The South-West Development Commission (SWDC) has officially moved from blueprint to action. By inaugurating a specialist Action Committee, the commission aims to fast-track Southwest rural development through its ambitious TransComs initiative.
This strategic body is now tasked with turning conceptual frameworks into tangible results, with a strict 180-day window to deliver pilot projects that will eventually scale across the entire region.
The Delivery Engine for the TransComs Initiative
The newly formed committee is co-led by Dr Charles ‘Diji Akinola and Professor Oyebanji Oyelaran-Oyeyinka. The latter serves as the Programme Director of the Foundation for Technology Innovation and Sustainable Development (FTID), which acts as the primary technical partner for the South-West Development Commission.
Speaking at the close of the co-creation roundtable held at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) in Ibadan, Dr Akinola made the commission’s intentions clear. He noted that the committee would serve as a high-velocity “delivery engine,” bridging the gap between high-level stakeholder talks and actual impact for local residents.
“TransComs is not another report on the shelf,” Dr Akinola said. “This committee is our delivery engine.
A Multi-Pillar Strategy for Southwest Rural Development
To ensure the programme is both credible and “de-risked,” the South-West Development Commission has structured the committee around four distinct pillars. This collaborative approach brings together the heavyweights of finance, policy, and industry to ensure the TransComs initiative does not falter at the execution stage.
Key players in the finance stream include the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the Bank of Industry (BoI), working alongside the South-West Agribusiness Company (SWAgCo). By involving these institutions early, the commission ensures that the necessary capital is available to fuel long-term growth.
Policy and Sustainable Agribusiness Integration
Success in Southwest rural development requires more than just funding; it demands seamless policy coordination. The Development Agenda for Western Nigeria (DAWN) Commission and the Southwest Governors’ Forum are providing the political backing needed to align the six states—Lagos, Ogun, Oyo, Osun, Ondo, and Ekiti.
Furthermore, the integration of sustainable agribusiness is central to the project’s DNA. Private sector leaders from Niji Farms and Psaltery International are contributing their technical expertise. They are joined by specialists from the Nigeria Railway Corporation to solve the logistics puzzles that often hinder rural trade.
From Pilot Projects to Regional Prosperity
The committee’s immediate priority is to coordinate across federal and state lines to deliver pilot projects in Fapote, Ogbomoso, and Ara. These initial sites will serve as the proving grounds for a model intended for all 137 local government areas in the region.
The TransComs initiative—short for Transformed Communities—utilises a cluster-based model. The goal is to turn rural settlements into integrated economic hubs where sustainable agribusiness links directly with housing, energy, and youth employment.
The economic targets are ambitious. The commission plans to lift household incomes from $2 to $10 a day within a five-year period. Professor Oyelaran-Oyeyinka described a TransCom as a “living community centre.” In this vision, agriculture is not a solitary struggle but the anchor for a much broader, modern prosperity where people trade, learn, and thrive together.

