Nigeria and Tanzania have launched a fresh drive to supercharge bilateral trade and investment, tapping into the momentum of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) amid global supply-chain upheavals.
The initiative, spearheaded by the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), seeks to reposition economic relations between Africa’s most populous nation and one of East Africa’s fastest-growing economies through structured private-sector collaboration and a surge in cross-border investment flows.
The push gained concrete momentum at a high-level business forum held recently in Lagos under the theme “Accelerating Investment and Trade between Tanzania and Nigeria for Economic Development.” The gathering brought together policymakers, investors, and business leaders determined to move beyond diplomatic handshakes to measurable commercial outcomes.
LCCI President Leye Kupoluyi set the tone, framing the current global economic landscape as a rare window of opportunity for African nations. “The world is witnessing supply-chain realignments and increasing regionalization of trade,” he told delegates. “This is the moment for African countries to strengthen intra-continental commerce and reduce over-reliance on distant markets.”
Kupoluyi reminded the audience that Nigeria and Tanzania share a proud history of political solidarity dating back to the liberation struggles of the 1960s and 1970s. Yet, he lamented, “That diplomatic bond has not yet translated into the level of commercial activity both nations deserve.” Both economies, he added, are now undergoing transformative reforms that create fertile ground for partnership.
In Nigeria, sweeping macroeconomic changes—including exchange-rate unification, fiscal restructuring, and the rationalization of fuel subsidies—are reshaping the business environment.
Across the Indian Ocean, Tanzania is reinforcing macroeconomic stability through disciplined monetary policy, massive infrastructure rollout, and a deliberate push toward export diversification. “These parallel reforms,” Kupoluyi said, “offer a strong foundation for private-sector partnerships that can deliver sustainable growth.”
The LCCI chief identified five high-potential sectors for immediate collaboration: agriculture and agro-processing, energy and infrastructure, manufacturing, tourism, and the digital economy. He singled out integrated value chains in cocoa, cashew, cotton, rice, and horticulture as low-hanging fruit, while spotlighting renewable energy projects, gas-to-power initiatives, and electricity transmission infrastructure as game-changers for both nations.
Tanzania’s High Commissioner to Nigeria, Selestine Gervas Kakele, echoed the optimism while injecting hard data into the conversation. He described the LCCI as “a strong pillar of Nigeria’s private sector and a key contributor to the economic development of Lagos State.” Kakele acknowledged that current trade volumes between the two countries “remain well below their potential,” despite Nigeria’s substantial footprint in Tanzania.
Citing figures from the Tanzania Investment and Special Economic Zones Authority, the envoy revealed that Nigerian investors have poured approximately $1.37 billion into Tanzania between 1997 and January 2025, generating more than 2,200 direct jobs across agriculture, infrastructure, manufacturing, transport, finance, and tourism.
Tanzania, Kakele noted, has posted impressive resilience over the past decade, recording average real GDP growth of about 6 percent between 2014 and 2024. The economy peaked at 7 percent in 2019 before dipping to 4.8 percent in 2020 under the weight of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Recovery has been anchored by agriculture, tourism, financial services, trade, construction, and mining, with fresh momentum expected from manufacturing, tourism, and investment inflows.
LCCI Director-General Chinyere Almona framed the forum as far more than a routine diplomatic exchange. “This is a strategic platform to deepen commercial partnerships and promote genuine investment opportunities between businesses in both countries,” she declared.
Almona pointed to global geopolitical tensions and recent trade disruptions as painful reminders of the fragility of international supply chains—a vulnerability that intra-African cooperation can directly address.
She highlighted the complementary strengths of the two economies: Nigeria’s vast consumer market and diversified industrial base, paired with Tanzania’s stable, reform-driven investment climate and strategic gateway to the East African Community. “Despite this natural synergy, trade between us remains relatively modest,” Almona observed. “The AfCFTA now gives us the perfect instrument to change that narrative.”
Both speakers stressed that targeted collaboration between the LCCI and Tanzania’s Investment and Special Economic Zones Authority will be critical. Planned activities include joint investment missions, sector-specific forums, and direct business-to-business matchmaking events designed to convert policy commitments into bricks-and-mortar projects and job-creating ventures.
As the curtains closed on the Lagos forum, the message was unmistakable: Nigeria and Tanzania are no longer content to let historical friendship lie dormant. In an era when Africa is racing to industrialize and insulate itself from external shocks, the two nations are betting that private-sector muscle, backed by smart policy and the AfCFTA framework, can finally unlock the full commercial promise that has eluded them for decades.
The coming months will test whether the fine words spoken in Lagos translate into the tangible investment flows, joint ventures, and expanded trade volumes that both countries—and the broader African economic integration project—urgently need.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nigeria and Tanzania are actively working to turn long-standing political ties into real economic gains. Both countries see massive untapped potential in bilateral trade and investment, especially in agriculture, energy, manufacturing, tourism, and digital sectors—and they are now using private-sector leadership (via the LCCI) and the AfCFTA framework to finally close the wide gap between current modest trade volumes and what is realistically achievable.
















