Niger State Governor Umar Bago has donated 100,000 hectares of land to Lagos State for agricultural development to boost food production in Nigeria’s most populated but smallest state by landmass.
Bago announced the donation at the FirstBank Nigeria-sponsored Agric & Export Expo 2025 in Lagos on Thursday. He said Niger would serve as the production hub, while Lagos would handle consumption and logistics.
The governor disclosed that the proposed “Lagos Farm” project would be spread across several locations in Niger to cultivate yams, beans, and livestock for Lagos markets, while also targeting export opportunities in the Middle East.
“The annual Hajj requires about five million sheep, each costing 500 riyals, representing a 2.5 billion riyal market in one transaction,” Bago said, stressing the need for value addition across the livestock chain.
Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, Abubakar Kyari, represented by his Special Adviser, Ibrahim Alkali, outlined the Federal Government’s renewed push for agricultural growth, calling for improved infrastructure, certification, and a zero-reject policy for exports. He noted that while Nigeria earns about $700 million annually from raw cocoa exports, processing could multiply the value up to fivefold.
Kyari also highlighted the role of young people in driving innovation, pointing to $640 million in investment attracted by African youth-led agri-tech startups between 2020 and 2022.
Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, urged private sector collaboration to diversify the economy beyond oil, citing recent data from the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC) showing a 19.59 per cent rise in non-oil exports in the first half of 2025.
He said Lagos, as the country’s commercial hub, has a special responsibility in the transformation agenda, noting key projects supported by a $1.35 billion partnership with Afreximbank and Access Bank, as well as the launch of a N500 billion Offtake Guarantee Fund for food security.
Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Jumoke Oduwole, represented by NEPC CEO Mrs. Nonye Ayeni, reiterated government support for exporters through certification programmes, while FirstBank Managing Director, Olusegun Alebiosu, reaffirmed the bank’s commitment to financing agribusiness and non-oil exports.
The FirstBank 2025 Agric & Export Expo, themed “The Fundamentals of Building an Export-Driven Economy”, ended with calls for actionable strategies to transform Nigeria into an export-driven economy.