Nigeria’s mining sector recorded a staggering 533% revenue jump from N6 billion in 2023 to N38 billion in 2024, but industry leaders warn this growth could stall without critical incentives for operators.
What Drove the Revenue Surge?
Solid Minerals Minister Dele Alake credited three key factors:
Stricter licensing regulations
Value-addition policies
Crackdown on illegal mining
However, Dele Ayankele, President of the Miners Association of Nigeria (MAN), argues these gains could multiply with targeted incentives to boost production volumes.
The Incentive Debate
While applauding the minister’s reforms, MAN highlights:
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Global demand for energy transition minerals is rising
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High licensing fees are pushing out small-scale miners
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Only foreign-backed operators can afford new costs
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Royalty-based growth (tied to production) beats fixed fees
“Maximizing government revenue shouldn’t mean choking operators,” Ayankele cautioned, urging a review of fee structures to protect local miners.
Growth vs. Sustainability
The sector faces a delicate balance:
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Short-term wins: N38B revenue shows policy impact
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Long-term risks: Over-reliance on fees may shrink the operator base
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Opportunity: Nigeria could leverage the global green energy rush with miner-friendly policies
MAN proposes:
Tax breaks for equipment imports
Lower entry barriers for indigenous miners
Production-linked incentives to boost output
Key Takeaways:
N38B revenue proves mining’s potential
High fees threaten small-scale operators
Global demand creates window for expansion
Industry seeks balance between govt revenue and growth incentives
The Bottom Line:
Nigeria’s mining sector is at a crossroads – maintain the fee-heavy approach for quick wins, or stimulate production through incentives to unlock exponential growth. With global markets hungry for minerals, the choice could define the sector’s trajectory for decades.