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He returned home from America not to retire — but to rewire an entire state for industrial greatness. From Gudi to Greatness In the quiet village of Gudi Station, where cultures mingle and faiths coexist, a young Abdullahi Sule first learned the discipline of work and the dignity of service. Born on December 26, 1959, his journey from that small Nasarawa community to the helm of the state’s transformation is one of remarkable vision and resolve. Today, that same child of Gudi stands as the architect of Nasarawa’s industrial rebirth, a leader whose blend of global experience and local understanding is rewriting the story of Northern Nigeria. An Engineer with a Mission Before politics, Sule was already a man of precision and performance. After studying in the United States, where he earned both his B.Sc and M.Sc in Mechanical and Industrial Technology from Indiana State University, he honed his skills across major American engineering firms — from Dril-Quip to Osyka Corporation — rising to become Director of Business Development for Africa and the Middle East. When he returned to Nigeria in 2000, he came not just with credentials, but with conviction. He co-founded Sadiq Petroleum, led the turnaround of African Petroleum Plc, and served as Group Managing Director of Dangote Sugar Refinery, where he built a reputation for efficiency and innovation. Those experiences became the blueprint for his political mission — to run Nasarawa like a business of shared prosperity. A Vision Grounded in Strategy: NEDS When he assumed office, Governor Sule came armed not with slogans, but with a plan — the Nasarawa Economic Development Strategy (NEDS). It was the state’s first comprehensive roadmap for growth, built around industrialisation, infrastructure, human capital development, and good governance. NEDS redefined Nasarawa’s economic identity — from a sleepy agrarian region into a vibrant investment frontier. Under his leadership, the state has attracted local and foreign investors in manufacturing, mining, power, and agriculture, repositioning Nasarawa as Nigeria’s emerging industrial hub. His economic vision is as pragmatic as it is ambitious: turn the state’s comparative advantage in solid minerals, proximity to Abuja, and youthful population into competitive gains. And he’s delivering. Industrialisation as Development Governor Sule’s model of governance treats industry as infrastructure. From the aggressive urban development drive which saw his administration build massive urban roads to Nasarawa Technology Village industrial parks, to renewable energy projects, the state is fast becoming a magnet for investment. Through deliberate partnerships, Nasarawa has attracted companies in cement production, lithium mining, ethanol processing, and agro-industrial value chains — generating jobs, revenue, and hope. The state’s collaboration with the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) on gas utilisation and the establishment of the Nasarawa Oil and Gas Exploration Project mark bold steps toward energy self-sufficiency and value retention. Infrastructure that Connects, Governance that Includes Governor Sule’s infrastructural renewal drive is rooted in inclusion. Roads, schools, and hospitals are spread across local governments, ensuring no community is left behind. Beyond physical projects, his governance is defined by transparency, citizen engagement, and institutional reform. His administration has introduced digital land administration, investment-friendly tax reforms, and PPP frameworks that make it easier for businesses to thrive. He is also expanding educational and vocational opportunities to build the human capital base that will sustain the state’s industrial push. The Technocrat in Power Those who know him describe Engr. Sule not as a politician, but as a technocrat with a conscience. He brings to government the precision of an engineer and the pragmatism of a manager. His background — from the Jos Steel Rolling Company to African Petroleum — gave him both the toughness to lead and the humility to listen. And that duality has become the hallmark of his administration: a human face to industrial progress. Nasarawa: The New Investment Frontier Today, Nasarawa is being reintroduced to Nigeria — not as a rural hinterland, but as an industrial power corridor of the North-Central region. Under Sule’s watch, the state is experiencing rapid growth in small and medium enterprises, infrastructural linkages with the Federal Capital Territory, and a climate of peace that encourages private investment. Through inclusive governance, he has balanced industrial ambition with social responsibility, ensuring that growth translates to real opportunities for ordinary citizens.