Nigeria’s non-oil export sector achieved a historic breakthrough in 2025, reaching an all-time high of $6.1 billion in formal earnings. According to the latest data from the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC), this 11.5% year-on-year growth was driven not by a few large conglomerates, but by a surge of 1,129 new exporters entering the market. This shift signals a fundamental transformation from “raw commodity” extraction to a diversified, “processed-value” trade model.
1. The Quality Over Volume Shift
While export volumes grew by 10% to reach 8.02 million metric tonnes, export earnings outpaced this growth. This indicates that Nigerian businesses are gaining pricing power through deeper processing:
-
Cocoa ($1.99 Billion): Derivatives like cocoa butter, liquor, and cake now command higher margins than raw beans.
-
Fertilizer ($1.29 Billion): Urea exports have positioned Nigeria as a critical player in global agricultural input markets.
-
Diversification: Significant receipts from aluminum and copper ingots, processed oilseeds, and rubber have insulated the economy from price volatility in any single sector.
2. The SME “Formalization” Revolution
NEPC CEO Nonye Ayeni highlighted that the lowering of entry barriers has turned non-oil trade into a viable pathway for small businesses.
-
Capacity Building: NEPC conducted 728 programmes reaching over 96,000 participants in 2025, drastically reducing shipment rejections and documentation errors.
-
Digital Integration: Over 70 SMEs were onboarded onto global e-commerce platforms (like Jumia), while 146 women-led businesses received grants up to $30,000 through the WEIDE programme.
-
Bankability: With nearly 20,000 NXP forms processed and 30 commercial banks active in trade finance, non-oil exports have moved from “informal hustle” to “bankable corporate operations.”
3. The Cluster Model: “One State, One Product”
To stabilize the supply chain, the NEPC has scaled production clusters. A pilot Sesame Cluster in Kebbi State, involving 250 farmers across 500 hectares, serves as the 2026 blueprint. By integrating production standards and export compliance into a single framework, the model ensures that rural farmers are directly connected to international buyers, cutting out inefficient middlemen.
The 2026 Outlook
The NEPC’s strategy for the coming year is clear: Scale and Certify. The focus will shift toward:
-
Increasing the participation of youth in the export value chain.
-
Providing export insurance to mitigate international trade risks.
-
Deepening value addition so that more “Finished in Nigeria” products hit global shelves.
The Bottom Line Nigeria is no longer just a “petro-state” in waiting; it is becoming a diverse industrial exporter. The addition of over 1,000 new exporters in a single year proves that the private sector is ready to lead the charge in foreign exchange generation, provided the regulatory and financial “handshake” remains strong.
