Tinubu Orders Six Months Ban On Raw Shea Nut Export – Independent Newspaper Nigeria

Tinubu Orders Six Months Ban On Raw Shea Nut Export – Independent Newspaper Nigeria


ABUJA – President Bola Tinubu has ordered a 6-month ban on the export of raw shea nut.

He hinged the decision on the need to curb infor­mal trade, boost local pro­cessing, protect and grow Nigeria’s shea industry.

The ban, which takes an immediate effect, is subject to review on expiration and specifically aimed at boosting Nigeria’s shea value chain to generate around $300 million annu­ally in the short term.

Vice President Kashim Shettima, who announced the president’s direc­tive on Tuesday, during a multi-stakeholder meeting at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, called on the Fed­eral Ministry of Finance and other relevant govern­ment agencies to fast-track enforcement.

Speaking further on the directive, the vice presi­dent said the decision was not “an anti-trade policy but a pro-value addition policy designed to secure raw materials for our pro­cessing factories and en­abling industries run at full capacity thereby boost­ing rural income and jobs for our people.”

He added that the deci­sion “will transform Ni­geria from an exporter of raw shea nut to a global supplier of refined shea butter, oil and other deriv­atives,” just as he said it is about industrialisation, rural transformation, gen­der empowerment and ex­panding Nigeria’s global trade footprint.

On opportunities for job creation and income gen­eration, the vice president said, “Nigeria produces nearly 40% of the global shea product, yet we ac­count for only 1% of the market share of $6.5 bil­lion.

“This is unacceptable. We are projected to earn about $300 million annu­ally in the short term, and by 2027, there will be a 10- fold increase. This is our target.”

Shettima explained that the ban was a collective decision involving the sub-nationals and the Fed­eral Government with clear directions for economic transformation in the over­all interest of the nation.

“Government is not clos­ing doors; we are opening opportunities. Mr Presi­dent is currently in Brazil, and both countries have agreed to prioritize access for Nigerian shea butter and oil into the Brazilian market. This process will be completed within the next 3 months,” the VP added.

The vice president further highlighted the gender dimension of the policy, noting that “by pro­tecting the shea industry, we are protecting liveli­hoods, dignity and oppor­tunity for millions of our women.

“We are not closing doors, we are opening bet­ter ones. Today, we plant the seeds of an industry that will yield fruit for decades to come for our women, for our economy, and for Nigeria’s place in global trade.”

Earlier, the Minister of Agriculture and Food Se­curity, Senator Abubakar Kyari, who explained how the nation stands to ben­efit from the ban, regret­ted that despite being the world’s largest producer of shea nuts, contributing nearly 40 percent of glob­al supply, Nigeria captures less than one percent of the multi-billion-dollar global shea economy.

He said, “Nigeria pro­duces an estimated 350,000 metric tonnes of shea an­nually across 30 states, with the potential to reach nearly 900,000 metric tons. Yet our share of the 6.5-bil­lion-dollar global market is less than one percent.

“The Rapid Assessment of the Shea Value Chain, conducted by the PFSCU, the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Invest­ment and in close collab­oration with the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, provid­ed the evidence that shaped this presidential directive.”

According to the minis­ter, the assessment showed that over 90,000 metric tons of raw shea are lost each year in informal cross-bor­der trade, even as Nigeria’s “processors operate at only 35 to 50 percent capacity despite a national installed capacity of 160,000 metric tonnes.”

Senator Kyari further explained that while “re­gional neighbours such as Ghana, Burkina Faso, Mali, and Togo have al­ready imposed restrictions to protect their indus­tries,” Nigeria is vulnera­bly left “as the outlier and a hotspot for opportunistic and unregulated buying.”

Underscoring the enor­mous potential of the shea trade for Nigeria, the minis­ter noted that the shea sec­tor “could generate more than 300 million dollars annually in the short term and position Nigeria to cap­ture a significant share of the projected 9-billion-dol­lar global market by 2030.

“Shea is one of the few commodities where our country holds both a comparative and abso­lute advantage. With over five million hectares of wild-growing shea trees, Nigeria has the natural en­dowment to dominate not only in production but also in value-added processing.

“Shea is also identified in our Zero Oil Plan as a strategic non-oil export. With a projected global market growth from 6.5 billion dollars today to 9 billion dollars by 2030, Ni­geria can position itself at the heart of this expan­sion,” Kyari noted.

The minister further noted that since 90 percent of pickers and processors of shea are women, invest­ment in this value chain would directly translate into women’s empower­ment, rural job creation, and sustainable livelihoods.

This, he said, aligns with the Tinubu adminis­tration’s focus on women empowerment and the pledge by the Federal Min­istry of Agriculture and Food Security “not only to support the rural popu­lation but also to create a pathway for national eco­nomic development.”

Senator Kyari contin­ued: “The reasons for this presidential directive are clear. Without corrective action, Nigeria risked be­coming a raw depot for opportunistic and illicit buyers, undermining our processors’ capacities, dis­empowering rural women, and forfeiting billions in potential export revenues.

“The PFSCU rapid as­sessment, which engaged over 2,000 pickers and 65 processors, confirmed the urgent need for action. In­formal exports, estimated at 90,000 metric tons an­nually, are draining our domestic supply.

“With neighbours like Mali, Burkina Faso, and Togo already restricting raw exports, Nigeria risked being left as the region’s raw depot. The benefits of the temporary ban are equally compelling.

“It will secure domestic supply, enable processors to operate at full capacity, curb informal trade, and lay the foundation for Ni­geria to transition from exporting raw kernels to exporting high-value de­rivatives such as butter, olein, and stearin.

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Source: Independent

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