The nuances of the UK–Nigeria port infrastructure deal, By Dipo Baruwa
Add us on Google Ultimately, the UK–Nigeria port deal illustrates a broader structural reality. While the conceptualisation of the deal is commendable, much work remains in localising its inherent gains. Development outcomes are not determined by the presence of external investment, nor by the scale of infrastructure financing. They are determined by how effectively domestic institutions mediate, coordinate, and align external engagements with national industrial objectives. The recently announced UK–Nigeria port infrastructure deal has been widely presented as a major step toward improving Nigeria’s maritime efficiency and unlocking trade potential. At first glance, this assessment is accurate, and the investment appears promising for the Nigerian economy. Nigeria’s ports are congested, inefficient, and costly, and modernisation is both necessary and overdue. In that sense, the deal represents a timely and decisive move by the present administration within its broader effort to build complementary logistics infrastructure, first the coastal highway, then the expansion of rail lines, and now the enhancement of port efficiency. The deal, as publicly disclosed on 19 March, is first and foremost a ports modernisation and UK export-finance transaction. The core package consists of a £746 million UK Export Finance (UKEF)-backed buyer credit facility for refurbishing Apapa Quays and the Tin Can Island Port Complex in Lagos, with at least £236 million in supplier contracts directed to British companies. This includes a £70 million contract awarded to British Steel for the supply of 120,000 tonnes of steel billets for the project. The official framing from both sides emphasises port efficiency, automation, reduced dwell times, and enhanced maritime competitiveness, without explicit linkage to domestic industrial capability development. While this does not present a complete picture of the deal’s economic implications, it underscores the need to situate it within the broader framework of the United Kingdom’s evolving post-Brexit engagement strategy with developing economies, particularly through instruments such as the Enhanced Trade and Investment Partnerships (ETIPs) and the Developing Countries Trading Scheme (DCTS), as well as Nigeria’s own imperative to build domestic industrial capabilities. At the outset, it is important to recognise that the UK’s external trade and investment frameworks are not neutral. They are carefully designed policy tools through which the UK structures its trade, investment, and development engagements to advance its commercial and strategic interests. They determine how market access is granted, how investment flows are facilitated, and how development finance is deployed, often in ways that reinforce the integration and internationalisation of UK firms within partner economies. The UK has often presented itself internationally as a market-enabling economy. This particular deal with Nigeria, however, reveals a more nuanced reality: a strategic state that incorporates ex-ante influence into its outward engagement model, shaping market outcomes, even as it promotes openness. Consequently, the port infrastructure deal is not an isolated transaction. It forms part of a broader engagement architecture in which infrastructure financing, trade facilitation, and commercial contracting are deliberately aligned to expand the UK’s economic presence in Nigeria, creating, in the short term, a market for UK industrial outputs and, over time, potentially entrenching Nigeria’s dependence on externally supplied industrial goods. This is where the nuance lies. Localising External Benefits At its core, the deal appears less as a vehicle for building Nigeria’s industrial capabilities and more as a trade facilitation mechanism that enhances UK entry into the Nigerian market. It strengthens Nigeria’s capacity to move goods, but not its capacity to produce them. While this is not inherently problematic, it requires a deliberate localisation effort to embed the benefits; otherwise, there is a real risk that these gains will be largely externalised, with value captured upstream in foreign production systems, rather than within Nigeria’s domestic economy. While the deal, as presently structured and publicly presented, does not reflect sufficient coordination among these ministries, let alone meaningful engagement with subnational governments, the opportunity is not entirely lost. As the ETIP framework itself implies, such engagements are iterative rather than fixed. Accordingly, as implementation progresses, there remains scope to integrate localisation and domestic capability-building measures into the execution phase. More importantly, the asymmetry between the UK’s structured approach and Nigeria’s relative lack of a comparable engagement framework is striking. While Nigeria has developed several policy instruments and initiatives, including industrial, trade, and investment policies, these largely function as internal frameworks for coordinating economic activity. They have yet to coalesce into a coherent, operational architecture that strategically shapes how the country negotiates and aligns external engagements with domestic priorities. Instruments such as the ECOWAS Common External Tariff provide a regional trade policy framework but do not constitute a strategic external engagement architecture comparable to tools such as the UK’s DCTS or ETIPs, which integrate trade, investment, and development finance into a coherent outward-facing strategy. Nor can broad policy statements, such as the Nigerian Industrial Policy, which primarily set direction rather than guide the terms of engagement, serve as viable substitutes. The absence of such a framework limits Nigeria’s ability to deliberately extract value from external partnerships and align them with domestic industrial objectives. The result is a recurring pattern: external engagements are absorbed into the economy, but not effectively mediated. Over time, this risks evolving into a form of externally anchored enclave economy, where, as in this instance, infrastructure improves and trade flows expand, but domestic productive capacity remains weakly developed. This concern is reinforced by what the deal reveals about coordination within Nigeria’s economic governance architecture. This should have been a textbook example of cross-ministerial alignment, bringing together the Federal Ministry of Transport, the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, and the Ministry of Steel Development to design an intervention that links port modernisation with domestic value chain development. While the deal, as presently structured and publicly presented, does not reflect sufficient coordination among these ministries, let alone meaningful engagement with subnational governments, the opportunity is not entirely lost. As the ETIP framework itself implies, such engagements are iterative rather than fixed. Accordingly, as implementation progresses, there remains scope to integrate localisation and domestic capability-building measures into the execution phase. Conclusion Quite evidently, Nigeria does not suffer from a lack of policy ambition. What it struggles with is the institutional coordination required to translate external engagement into structural transformation. Deals such as this continue to expose that gap. They show that while the country can mobilise financing and participate in global economic arrangements, it often falls short in shaping those arrangements to serve long-term domestic objectives. A more strategic pathway would situate port development within a broader industrialisation framework. Nigeria’s natural trajectory should prioritise building domestic production capacity for the West African market, and then scale into continental value chains under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). This sequencing is critical. Industrial capabilities are built through production, learning, and market engagement, not merely through improved logistics. To be clear, improving port efficiency is important. Efficient logistics reduce trade costs and enhance competitiveness. But infrastructure cannot substitute for the more urgent task of building domestic industrial capabilities. This requires institutional frameworks that deliberately filter, embed, and strategically couple external gains with domestic productive structures. Without this, improved logistics risks reinforcing Nigeria’s role as a consumption and transit economy, rather than transforming it into a production-based one. In practical terms, Nigeria may become better at importing and redistributing goods, without becoming significantly better at producing them. A more strategic pathway would situate port development within a broader industrialisation framework. Nigeria’s natural trajectory should prioritise building domestic production capacity for the West African market, and then scale into continental value chains under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). This sequencing is critical. Industrial capabilities are built through production, learning, and market engagement, not merely through improved logistics. Without such alignment, infrastructure improvements, however well-intentioned, may deepen trade flows without transforming the underlying productive structure. The country risks becoming a more efficient gateway for goods produced elsewhere, rather than a hub for value creation. Ultimately, the UK–Nigeria port deal illustrates a broader structural reality. While the conceptualisation of the deal is commendable, much work remains in localising its inherent gains. Development outcomes are not determined by the presence of external investment, nor by the scale of infrastructure financing. They are determined by how effectively domestic institutions mediate, coordinate, and align external engagements with national industrial objectives. To ensure more structured and strategically guided external engagement, Nigeria needs to develop a coherent framework, one that reflects its economic, industrial, innovation, and trade aspirations, and against which external instruments such as ETIPs and DCTS can be aligned. Without this, deals such as the UK–Nigeria port infrastructure agreement will continue to deliver incremental improvements without driving transformative change. And that is the nuance that must not be overlooked. Dipo Baruwa is a business climate development analyst. Share this: Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp Click to share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email Click to print (Opens in new window) Print