Nigeria hits 206 Million says NPC
The National Population Commission says Nigeria’s population is now estimated at 206 million.
This comes exactly two years after the NPC estimated the country’s population at 198 million.
The Chairman of the NPC, Nasir Kwarra, said this at a press conference on the commencement of the next Enumeration Area Demarcation in Abuja on Tuesday.
Kwarra said since Nigeria had not been able to hold a census in the last 14 years, it would be challenging to know the exact population of the country. He said, “In the absence of an actual census, we formally make projections, and we have all along been making our projections, and we estimate that as of 2020, the estimated population of Nigeria is 206 million.”
The NPC boss said President Muhammadu Buhari had the sole right to announce the next census.
Kwarra, however, said he was confident that Buhari would do the needful soon.
While announcing the commencement of the Enumeration Area Demarcation exercise, Kwarra said about 260 local government areas out of the 774 in the country had been fully demarcated. He stated that the 11th phase of the exercise would begin on December 9, 2020, and end on January 20, 2021.
The NPC chairman said, “Planning for the census is anchored on the EAD as the basis for estimating both the human and material resources required for the census. In essence, the success of a credible and accurate census depends very much on the quality and reliability of the EAD.”
Kwarra explained that the EAD exercise is not the enumeration of persons living in the country but a preparatory exercise before the census.
He said the NPC would be assisting the Independent National Electoral Commission to create digitized maps of INEC registration areas for the first time as part of the EAD. He said this collaboration would positively affect future elections.
The NPC chairman further stated, “It is essential to say that the latest technology is being deployed for this EAD exercise, including the use of very high-resolution satellite imageries as the base map, the use of GPS for georeferencing and the use of GIS for data management. “Also, personal data assistants (handheld devices/tablets) that include computer software for population estimation are being used for data capture.”