Thursday, July 16, 2026

Nigeria launches $500 million agriculture fund to transform oil-rich Niger Delta

Nigeria has unveiled a $500 million Niger Delta Agricultural Investment Fund, marking one of its biggest agriculture-focused investment initiatives as the government looks to diversify the economy beyond oil and strengthen food security.

Vice President Kashim Shettima announced the fund on Wednesday at the Niger Delta Agricultural Development and Investment Summit in Abuja, describing agriculture as a critical pillar of Nigeria's long-term economic transformation. The initiative is designed to increase food production, unlock private capital and position the oil-producing Niger Delta as a major agribusiness hub.


A commercial investment model

Unlike traditional government intervention programmes, the fund will operate as a commercial, returns-driven investment vehicle, financing projects across the agricultural value chain.

Investment will target high-potential sectors including aquaculture, palm oil, livestock, fisheries, marine resources and crop production. According to Shettima, financing will come from a mix of multilateral development institutions—including the World Bank, African Development Bank and Islamic Development Bank—alongside private investors. He did not disclose how much each institution would contribute or the fund's ownership structure.

Nigeria has been ramping up mechanisation efforts, including plans to deploy 10,000 tractors over five years to improve productivity. The government has also pursued international partnerships, including a $1 billion agriculture cooperation agreement with Brazil, aimed at expanding mechanised farming and agricultural infrastructure.


Why the Niger Delta matters

Although the Niger Delta has long powered Nigeria's economy through crude oil production, its vast agricultural potential has remained largely underdeveloped.

By attracting institutional investors and commercial capital into the region, the government hopes to create jobs, expand agricultural exports and reduce Nigeria's dependence on food imports. If successfully executed, the initiative could help reposition the Niger Delta from an oil-dependent economy to one of the country's most important food-production and agribusiness centres.

By Adekunle Agbetiloye, Business Insider Africa

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