Nigeria is reshaping the way sustainability reporting is understood—no longer treating it as a bureaucratic checkbox but as a tool to attract capital, lower financing costs, and boost investor confidence.
At the 2nd Regulatory Roundtable on ISSB Standards in Abuja, Rabiu Olowo, Chief Executive of the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria (FRC), underscored this shift, noting that the country intends to demonstrate how transparent, high-quality disclosures can give businesses a competitive edge.
“This is not about filling out forms,” Olowo emphasized. “It is about credibility, competitiveness, and building an economy that investors can trust.”
Nigeria has become the first African country to officially adopt the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) framework, signaling its determination to set globally relevant benchmarks. The plan, created with NGX Regulation Limited and the ISSB, introduces a phased rollout—beginning with voluntary adoption and later moving to mandatory requirements for broader corporate categories.
Several trailblazers, including Access Bank, Fidelity Bank, MTN Nigeria, and Seplat Energy, are already embedding these standards into their systems, demonstrating the tangible potential of early adoption.
For Ndidi Nnoli-Edozien, ISSB board member, the goal is clear: prove that sustainability disclosure delivers more than compliance—it creates financial opportunities. “The stories of businesses that have reduced their cost of capital or unlocked new funding through sustainability reporting must be told,” she urged.
Nnoli-Edozien also highlighted areas Nigeria must strengthen: developing localized climate and emissions data, running scenario analyses for risks such as flooding, and equipping preparers through capacity-building initiatives.
Climate science, too, is taking center stage. Charles Anosike, head of the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMet), stressed that reliable climate data is essential for meaningful disclosures. “Climate change introduces both physical and transition risks that can reshape corporate performance. Without precise data, businesses cannot respond effectively,” he said.
With these moves, Nigeria is not only securing its role as a sustainability leader in Africa but also building a framework where corporate transparency fuels global trust, capital inflows, and long-term resilience.