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FG advocates local cocoa processing to end raw bean export

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President Bola Tinubu has declared that Nigeria must move away from exporting raw cocoa beans and focus on processing the commodity locally to capture more value from the global chocolate market.

The president, represented by the Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, Abubakar Kyari, stated this on Tuesday at the Cocoa Value Addition Summit 2026 in Abuja.

The summit, themed “From Bean to Brand: The Bean in My Hand, The Brand in Our Future,” brought together government officials, cocoa-producing countries, investors, development partners, and industry stakeholders to discuss strategies for expanding cocoa processing and manufacturing across Africa.

President Tinubu said Nigeria could no longer rely on exporting raw agricultural commodities while other countries generated most of the profits from processing, branding and manufacturing finished products.

“Nigeria will no longer export raw beans while importing finished value. We will grind our beans at home, we will press our butter at home, we will make our chocolate at home, brand it at home, and sell it to the world on our own terms,” he said.

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He said more than 300,000 Nigerian farming households cultivate cocoa on over 1.4 million hectares, making Nigeria one of the world’s leading cocoa producers with about six to seven per cent of global output.

According to him, cocoa generated more than N3 trillion in export earnings during the recent surge in global prices, but exporting raw beans meant Nigeria captured only a fraction of the industry’s economic value.

The president cited ongoing investments in local processing, including a 70,000-metric-tonne cocoa processing facility under construction in Sagamu, Ogun State, and said Nigeria’s annual cocoa grinding capacity has exceeded 120,000 metric tonnes.

Industrial policy

The Minister of State for Industry, John Owan Enoh, said the initiative aligns with Nigeria’s industrial policy, which seeks to reduce dependence on raw commodity exports and expand domestic manufacturing.

“We are not interested in exporting anonymous sacks anymore. We are interested in exporting value. If Nigeria truly wants to build a one-trillion-dollar economy, it cannot continue exporting raw materials while other countries earn the real wealth from processing and branding them,” he said.

Mr Enoh also disclosed that Nigeria is working with Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire and Cameroon to establish an African cocoa alliance aimed at strengthening the continent’s bargaining power in the global cocoa market.

According to him, the proposed alliance would coordinate policies on cocoa processing, value addition and trade among countries that account for the bulk of global cocoa production.

BOI pledges financing

The Managing Director of the Bank of Industry (BOI), Olasupo Olusi, said the bank is prepared to provide long-term financing to support investments across the cocoa value chain.

He disclosed that the bank disbursed more than N164 billion to over 3,500 agro-processing and food businesses in 2025 and recently secured a €60 million credit facility from the European Investment Bank to support cocoa processing projects.

“Our goal is to finance everything from nurseries and cooperatives to grinding plants, ingredient factories, packaging lines and chocolate manufacturers,” Mr Olusi said.

Also speaking, the Chief Executive of the Ghana Cocoa Board, Ransford Abbey, called for closer cooperation among Africa’s leading cocoa-producing countries, noting that although the continent produces between 75 and 77 per cent of the world’s cocoa, it earns less than 10 per cent of the value generated by the global chocolate industry.

“We do not need charity. We deserve equity. The time has come for Africa to process its own wealth, protect its farmers and negotiate with one voice in the global cocoa market,” he said.

READ ALSO: FG begins work on animal identification, traceability to boost export

The renewed push for local processing comes as Nigeria seeks to diversify export earnings away from crude oil and increase the contribution of agriculture to industrial growth. Although Africa produces about 70 per cent of the world’s cocoa, most of the value from chocolate manufacturing is captured in Europe and North America, where beans are processed into butter, powder and finished confectionery products.

For years, industry stakeholders have argued that expanding domestic processing would create jobs, increase foreign exchange earnings and strengthen Nigeria’s position in global agricultural value chains. Recent investments in cocoa processing facilities and financing initiatives are part of broader efforts to shift the country from exporting raw commodities to exporting higher-value manufactured products.

The summit ended with the adoption of the Cocoa Value Addition Accord and a proposed Abuja Declaration aimed at accelerating domestic cocoa processing, attracting investment, improving farmers’ incomes and deepening collaboration among Africa’s major cocoa-producing countries.


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Trader sentenced to prison for stealing trousers in hospital

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A Jos Magistrate’s Court on Wednesday sentenced a 26-year-old trader, Ahmed Abdullahi, to nine months in prison for stealing a shirt and trousers from a hospital.

The convict pleaded guilty to the charges of trespass and theft brought against him by the police.

The magistrate, Irene Pati, sentenced the convict to nine months in prison, with an option of a N20,000 fine or three months in prison for trespass, and a N20,000 fine or six months in prison for stealing, all to run concurrently.

While reviewing the facts, the prosecutor, Ijuptil Thiawur, told the court that the case was reported on June 24 at the ‘C’ Division Police Station by Joshua Tongpan, the complainant.

Mr Thiawur said the convict trespassed into the hospital facility and stole the shirt and trousers valued at N25,000 before he was caught with them.

He said the offences contravened the Plateau Penal Code Law.

(NAN)

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Climate tech overtakes fintech as Africa’s top venture funding sector

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Climate tech, the field of technologies and solutions increasingly adopted to tackle the climate crisis, has emerged as Africa’s top venture-funding sector, relegating fintech, which has dominated the scene for years, to the back seat.

The sector accounted for less than a quarter of the aggregate venture capital that flowed into Africa in the nine years to 2025, according to a report released Tuesday by London-based research house Briter.

Climate tech’s role in venture funding became particularly pronounced in 2025, when it alone contributed 40 per cent, or $1.5 billion, compared with other years in the near-decade period under review, the study said. That was up from 13 per cent, or $206 million, in 2016.

“This growth has been accompanied by a rapid expansion in the number of funded companies and deals,” the report titled “The State of ClimateTech in Africa 2.0: Moving Beyond the Headline Numbers,” stated.

“Between 2016 and 2025, ClimateTech companies raised approximately $6.35 billion across 779 companies,” the research, conducted by Briter, conducted along with Catalyst Fund, BFA Global, FSD Africa and Africa: The Big Deal, added.

Nigeria’s growing profile

The report indicated that Nigeria, Africa’s largest nation by population, is quietly building a reputation as a climate-solution powerhouse, second only to Kenya. It attracted 12.9 per cent of the continent’s total investment between 2019 and 2025.

That said, Kenya, which tops the group of the three largest markets, which also includes South Africa, took more than half of the pool. It implies Nigeria needs to cover a vast swathe of ground within the ecosystem in the years ahead to stand a chance of leading Africa.

The country has remained the fintech capital of Africa for years, with fintech revenue currently standing above $14 billion at a compounded annual growth rate of 31.4 per cent. The prestige has ridden a prolonged payments-led boom that has produced unicorns like Flutterwave, OPay and Moniepoint, with valuations above $1 billion.

Nevertheless, the report’s emphasis on climate tech as the newest sweetheart of offshore investors means that sector may end up as the leader of the broader tech industry in a matter of years, provided the current funding tempo doesn’t slow.

It highlighted areas such as logistics, farmer-to-market links, and post-harvest loss reduction as bright spots where Nigeria can leverage its climate tech potential.

A case in point is Lagos-based Winich Farms and a generation of new platforms, which it said have drawn inspiration from Twiga Foods, a mobile-enabled B2B supply platform operating in Kenya.

Winich and those others, the research said, are forging ahead where Twiga faced difficulties in its early days, as they are now incorporating market access, embedded finance and logistics, helping them avert costs that otherwise could have gone into building physical infrastructure. Walking that path has also cleared the hurdle for Winich Farm and the rest to link farmers up with off-takers, “rather than assuming demand will follow supply,” it noted.

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