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Nigeria Launches BisonFly Project to Tame Air Travel Costs for MDAs

The Federal Government of Nigeria has launched the BisonFly Project, a centralized digital platform aimed at cutting down on the ballooning cost of air travel within the federal civil service.

The initiative, announced in Abuja by the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, is being touted as a key reform step in the drive to enforce fiscal discipline across Nigeria’s bloated Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs).

The move comes amid mounting pressure from governance advocates and economic analysts who have repeatedly called for a drastic reduction in the cost of running government — a longstanding drain on Nigeria’s limited public resources.

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According to a statement released on the Ministry’s official X account on Friday, the BisonFly Project was developed by the Ministry’s Efficiency Unit in collaboration with ICT advisers and other key stakeholders. It will serve as a single digital platform for booking all official air travel, enabling the government to leverage its bulk purchasing power to negotiate better fares with airlines, eliminate redundant travel schedules, and ensure real-time tracking of travel-related expenditures.

“In its avowed commitment to ensuring cost savings across all air travels, the Federal Government has launched the BisonFly Project to optimize air travel costs for the Federal Civil Service through a structured, optimized, and technology-driven discount program,” the Ministry stated.

Wale Edun, who inaugurated the BisonFly Project team at his office, said the initiative was a direct response to the need for smarter financial governance. He pointed out that the cost of travel across MDAs had reached unsustainable levels, and that BisonFly was expected to bring transparency and coordination to what has largely been a chaotic and expensive aspect of government spending.

The announcement has also renewed focus on the wider issue of government spending and inefficiency. Nigeria’s MDAs, many of which operate without oversight, continue to gulp a significant portion of the national budget — often with very little output to show. Despite being created to drive service delivery and revenue generation, a number of these agencies fail to remit any revenue to the federation account, while still drawing heavily on public funds for recurrent expenses such as travel, allowances, and office maintenance.

Analysts have consistently flagged the MDAs as a black hole in Nigeria’s fiscal framework. A report by the Office of the Auditor-General has in the past revealed how several government agencies generated billions in revenue annually but retained nearly all of it, in violation of fiscal rules, while still depending on federal allocations to fund their operations.

This fiscal recklessness, critics argue, has not only deepened the country’s fiscal crisis but also eroded public confidence in government reforms. It is within this context that the BisonFly Project is being launched — not just as a digital tool, but as a symbolic gesture to rein in one of the many cost leakages plaguing the system.

Edun said the system would mirror international best practices, citing the World Bank’s use of centralized travel systems to manage costs and ensure accountability.

“By centralizing travel coordination and securing discounted rates, we are introducing a structure that reduces inefficiencies and ensures transparency,” he said.

The project, expected to go live in the coming months, will be monitored by a dedicated implementation team tasked with ensuring its swift rollout and measurable outcomes.

Raymond Omenka Omachi, the Permanent Secretary for Special Duties at the Ministry of Finance, praised Edun’s leadership, describing the BisonFly Project as a “benchmark for fiscal responsibility” that could become a model for other sectors of the public service.

But for many Nigerians, digital platforms and reform promises are not enough. The real demand is for a wholesale reduction in the cost of governance, from trimming redundant agencies to enforcing accountability in revenue-generating ones.

Groups like BudgIT and the Centre for Social Justice have repeatedly urged the federal government to go beyond surface-level reforms and restructure the civil service entirely, including merging overlapping agencies and introducing a performance-based allocation system.

For years, Nigeria has faced a paradox where over 70% of its budget goes to recurrent expenditure — salaries, allowances, foreign trips, and operations — while capital projects, which directly impact the lives of citizens, receive the scraps. That imbalance has only worsened in recent times, as the government grapples with inflation, mounting debt, and dwindling oil revenue.

Although the BisonFly initiative may help trim air travel costs, critics warn that such reforms will mean little if not accompanied by broader changes across the MDA ecosystem. Without mechanisms to enforce compliance and penalize agencies that sidestep the system, past efforts at cost-cutting have collapsed under the weight of entrenched interests and bureaucratic resistance.

Still, the launch of BisonFly marks a shift in tone from the Finance Ministry, signaling some political will to confront Nigeria’s cost-of-governance crisis. Whether this will translate into meaningful savings and long-term reform is a test yet to come.

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