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World Bank offers $250bn procurement window to Nigerian firms

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•Says $2.5bn contracts awarded to 6,800 Nigerian suppliers in 5yrs

•As IFC invests $5bn 

 •FG will deepen engagement with World Bank procurement — Bagudu

By Babajide Komolafe

The World Bank has offered  a $250 billion global procurement window to Nigerian firms, urging local companies to take advantage of thousands of opportunities across World Bank–financed projects worldwide.

Speaking at a World Bank procurement seminar in Lagos, the Vice President, Operations Policy and Country Services (OPCS), Ms. Gallina Andronova Vincelette, said the scale of opportunities available to Nigerian businesses was “significant and growing.”

“To understand the scope of procurement, I will focus on the public sector,” Vincelette said.

On this slide, we see a couple of numbers. One is $250 billion. This is what has been approved by our Board and is available to be delivered in projects and financing to governments across the world.

“We also see another number, which is 40,000. This is the number of procurement opportunities available for companies to deliver on projects approved by our Board and serve the countries that we work in.”

Putting the figures in the Nigerian context, Vincelette disclosed that Nigerian firms have already benefited substantially from World Bank–financed contracts.

 “Over the past five years, Nigeria-based suppliers have been awarded more than 6,800 World Bank–financed contracts with a total value of $2.5 billion,” she said.

“More than 60 per cent of these awards have gone to the delivery of civil works, including roads, bridges, hospitals and school construction.”

She stressed that opportunities for Nigerian companies go beyond the domestic market.

“There are also opportunities not only in Nigeria, but across Africa, where Nigerian companies can participate,” she said.

“Looking more broadly across Africa, over the same five-year period, World Bank–financed projects have awarded more than 9,000 contracts with a total value of close to $45 billion, underscoring the scale and depth of opportunities across the region.”

IFC invests $5bn 

Also speaking, IFC Director for Central Africa and Nigeria, Ms. Dahlia Khalifa, reaffirmed the International Finance Corporation’s long-term commitment to Nigeria, with jobs creation as its core focus.

 “IFC is very committed to Nigeria. We’ve been here for decades and we hope to be here for decades and decades further,” Khalifa said.

“Being as helpful and supportive to the development of Nigeria, achieving its objectives and keeping our eye on that North Star, which is jobs, is critical.”

She emphasised the role of the private sector in achieving sustainable growth.

 “Of course, it is the private sector which is key to completely embrace and understand that, and therefore what we do is critical right now,” she said.

 Khalifa disclosed that IFC’s direct investment exposure in Nigeria stands at $1.3 billion, while its mobilisation efforts have brought in far larger sums.

 “We have a portfolio in Nigeria which is $1.3 billion, which is how much we have funded from our own balance sheet,” she said.

“That’s not all talked about — how much we crowded in in terms of mobilisation using multiples of this.”

According to her:  “Last year alone, we brought about $5 billion to Nigeria, and that is the case we have been seeing for the past three or four years. But that’s not enough. Our ambition is much higher.”

She added:  “Our ambition is to mobilise as much private capital to Nigeria as possible to help you grow your businesses and help create as many jobs as possible.”

FG clamour more opportunities 

In his remarks at the seminar,  Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Abubakar Atiku Bagudu, said Nigeria was ready to deepen its engagement with the World Bank’s procurement framework and leverage it to position Nigerian firms globally.

“Just last week, the Country Director made a presentation at the National Economic Council, chaired by the Vice President, and he spoke about a portfolio of over $17 billion,” Bagudu said.

“We appreciate the size of this portfolio, even though we believe we can do more.”

He described the procurement engagement as a strategic opportunity for Nigerian businesses.

“Very importantly for Nigeria, this is to encourage Nigerian companies, Nigerian entrepreneurs and Nigerian service providers to look at World Bank proposals across the world as an entry point into procurement worldwide,” he said.

Bagudu expressed confidence in the capacity of Nigerian firms to compete internationally.

“Our President believes in our capacity, and our entrepreneurs are celebrated everywhere,” he said.

“We believe our construction companies, our artisans and our service providers have the ability to compete globally.

“This opportunity that will be provided by the Bank is quite well appreciated, and we believe Nigerian firms are ready to seize it.”

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Export rerouting erodes Nigeria’s gains despite N7.55trn trade surplus — NESG

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By Yinka Kolawole

The Nigerian Economic Summit Group, NESG, has warned that export rerouting through neighbouring countries is undermining Nigeria’s trade competitiveness and depriving the economy of significant domestic value, despite the country’s impressive N7.55 trillion trade surplus recorded in the first quarter of 2026.

The warning comes as data from the National Bureau of Statistics, NBS, showed that Nigeria’s total merchandise trade rose to N34.79 trillion in Q1 2026, with exports valued at N21.17 trillion and imports at N13.62 trillion, resulting in a positive trade balance of N7.55 trillion.

While describing the surplus as encouraging, NESG cautioned that headline trade figures do not tell the full story, stressing that Nigeria continues to lose substantial economic benefits when locally produced goods are exported through neighbouring countries before reaching their final destinations.

Export rerouting happens when goods produced in one country are moved through another country before they reach buyers.

According to the group, export rerouting deprives Nigeria of logistics income, distorts trade statistics, weakens product branding and limits the country’s ability to capture the full value generated by its exports.

The private sector think tank identified weak quality assurance and certification systems, inefficient port operations and cumbersome export procedures as major factors pushing exporters to seek alternative trade routes outside Nigeria.

NESG called on the government to strengthen local certification and quality assurance infrastructure to ensure Nigerian products meet international standards without relying on third-country certification systems.

It noted that globally recognised certification has become a critical requirement for accessing international markets, warning that where Nigerian exporters cannot obtain credible certification domestically, neighbouring countries often benefit from providing the final export channel.

The group added that sectors such as agriculture, food processing, textiles, leather and manufacturing stand to gain significantly if certification processes are improved, enabling exporters to access foreign markets directly while retaining more value within the domestic economy.

NESG also urged authorities to address longstanding bottlenecks at Nigerian ports, including congestion, excessive documentation, delays and high logistics costs, arguing that these inefficiencies continue to discourage exporters and make neighbouring ports more attractive.

According to the group, improving port efficiency is not merely a transportation issue but a strategic imperative for boosting Nigeria’s export competitiveness under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) and the global trading system.

It stressed that beyond recording trade surpluses, Nigeria must focus on increasing domestic value capture by simplifying export procedures, modernising port infrastructure, investing in industrial processing zones and providing exporters with the infrastructure needed to compete globally.

“Trade growth should not be measured only by the size of the surplus,” the group said, insisting that the ultimate objective should be to ensure exports generate more jobs, foreign exchange earnings, industrial expansion and broader economic value within Nigeria.

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FG unveils 2026 push for industrial growth, trade, investment

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The Federal Government is set to intensify efforts to drive industrial growth, expand trade, mobilise investment and boost non-oil exports in 2026 as part of its economic diversification agenda.

Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Jumoke Oduwole, stated this at a management retreat for directors-general, directors and chief executives of agencies under the ministry.

She said the focus is to translate policy into measurable economic outcomes through stronger implementation, collaboration and performance monitoring.

The retreat themed, “From Policy to Performance: Driving Industrial Growth, Trade Expansion and Investment Outcomes,” was convened to review the implementation of the Nigeria Industrial Policy (NIP), described as the country’s first comprehensive industrial framework aimed at rebuilding Nigeria’s manufacturing base.

According to the minister, the retreat seeks to assess progress on the policy and strengthen accountability, noting that previous policy initiatives often faltered at the implementation stage.

“Our immediate responsibility is to convert policy direction into tangible results through effective execution, inter-agency collaboration and rigorous performance monitoring,” she said.

Highlighting achievements recorded in 2025, Oduwole said policy alignment across trade, investment and industry delivered significant gains for the economy.

She disclosed that total capital importation rose to about $21 billion within the first 10 months of 2025, while non-oil exports exceeded $6.1 billion, reflecting sustained efforts to diversify Nigeria’s export base.

She also said intra-African trade climbed to approximately N4.82 trillion in the first half of 2025, driven by expanding opportunities under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

According to the minister, more than 115,000 Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) accessed grants, loans and trade finance through interventions implemented by the Bank of Industry, NEXIM Bank and the Nigerian Export Promotion Council.

Oduwole further revealed that Nigeria successfully completed Africa’s first comprehensive five-year review of the implementation of the AfCFTA, underscoring the country’s leadership in regional trade integration.

She said progress has continued in 2026 with improved export connectivity, enhanced investment facilitation, stronger intellectual property reforms and increased support for exporters and manufacturers.

The minister added that ongoing trade and investment agreements would unlock new export markets, attract foreign and domestic investments and strengthen Nigeria’s participation in global value chains.

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AfCFTA lifts Nigeria’s intra-African trade by 21% to $9.02bn in 2025

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Nigeria recorded a 21 per cent increase in intra-African trade in 2025, with total trade rising to $9.02 billion as the implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) continued to unlock new export opportunities and deepen regional commercial integration, as businesses leveraged preferential market access and lower trade barriers.

The latest African Trade Report 2026 released by Afreximbank showed that Nigeria’s trade with the rest of Africa increased from $7.47 billion in 2024 to $9.02 billion in 2025, consolidating the country’s position among the continent’s leading intra-African trading nations.

According to the report, the growth was driven by Nigeria’s intensified focus on regional commerce and deliberate efforts to leverage opportunities under the AfCFTA to reduce trade barriers and expand export markets across Africa.

While crude oil remained Nigeria’s dominant export to African markets, the report noted increasing diversification of the country’s export basket. Key non-oil exports included chemicals, plastics and rubber products, processed agricultural goods, food products, urea and cement.

The development comes as Nigeria seeks to reduce its dependence on traditional export destinations outside Africa while positioning local manufacturers to tap into the continent’s fast-growing consumer market.

The report stated: “Elsewhere in West Africa, the value of Nigeria’s trade with the continent grew from $7.47 billion to $9.02 billion. Crude oil was a dominant feature in Nigeria’s exports to Africa. Other key exports included non-oil manufactured goods such as chemicals, plastics and rubber products, processed agricultural goods and foodstuffs, urea and cement.”

Afreximbank added that Nigeria stepped up efforts to deepen intra-African trade by leveraging the AfCFTA to widen market access and lower trade costs for domestic exporters.

It identified the gazetting of Nigeria’s Provisional Schedule of Tariff Concessions in April 2025 as one of the year’s major milestones. The move enabled Nigerian products to qualify for preferential tariffs across AfCFTA member states while granting reciprocal access to imports from participating African countries.

The bank also highlighted new logistics initiatives, including a dedicated air cargo corridor linking Nigeria with East and Southern Africa, saying the initiative is reducing transportation costs and improving the competitiveness of Nigeria’s intra-African trade.

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