakness are well documented.

For the channel to achieve credibility, it must navigate a delicate balance. On one hand, it seeks to promote the sector and attract investment. On the other, it must retain the independence necessary to interrogate policies, expose inefficiencies and hold stakeholders accountable.

This tension is not unique. Media institutions operating within emerging economies often face implicit or explicit pressures to align with government narratives. The risk is that the channel becomes an instrument of public relations rather than public interest.

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If Blue Economy TV is to avoid this trap, it must invest in editorial independence, professional standards and investigative capacity. The long-term value of the platform will depend less on its ability to celebrate success and more on its willingness to confront uncomfortable truths.

Content strategy: what should the channel prioritise?

For the platform to achieve both relevance and impact, its reportage must move beyond surface-level coverage. Several areas warrant sustained attention.

First is policy analysis. Maritime regulations, trade agreements and environmental frameworks are often complex and poorly understood. Breaking these down in accessible formats could enhance public understanding and stakeholder engagement.

Second is data-driven storytelling. The blue economy is rich in quantitative indicators, from trade volumes to fish stock levels. Integrating data analytics into reporting would elevate the channel’s authority and provide actionable insights for decision-makers.

Third is investigative journalism. Exposing inefficiencies, corruption and regulatory failures would not only build credibility but also contribute to sectoral reform.

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Fourth is human-centred narratives. Stories of fishermen, traders, transport operators and coastal communities would ground the abstract concept of the blue economy in lived experience.

Finally, there is a need for forward-looking analysis. Climate change, technological innovation and global trade dynamics are reshaping maritime industries. Anticipating these shifts would position the channel as a thought leader rather than a passive observer.

Structural challenges: funding, reach and trust

Despite its promise, Blue Economy TV faces significant structural challenges.

Funding is an immediate concern. Specialised channels often struggle to attract sufficient advertising revenue, particularly in markets where media consumption is fragmented. Without a sustainable financial model, the platform risks becoming dependent on government or institutional funding, which could compromise editorial independence.

Audience reach is another hurdle. In an era dominated by digital platforms, traditional broadcasting alone may not suffice. The channel will need a strong digital presence, including streaming services and social media integration, to engage younger audiences.

Trust, perhaps the most intangible yet critical asset, will take time to build. In a media environment where audiences are increasingly sceptical of institutional narratives, credibility must be earned through consistency, transparency and quality.

Governance, institutions and the limits of media intervention

The success of Blue Economy TV ultimately depends on factors beyond media. Institutional economics offers a useful lens here. Scholars such as Douglass North have long argued that economic performance is shaped by the quality of institutions, including legal frameworks, governance structures and enforcement mechanisms.

In Nigeria, institutional weaknesses have historically constrained the effective utilisation of resources. Even the most compelling media narratives cannot substitute for coherent policy, efficient regulation and accountable governance.

This raises a broader question. Can a media platform meaningfully influence institutional reform? The answer is nuanced. While media cannot replace institutions, it can shape the incentives that govern them. By increasing transparency, amplifying stakeholder voices and exposing inefficiencies, it can contribute to a more accountable ecosystem.

The road ahead

Blue Economy TV arrives at a moment when Nigeria is actively seeking to diversify its economy and redefine its development trajectory. The platform’s ambition aligns with broader efforts to unlock new sources of growth, from agriculture to digital technology.

Yet ambition alone is insufficient. The channel must navigate a complex landscape of economic expectations, political realities and media dynamics. Its success will depend on its ability to combine advocacy with analysis, promotion with accountability, and storytelling with substance.

If it succeeds, Blue Economy TV could become more than a niche broadcaster. It could serve as a model for how media can shape economic transformation in emerging markets. If it fails, it risks becoming another well-intentioned initiative constrained by the very institutional challenges it seeks to address.

For now, the launch marks a beginning rather than a conclusion. Nigeria’s waters, long overlooked, are finally entering the national conversation. Whether that conversation leads to meaningful change will depend not only on what is said, but on how truthfully, critically and persistently it is told.

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ByDr. Desmond Ekeh
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Dr. Desmond Ekeh, a PR consultant, journalist, and brand communicator, researches at the intersection of philosophy, politics and communication.
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