Industry Ministry’s $500m Export Claim Faces Scrutiny

Nigeria’s Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment appearing before the Senate Committee on Trade and Investment during the 2026 budget defence
Industry Minister Jumoke Oduwole defends the ministry’s 2026 budget before the Senate amid scrutiny of export revenue claims.
na_logo

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Get Daily News, Tips, Trends and Updates in your mailbox

Latest News

The Right Place for you comfort furniture's

Living Room

We offer a wide variety of furniture for homes and offices

Dinning Set

We provide stylish and high-quality dinning interior furnishing solutions.

Bedroom

We manufacture and produce complete bedroom furniture and interior furnishing products.

Share

Join us in a transformative journey towards better care for Deltans and support for all.

Nigeria’s Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Jumoke Oduwole, says the ministry generated more than $500 million in export revenue in 2025 through industrial development and diversification initiatives. However, details presented to lawmakers raise questions about attribution, scale, and the ministry’s capacity to sustain impact under persistent capital constraints.

Oduwole made the disclosure on Monday while defending the ministry’s 2026 budget proposal before the Senate Committee on Trade and Investment.

The minister also claimed that the ministry’s programmes created over 20,000 direct jobs in 2025. No supporting data was provided on the sectors involved, the duration or quality of the jobs, or the methodology used to separate ministry-driven outcomes from broader private sector activity.

From a trade perspective, Oduwole pointed to a reported 500 per cent increase in traded volumes on the Nigeria Commodity Exchange. While the growth suggests rising activity in structured commodity markets, the ministry did not disclose absolute volume figures, making it difficult to assess whether the increase reflects meaningful market depth or a rebound from a low base.

She said the ministry advanced plans for a national trade and distribution company to improve commodity aggregation and market access. However, key commercial details, including capital structure, governance, funding sources, and expected timelines, were not outlined, leaving uncertainty around execution and private sector participation.

On policy delivery, the minister confirmed that the Federal Executive Council approved the National Industrial Policy in November 2025 and that Nigeria launched its first National Intellectual Property Policy. While these approvals expand Nigeria’s policy framework, they add to a growing list of strategies whose effectiveness will depend on implementation capacity rather than regulatory intent.

Funding constraints dominated the budget defence. Oduwole said the ministry’s 2025 appropriation totalled ₦11.8 billion, largely consumed by personnel and overhead costs. Apart from a ₦3.8 billion capital allocation, she said no capital funds had been released, effectively limiting the ministry’s ability to execute industrial infrastructure, cluster development, or export-support programmes.

Despite these limitations, the minister disclosed that the ministry exceeded its revenue target by approximately ₦100 million, with full remittance to the Consolidated Revenue Fund. In macro terms, however, the figure remains marginal when set against Nigeria’s industrial financing gap and the scale of the country’s non-oil export ambitions.

Looking to 2026, Oduwole said the ministry’s priorities align with the Renewed Hope Agenda of Bola Tinubu, the National Development Plan, and existing trade, investment and industrial policy frameworks. She said the emphasis would shift from policy formulation to implementation across priority value chains, industrial clusters, and special economic zones, with a renewed focus on local production and non-oil exports.

The minister described domestic investors as the primary signal of confidence in the economy, while foreign investors would continue to be targeted through trade missions and investment roadshows. She also announced plans for a National AfCFTA Tour and expanded sub-national engagement to embed trade and industrial outcomes at state level.

She said these initiatives would be supported by digital investor portals and trade intelligence tools, measures long promised by successive administrations but yet to materially change investor experience.

Oduwole disclosed that the ministry’s proposed 2026 capital allocation stands at ₦2.72 billion, a level she acknowledged would be insufficient given the ministry’s mandate and execution targets. She urged lawmakers to approve an increase, warning that without improved funding, delivery risks would persist.

For investors and market operators, the central issue remains whether the ministry can translate policy approvals and headline revenue figures into measurable gains in industrial output, export competitiveness, and market infrastructure , or whether ambition will continue to outpace execution capacity.

Related Post