The Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, said on Tuesday efforts are ongoing to make the state Africa’s model megacity by 2052.
The governor stated this during the 9th edition of the
Ehingbeti Lagos Economic Summit held in Victoria Island.
He said the government had made concerted efforts towards
the conceptualisation and development of a comprehensive 30-year plan for the
state.
According to him, the Lagos State Development Plan 2052 has
the ambition of transforming Lagos into Africa’s Model Megacity.
Sanwo-Olu said: “The Lagos State Development Plan 2052 is
built around four strategic pillars – Thriving Economy, Human-centric City,
Modern Infrastructure, and Effective Governance.
”This plan focuses on 20 strategic areas that will drive
this ambition.
“This long-term development plan has been meticulously
devised to accommodate the best of all existing and prior high-level policy
documents, transformation plans and development policies, including the THEMES
Agenda.
Google said Tuesday that it will rely on Coinbase to start
letting some customers pay for cloud services with cryptocurrencies early in
2023, while Coinbase said it would draw on Google's cloud infrastructure.
Coinbase shares rose as much as 8.4% in Tuesday's trading
session, although the stock is still down over 70% for the year.
The deal, announced at Google's Cloud Next conference, might
succeed in luring cutting-edge companies to Google in a fierce, fast-growing
market, where Google's top competitors do not currently permit clients to pay
with digital currencies. The cloud business helps diversify Google parent
Alphabet away from advertising, and it now accounts for 9% of revenue, up from
less than 6% three years ago, as it is expanding more quickly than Alphabet as
a whole.
Coinbase, which generates a majority of its revenue from
retail transactions, will move data-related applications to Google from the
market-leading Amazon Web Services cloud, which Coinbase has relied on for
years, said Jim Migdal, Coinbase's vice president of business development.
The Google Cloud Platform infrastructure service will
initially accept cryptocurrency payments from a handful of customers in the
Web3 world who want to pay with cryptocurrency, thanks to an integration with
the Coinbase Commerce service, said Amit Zavery, vice president and general
manager and head of platform at Google Cloud, in an interview with CNBC. Web3
is a buzzword that has come to stand for decentralized and distributed internet
services that can't be controlled by big internet outfits such as Facebook or
Google.
Over time, Google will allow many more customers to make
payments with cryptocurrency, Zavery said. Coinbase Commerce supports 10
currencies, including Bitcoin, Bitcoin Cash, Dogecoin, Ethereum and Litecoin.
Bitcoin, Dogecoin and Ethereum prices have all declined over 60% in the past
year.
Terms of the deal weren't disclosed. But like other Coinbase
Commerce arrangements, Coinbase will earn a percentage of transactions that go
through it, Migdal said.
It wasn't a guarantee that Google would go with Coinbase for
the payments portion of the deal. PayPal, for one, offers businesses a way to
take payments with digital currencies. "We did look at other companies for
the cryptocurrency side of it," Zavery said. Ultimately, he said, Coinbase
had the greatest capability.
Google is also exploring how it can use Coinbase Prime, a
service that securely stores organizations' cryptocurrencies and allows them to
execute trades. Zavery said Google will experiment and "see how we can
participate" with managing cryptocurrency assets. Block (the payments
company formerly known as Square), Coinbase, MicroStrategy and Tesla are among
the companies that have added digital currencies to their balance sheets. That
can be a risky endeavor. Coinbase announced a $377 million impairment charge
tied to a decline in the value of its cryptocurrency holdings in August.
Google had previously indicated in May that it was exploring
the possibility of adding support for payments with digital currencies. Migdal
said Coinbase had been in discussion with Google for months, with conversations
about supporting commerce transactions, cloud usage and the Prime service all
happening in parallel. "We decided to bring them together," he said.
Blockchain technologies such as nonfungible tokens, or NFTs,
have become a bigger focus for Google's cloud division. Previously, Google's
cloud chief, Thomas Kurian, has pushed for growth in major industries such as
media and retail. This year it announced the formation of teams to drum up
blockchain business and build tools that third-party developers can draw on to
run blockchain applications.
