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  • This is Lagos, Nigeria the largest city in Africa.

  • Home to more than 22 million people, it’s facing a perfect storm of challenges.

  • So let’s look at how this megacity is trying to modernize.

  • The biggest challenge Nigeria faces is a population pyramid that’s overwhelmingly bottom heavy.

  • 61% are younger than 25—that’s a lot of jobs to create and houses to build in the

  • coming years.

  • This problem is made worse by the extremely poor condition of the city’s infrastructure.

  • Badly designed and maintained motorways cause people to endure agonizing commute times,

  • and interrupted access to electricity causes regular blackouts.

  • Add in the threat of a rising ocean that’s steadily eroding the coastline, and the future

  • of this place looks bleak.

  • But perspective is relative, so let’s gain some.

  • 165 years ago Lagos was an island fortress and one of the principal roots of the slave

  • trade, until the British navy bombarded it into submission and abolished the practice.

  • But slavery wasn’t outlawed in Northern Nigeria until 1936.

  • That means any Nigerian older than 85 can probably still remember slavery, or was a

  • slave themselves.

  • In 1960, Nigeria gained independence from the British.

  • But, the country quickly became engulfed in a civil war that killed as many as 3 million

  • people.

  • In the dark aftermath of this bloody conflict the country had one thing going for it: oil,

  • which provided a consistent source of income.

  • But the temptation of controlling all that black gold attracted deeply corrupt men, and

  • Nigeria endured decades of violent struggles between power-mad dictators and military officers.

  • With just two legitimate presidential elections under its belt, in 2011 and 2015, Nigeria

  • has only had six years of truly peaceful, independentnot completely corruptdemocratic

  • rule in its entire history.

  • All this upheaval was amplified by strong ethnic and religious divisions throughout

  • the country.

  • So for the federal government to appear legitimate, the capital had to move away from Lagos to

  • a more centralized, neutral part of the country.

  • Following in the footsteps of Brazil’s master-planned capital, Brasilia, the Nigerians built an

  • entire city from scratch during the 1980’s.

  • The relocation of thousands of government workers drove migration to this new capital,

  • Abuja, the fastest growing city in the world from 2000 to 2010.

  • Unfortunately, while Abuja thrived, Lagos languished.

  • With the city far away now it became even easier for deeply corrupt federal officials

  • to neglect the megacity’s needs.

  • But the its downward spiral is quickly changing direction thankslargelyto one man,

  • the current governor of the state of Lagos, Akinwunmi Ambode.

  • Ambode earned his Master’s in accounting from the University of Lagos and studied abroad

  • in England, Switzerland, Singapore, and at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government in

  • Boston.

  • [Osoba]: “Everything about this man is outstanding, everything about him

  • He is someone who does not leave a place without changing it for the better.”

  • Now 53 — with a long career serving the people of Lagos under his beltAmbode

  • hit the ground running upon his election in 2015.

  • He immediately began holding regular town hall meetings.

  • This helped him tailor his plans to best affect positive change for citizens that they could

  • see and feel.

  • He installed a team of competent deputies whove helped him implement his mega-master

  • plan of targeted micro projects to drastically improve conditions throughout the city.

  • Lagosians are already feeling the benefits of his less than two years in office.

  • [Citizen of Lagos]: “Today we are happy because the government have done a perfect

  • job here.

  • Now we can have a good access roads to get to our homes.

  • And you can see business around this area, they are doing very well.”

  • By making road fixes his first major task, Ambode wisely accomplished several important

  • things that any new leader should immediately set out to do:

  • 1) He gave his team a series of small, achievable goals to accomplish, allowing him time to

  • weed out bad people and fix flawed management processes that bog down efficiency.

  • 2) He gave himself some time to become comfortable in his new executive role and familiarize

  • himself with the levers of power.

  • And 3) He gained the trust of the people by doing something simple, but important: completing

  • a project that everyone wanted, on-time and on-budget.

  • Now that his government is working well, Ambode is well positioned to tackle much more complex

  • problems like improving the efficiency of the bus system; building a massive urban rail

  • system; providing all citizens with uninterrupted access to electricity; cleaning up Lagos

  • badly polluted environment; partnering with private industry to try and give all Lagosians

  • access to affordable food, housing, and health care; and improving the pay of police, first

  • responders, and security personnel.

  • In addition to the construction of several bridges and other traffic improvements, Lagos

  • is also installing 6,000 new street lights and 13,000 Closed Circuit Television (CCTV)

  • cameras and security sensors for surveillance and crime prevention.

  • These efforts are working: Lagos was named the most security and safety-conscious state

  • in all of Africa last year, and Ambode was named Nigerian governor of the year.

  • By leading the mega-overhaul in the way civil society conducts itself, Ambode represents

  • one half of the equation in creating a modern Nigeria.

  • He also seems perfectly positioned to go on to serve as President and lead his people

  • on their quest to claim their rightful place as Africa’s powerhouse country.

  • The other half of this modernization equation rests largely on the success of two key mega-projects

  • under construction in Lagos and Abuja: Eko Atlantic, a financial hub that’s being built

  • on reclaimed land along the coast; and Centenary City, a gated luxury mini-city outside of

  • Abuja where elites will live and stay while conducting business in the capital.

  • [Builder] “The goal is to establish Lagos as the financial hub and commercial hub of

  • the continent of Africa.”

  • Geographically, Nigeria is centrally-positioned to lead Africa’s emergence in the second

  • half of the century, but it must approach development carefully.

  • With many parts of Lagos, and the rest of the country, living in squalor without good

  • jobs or adequate housing, spending tens of billions of dollars to build playgrounds for

  • the rich runs the risk of making the majority of the Nigerian people feel neglected, and

  • angry.

  • In fact, the Centenary City project in Abuja is already tainted by allegations of corruption.

  • Another challenge facing Lagos is the unstoppable rising sea level, which will eventually submerge

  • most of the existing city.

  • It faces the same dilemma as many other coastal metropolises around the world: stop building

  • on land that will likely be completely underwater by the end of the century and start building

  • inland, or live for the immediate future by building where people want to live now, along

  • the waterfront.

  • I’m confident that youll be hearing a lot more about Nigeria and it’s rising star,

  • Governor Ambode, as the confronts these challenges head-on in the years ahead.

  • I’m glad you enjoyed our previous video in this series about the push to land humans

  • on Mars.

  • It started some interesting exchanges around colonizing space generally, how to specifically

  • reach mars in the most efficient way, and what we should call the global space agency

  • I proposed forming to make it happen.

  • Until next time, for TDC, I’m Bryce Plank.

This is Lagos, Nigeria the largest city in Africa.

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非洲的超級城市。未來的巨型項目 (Africa's Mega-City: Future MEGAPROJECTS)

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