LAGOS – Experts have maintained that Nigeria’s participation in the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) represents one of the most strategic economic opportunities in the nation’s modern history.
However, they warned that many factors including structural weaknesses in the country’s logistics, transport, and trade architecture, among others, currently undermine the country’s competitiveness, export capacity, and regional trade leadership potential.
They also lampooned the government for not encouraging indigenous exporters, accusing the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC) of inefficiency.
Dr. Eugene Nweke, a maritime expert, noted that despite large-scale investments in airport infrastructure development across states of the federation, the absence of dedicated air cargo infrastructure, sea–air/air– sea integration frameworks, and multimodal trade corridors have created systemic inefficiencies.
Nweke, Head of Research, Sea Empowerment and Research Center (SEREC), noted that these gaps result in high freight costs, prolonged transit times, weak regional connectivity, and reduced competitiveness for Nigerian shippers under the AfCFTA regime, highlighting that cargo movements from Southern and Eastern Africa into Nigeria frequently require trans-shipment through Europe, the Middle East, Asia, or America due to the absence of direct African trade routes.
This structure, according to him, increases shipping costs, introduces double handling, extends voyage times, and structurally put Nigerian businesses within continental trade competition disadvantages.
The SEREC Head of Research, who was also a former National President, National Association of Government Approved Freight Forwarders (NAGAFF), in a comprehensive white paper policy framework for repositioning Nigeria as a regional and continental logistics hub called for dedicated national air cargo airports, sea–air and air–sea cargo corridors, multimodal customs integration; cargo-first airport development philosophy, technology-driven logistics governance and regional route development incentives.
“Anchored in global best practices and adopted from Singapore’s cargo hub evolution model, this policy framework aligns with the Renewed Hope Agenda and provides a roadmap for transforming Nigeria into a competitive AfCFTA trade and logistics powerhouse,” Nweke asserted.
He pointed out that trade competitiveness in the 21st century is no longer determined solely by production capacity but by the efficiency, speed, cost, reliability, and integration of logistics systems, adding that nations that dominate global and regional trade flows are those that have built seamless multimodal infrastructure connecting ports, airports, railways, inland freight terminals, and digital trade platforms.
According to him, Nigeria’s current logistics architecture remains fragmented, mode-isolated, and structurally inefficient.
“While investments in ports, roads, rail, and airports are ongoing, they are largely developed in isolation rather than as components of an integrated national trade logistics system.
“This white paper argues that Nigeria’s AfCFTA strategy cannot succeed without a deliberate national logistics transformation policy that prioritises cargo infrastructure, multimodal integration, and trade facilitation as strategic economic instruments”, he said.
Ismail Aniemu, another maritime expert, while speaking on the benefits eluding Nigeria in the area of export produce, and why they are lagging behind in international market, said: “Packaging is very important, this is because there are some produce that are perishable. If you don’t package well, it will affect your product because you are in a competitive market.
“For instance, when I travelled to Ghana, I went to Takoradi, in Ghana, I saw where they were packaging yam to be exported. Thought I did not confirm what I heard, but there was a rumour that some of these yams being packaged for export in Ghana were from Nigeria. I saw them in a place called Akosombo. I was also told that some of those yams being packaged were not grown in Ghana. That some of the yams were gotten from Nigeria. So, you see that they have a way of packaging it and labelling it to meet international standard, which we are not doing in Nigeria. Yams were packaged in cartons and put in containers. We have to grow to that level. We need to package properly.
“There is the need for economic growth. Ghana is leading us in terms of cocoa export, now they are taking away yams from us. What is the population of Ghana? Ghana is like Lagos and Oyo put together. Or if we want to be modest, we say, Lagos, Oyo and Ogun. The need for development in Nigeria is very wide. If Ghana is exporting cocoa more than us, Ivory Coast taking cocoa from us, Ghana taking yam, if we don’t take time, they will lead us in cassava, lead us in everything. We must have comparative advantage. We have to look at our packaging. Government has a leading role to play in business sustainability. Export is a serious business that deserves more government attention”, he noted.
Aniemu lamented that the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC) is not doing enough, arguing that the impact of the agency is not being felt in the maritime sector.
“It is an absentee organisation. Meanwhile, the maritime environment is where you make your highest level of export because what a ship can carry in terms of export, you may need 500 aircraft or airplanes to carry that same quantity. The NEPC is absent in the ports where their present is most needed but seated in air-condition offices in Abuja. They need to be on ground and encourage exporters.”
Also commenting, Anefi Mohammed, an international freight forwarder, averred that Nigeria is exporting more from the maritime space, but that the government agency in-charge of export is not also on ground.
Mohammed, the Vice Chairman, International Freight Forwarders Association (IFFA), Port and Terminal Multipurpose Services (PTML) chapter, queried, “Have you seen the NEPC on the ground? Have you seen them doing stakeholders’ meetings? Even when they do, you don’t see them do it near the port environment. To the extent that during the era of port congestion in Apapa, export cargoes will stay on the road for days. It is the exporters themselves that will be fighting their battle. The private-sector exporters themselves are the ones fighting their battles. Nigeria Export Promotion Council will never come to say please, bear with us, police, road safety, LASTMA help us clear the roads because the export containers need to pass. We did not see them”, he said.
Mohammed said their absence affected exporters, pointing out that exporters are still struggling and that it will be easier for them if they see the government agency whose duty it is promote export on ground.
“There is what we call the domestic export warehouse. This is promoted by NEPC. Most of these concepts by government, we only see it on papers. You will see that any government container that is moving, once it goes through domestic warehouse, it will not be re-examined or delayed. Fine, there is implementation in that direction, but the question you ask yourself is, the government agency –NEPC, are they on the ground to ensure that things work the way they are planned? It is the exporters themselves that struggle their way. The NEPC is not on ground. The growth we are seeing in export is the commitment of the private-sector practitioners. NEPC support is very slow, very minimal and as Nigeria gears up to participate very well in the AfCTA, export is one of the sectors that Nigeria will take advantage of.”
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