CONTINENT DNA cover art

CONTINENT DNA

CONTINENT DNA

By: Tobe Duru | Duru Media Network
Listen for free

Summary

Every country has a DNA. Decoding Africa's business DNA for builders, investors, and operators who want to be ahead of where growth is going.© 2026 Duru Media Network. All rights reserved. Economics Leadership Management & Leadership
Episodes
  • The Cocoa Century: How Ivory Coast Became the World's Cocoa Superpower and Built a Perfect Trap for Itself
    May 14 2026

    The Cocoa Century: The Architecture of the Ivorian Trap

    Ivory Coast produces 40% of the world’s cocoa, yet it remains a price taker in a $130 billion global industry. While mainstream analysis often focuses on the optics of poverty, this episode of Continent DNA deconstructs the underlying structural mechanics that made this disparity inevitable.

    Tobe Duru examines the "Ivory Miracle" not as a story of failed development, but as a perfectly executed national strategy that built an elegant economic trap. We analyze the cold arithmetic of the 94% value gap where retail profit is captured downstream, and explore the "invisible walls" of global trade policy specifically the tariff escalation that effectively penalizes African industrialization.

    The episode provides a technical autopsy of the failed 1988 Cocoa War, offering a brutal lesson in market leverage and the strategic importance of inventory buffers held in Rotterdam. As climate change shifts the cocoa belt and the African middle class emerges as a trillion dollar consumer block, the question for policymakers is no longer how to grow more, but how to break the structural rails of a century old system. This is a study in institutional patience, trade barriers, and the necessity of a pivot toward internal African markets and agritech.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 8 mins
  • Designing Bankable Mobility in Volatile Markets (with Celeste Vogel)
    Apr 18 2026

    How do you turn "operational hell" into a bankable asset? In this episode, Tobe Duru sits down with Céleste Tchetgen Vogel, Co-founder and CEO of eWAKA Mobility. Céleste brings 20 years of expertise from global financial giants like Swiss Re and Citibank to the front lines of Africa’s electric vehicle revolution.

    Moving beyond the typical "green energy" narrative, this conversation focuses on the cold, hard mechanics of infrastructure as a service. Céleste explains why hardware is only a fraction of the puzzle and why building an "Intelligence Layer" is the only way to coordinate a fragmented value chain of riders, capital providers, and vendors.

    What We Cover:
    The Intelligence Layer: Why eWAKA positions itself as the "rails" for African logistics rather than just a bike seller.

    Engineering Bankability: The sophisticated financial framework used to separate operational performance from credit risk.

    The Ground-Truth Advantage: Why remote leadership fails in Africa and the necessity of the "Humble Approach" to local operations.

    Scaling to 100k: The path to mass-market adoption and why 100,000 vehicles is just the beginning.

    Vocational Moats: How local assembly and technical training create long-term defensive advantages.

    This is a masterclass in ecosystem orchestration for any operator, investor, or policymaker looking to understand the future of mobility on the continent.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 3 mins
  • The Truth About Nigeria's Energy Crisis
    Mar 14 2026

    Why is Nigeria facing a persistent electricity crisis despite being one of the world’s largest oil and gas producers?
    In this deep-dive episode of Continent DNA, Tobe Duru analyzes the structural causes of Nigeria’s power sector failure, generator dependence, fuel subsidy distortions, and long-term energy policy challenges shaping Africa’s largest electricity market.

    Moving beyond headlines about power outages and fuel shortages, the episode traces the historical, political, and economic architecture behind Nigeria’s energy crisis. From early colonial oil monopolies to the centralization of petroleum ownership after the Biafran War, it explains how institutional incentives, governance structures, and global energy dynamics combined to produce chronic electricity shortages.

    The analysis examines the role of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), large-scale corruption scandals such as the Malabu OPL 245 case, and the financial instability of electricity market institutions including NBET. It also explains why Nigeria’s vast natural gas reserves have not translated into stable power generation, highlighting pricing distortions, liquidity constraints, transmission bottlenecks, and distribution sector weaknesses.

    The episode further explores the rise of decentralized generator use, now one of the largest informal power systems in the world, and what this means for industrialization, infrastructure investment, and long-term economic development across African energy markets.

    Through a systems-level lens, this episode connects energy policy, market incentives, institutional design, and global energy geopolitics. It offers a clear framework for understanding Nigeria’s electricity crisis and the broader structural challenges facing resource-rich developing economies.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 29 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
No reviews yet