When sponsorship revenue for Ojude Oba jumped from ₦200 million to ₦2.8 billion within a year, it was more than a viral cultural moment — it became a case study in how Nigeria’s festival economy could transform into a structured, revenue-generating national asset.
That was the central message delivered by Obi Asika, Director-General of the National Council for Arts and Culture (NCAC), at the Naija7Wonders conference, where stakeholders reviewed the economic impact of Nigeria’s growing December tourism season and broader cultural sector.
According to Asika, Nigeria has already mapped and indexed more than 850 traditional festivals nationwide — a figure that could exceed 3,000 when contemporary art, music and cultural events are included.
“If you brand them, merchandise them and package them properly, this is a multi-billion-dollar segment,” he said.
The Numbers Behind the Narrative
Nigeria’s cultural tourism base, Asika argued, is stronger than often acknowledged.
• 850+ indexed traditional festivals
• 1,400 kilometres of coastline, with less than 20km fully developed
• 37 airports and airstrips
• 12,000 hotel rooms nationwide
• 75–80% average hotel occupancy in major cities
• 100 million Nigerians travelling at least 100km annually
• $900 million estimated Lagos nightlife economy in 2024
• ₦2.8 billion sponsorship inflow to Ojude Oba, up from ₦200 million
He described these figures as evidence that Nigeria’s tourism and cultural economy is “just beginning.”
Using nightlife data as an example, Asika said Lagos alone generated an estimated $900 million in nightlife-related economic activity in 2024. Extrapolated across roughly 40 major Nigerian cities, he suggested the segment could approach $3 billion nationwide.
“We have to measure our economy properly,” he said, noting ongoing engagements with national statistical authorities.
Digital Influence as Economic Multiplier
Central to his presentation was the role of digital storytelling and influencer partnerships.
Asika cited the Ojude Oba festival as a template for future growth, explaining that after a cultural figure went viral globally, sponsorship revenue increased more than tenfold within a year.
“Attention drives value,” he said.
He urged state governments to partner with globally recognised Nigerian artists, noting that entertainers command massive digital audiences.
“Davido has 84 million followers. That’s a digital continent. If Burna Boy partners with Rivers State, you could have 200,000 people annually at a festival,” he said.
According to him, over 3 billion people engage with Nigerian digital content daily, yet structured cultural merchandise and festival branding remain underdeveloped.
“There is no Detty December T-shirt. There is no structured Lagos merchandise. We build attention, but we don’t build product,” he said.
Detty December and Pricing Debate
Responding to criticism over pricing spikes during the December festive period, Asika defended market-driven increases.
He noted that during global peak events such as the United Nations General Assembly in New York, hotel rates can surge by as much as 600 percent.
“Anywhere in the world that becomes hot, prices go up,” he said, urging Nigerians to avoid excessive negativity toward local operators.
He emphasised that Detty December is not accidental but the result of years of private and public sector investment, including early initiatives such as the “One Lagos” programme launched in 2015.
Federal Coordination and Niger Season
Asika disclosed that the Federal Executive Council has approved a national framework known as “Niger Season,” designed to calendarise cultural and tourism activities across Nigeria’s 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory.
The initiative aims to position Nigeria as a 12-month, 24/7 destination while aligning federal ministries, security agencies and subnational governments.
He revealed that more than 850 festivals have already been indexed, and a functional platform linking commissioners, permanent secretaries and cultural agencies across states has been established to coordinate strategy.
Infrastructure Gaps and Opportunities
Despite the optimism, Asika acknowledged infrastructure limitations, particularly in beach development and access.
Nigeria’s 1,400km coastline remains largely underdeveloped, with fewer than 20km fully structured for tourism use. He also pointed to traffic congestion in Lagos during peak periods as a challenge requiring coordinated planning.
However, he stressed that the country is seeing more hotel rooms open than any other African nation, and argued that political will — combined with private sector collaboration — could unlock substantial growth.
Culture as Core Asset
Asika concluded that Nigeria’s greatest resource is not its minerals but its people and cultural output.
“The biggest tribe in Nigeria are the Nigerians,” he said. “The real wealth of Nigeria is its creative and cultural expression.”
He maintained that culture and tourism are inseparable and that structured investment in storytelling, digital amplification and product development could reposition Nigeria as a leading global cultural destination.
“We are still starting,” he said. “It is not too late for anyone to enter this sector.”