By Adetutu Audu
Tunji Olaseinde, the founder and chief executive of Lagos based smart-home developer Gate & Carter Limited, has announced the launch of Future Inc., a new company targeting Nigeria’s electricity deficit and security challenges through two separate commercial divisions.
The announcement marks a significant expansion of Olaseinde’s business interests beyond real estate. Gate & Carter, which he founded roughly six years ago, built its reputation developing technology integrated residential properties across Lagos, among them a smart apartment building in Lekki Phase 1, ultra-luxury waterfront homes along Cowrie Creek, and CLAY Beach Resort, a wellness development currently under construction on the private island of Ilashe.
Future Inc. is organised into two divisions. The first, Future Energy, will sell solar power systems to households and businesses and finance purchases through instalment payment plans, an arrangement the company says is designed to lower the barrier to entry in a market where upfront solar costs remain out of reach for most Nigerians. The second division, Future Dynamics, will manufacture what Olaseinde describes as dual-use technology: security and surveillance hardware intended for both civilian and national security applications.
The energy offering arrives against a difficult backdrop for Nigerian power consumers. Grid reliability has long been a structural problem, and the removal of the fuel subsidy has pushed the cost of diesel generator operation sharply higher, strengthening the economic case for solar alternatives. Nigeria has significant solar potential given its geographic position, but adoption has been constrained by cost, fragmented supply chains, and inconsistent product quality.
Future Energy’s payment plan model spreading the cost of installation across monthly or quarterly payments is not new to the Nigerian market, though Olaseinde is betting that combining it with smarter system technology and stronger after-sales infrastructure will differentiate his offering. The systems are described as fully integrated, capable of remote monitoring and automatic load management, and scalable from single households to commercial operators.
Future Dynamics enters more complex territory. Dual-use technology manufacturing, producing systems that serve both commercial security and military or law enforcement purposes and carries significant regulatory implications and requires navigating procurement relationships with government institutions. Olaseinde has not detailed which specific products the division will manufacture at launch, nor provided a timeline for its first deployments.
The broader market context gives the venture some credibility. Nigeria’s security situation has deteriorated across multiple regions, creating demand for surveillance and perimeter protection technology that domestic manufacturers have largely been unable to meet, leaving the market dependent on imports.
What remains to be demonstrated is whether Future Inc. can execute at the scale its ambitions require. Both the solar financing market and the defence technology sector demand significant capital, institutional relationships, and operational capacity that a company at this stage is still assembling.
Olaseinde, for his part, frames the venture in terms of national obligation as much as commercial opportunity. Whether the market agrees will become clearer as the company moves from announcement to delivery.
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