ECONOMY
“WITHOUT ACCURATE DATA, PLANNING BECOMES GUESSWORK” — Abia State Govt Says, Declares Data and Identity for Governance Workshop, Sets Stage for Unified Digital Architecture and Evidence-Based Administration
The Abia State Government has taken a bold and strategic step toward institutionalising data-driven governance with the formal declaration of the Abia State Data and Identity for Governance Workshop by the Deputy Governor, His Excellency Engr. Ikechukwu Emetu, FNSE.
The high-level workshop, held at the Okpara Auditorium, Umuahia, on Thursday, 19th February 2026, convened key policymakers, development partners, heads of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), and technical experts in a coordinated effort to advance the state’s transformative “One Data, One Identity, One Government” initiative.
Declaring the workshop open on behalf of the Executive Governor, Dr. Alex Chioma Otti, OFR, the Deputy Governor reaffirmed the administration’s unwavering commitment to building a modern, efficient, and digitally enabled state anchored on credible data systems and a harmonised identity framework.
He emphasized that governance in the 21st century must be rooted in accurate data and reliable identity systems, warning that without these foundational pillars, planning becomes speculative and service delivery fragmented.
“Without accurate data, planning becomes guesswork, and without a harmonised identity framework, service delivery becomes fragmented.
“Today, we are taking deliberate steps to correct these gaps and position Abia State for intelligent, evidence-based governance,” the Deputy Governor noted.
Reinforcing the administration’s forward-looking vision, Engr. Emetu further declared, “The future of governance is digital. The future of planning is analytical. The future of accountability is data-based,” describing the initiative as a transformational blueprint designed to integrate data systems across MDAs, eliminate duplication, enhance transparency, strengthen revenue generation, and ensure measurable impact in public service delivery.
Earlier in his remarks, the Secretary to the State Government, Dr. Emmanuel Meribole, described the workshop as a strategic turning point in Abia State’s transition from fragmented digital projects to a coordinated enterprise-wide data architecture. He stressed that data is a critical state asset and identity is the backbone of efficient service delivery.
According to him, integrating data systems across MDAs would deepen transparency, improve policy coordination, strengthen regulatory compliance, and foster institutional efficiency. He underscored that without harmonisation, government efforts risk duplication, inconsistencies, and reduced accountability.
The Honourable Commissioner for Budget and Planning, Mr. Kingsley Anosike, underscored the urgency of reform, warning that fragmented data systems pose significant risks to planning credibility, fiscal efficiency, and overall development outcomes.
He noted that siloed data environments often result in duplication of records, revenue leakages, weak performance tracking, and poor impact measurement. These systemic inefficiencies, he explained, undermine both short-term planning and long-term development strategies.
Mr. Anosike clarified that the proposed unified data governance framework would not strip MDAs of ownership over their respective datasets. Rather, it would provide secure infrastructure, enforce interoperability standards, and establish a central data warehouse under a strengthened Bureau of Statistics framework. The objective, he stated, is to ensure a single source of truth for government decision-making while preserving institutional autonomy.
Delivering a technical presentation, the State Chief Information Officer, Mr. Gerald Ilukwe, highlighted the importance of accurate, standardised, and secure data systems in achieving meaningful governance outcomes.
He outlined key enablers of data integrity, including harmonised identity systems, robust cybersecurity safeguards, regulatory compliance mechanisms, and sustained institutional capacity building.
According to him, digital transformation must be accompanied by strong governance structures to guarantee data protection, system resilience, and long-term sustainability.
Contributions from sectoral leaders further reinforced the consensus around the urgency of digital transformation and identity integration.
The Commissioner for Agriculture, Dr. Cliff Agbaeze, FCIB, emphasised that accurate data systems would enhance investment opportunities and agricultural planning, while improving communication between government and citizens.
Similarly, the Commissioner for Poverty Alleviation and Social Protection, Mrs. Blessing Ngozi Felix, noted that harmonised identity systems would significantly strengthen social protection targeting, eliminate duplication in beneficiary databases, and ensure that government interventions reach the most vulnerable citizens efficiently and transparently.
Their interventions highlighted the cross-sectoral impact of the reform agenda, demonstrating how unified data architecture can drive measurable improvements across agriculture, social protection, revenue administration, budgeting, and public service delivery.
The workshop concluded with a shared commitment among participants to develop a scalable, secure, and fit-for-purpose framework that will institutionalise data governance standards across Abia State.
Stakeholders agreed on the need to establish clear reporting structures, enforcement mechanisms, and monitoring systems to support evidence-based executive decision-making and measurable performance outcomes.
Members of the State Executive Council, including the Honourable Commissioner for Information, Prince Okay Kanu; the Senior Special Adviser to the Governor on Budget and Planning, Dr. Eric Egwuibe; heads of several MDAs, and other critical stakeholders were in attendance.
With the formal declaration of the Data and Identity for Governance Workshop, Abia State has signaled a decisive move toward intelligent governance, one anchored on reliable data, unified identity systems, transparency, and measurable impact. The initiative stands as a defining pillar in the administration’s broader agenda to build a digitally enabled,
accountable, and performance-driven state.
