KEY POINTS
- AfDB approved a $200 million facility for the Bank of Industry to fund Nigerian SMEs, manufacturers and green industrialization projects.
- At least 30 percent of the package will flow to small and medium-sized enterprises, with priority for women-owned and youth-led businesses.
- The deal includes a $650,000 grant and a technical assistance component under AfDB’s AFAWA initiative for women-led enterprises.
The African Development Bank Group on Monday approved a $200 million financing facility for Nigeria’s Bank of Industry, targeting medium- and long-term capital for manufacturers, SMEs and green industrialization projects across the country’s productive sectors.
The AfDB said the package will support businesses seeking expansion capital across infrastructure, transportation, agro-food processing, healthcare, pharmaceuticals and green industrialization, with at least 30 percent of the facility flowing to small and medium-sized enterprises and priority going to women-owned and youth-led businesses.
Now the approval lands as Nigeria’s industrial policy push gathers pace, with the federal government separately targeting N250 billion in textbook import savings, a textile sector revival and reforms to tariff structures, all designed to deepen domestic production capacity.
Where the $200 million goes
Specifically, the AfDB said the financing package aligns with ongoing efforts to deepen Nigeria’s industrial capacity, lift economic competitiveness and accelerate private sector-led development across critical productive sectors.
Indeed, the bank stressed that inclusive financing remains essential to sustainable economic growth, with the 30 percent SME allocation positioning the facility to reach beyond large industrial players into the smaller firms that dominate Nigerian employment.
Moreover, the deal includes a $650,000 grant from the Fund for African Private Sector Assistance, which AfDB said will strengthen SME capacity and support climate-smart business initiatives across productive sectors.
Women-led businesses get a lift
Furthermore, the arrangement includes a technical assistance component under AfDB’s Affirmative Finance Action for Women in Africa initiative. The AFAWA component will improve access to financing for women-led enterprises and lift their participation in industrial and commercial activities.
Additionally, AfDB Director-General of the Nigeria Country Department Abdul Kamara framed the approval as a statement of confidence in Nigeria’s industrial potential and the country’s economic transformation agenda.
“Stronger local enterprises will contribute significantly to sustainable industrial transformation and inclusive economic growth,” Kamara said, citing SMEs, women entrepreneurs and youth-led businesses as central to Nigeria’s diversification push.
Bank of Industry positioning
Meanwhile, BoI Managing Director Olasupo Olusi described the facility as another milestone in the long-standing partnership between the two institutions. He said the collaboration has remained focused on promoting economic development, unlocking investment opportunities and creating jobs.
However, the broader test sits in how the funds translate into actual manufacturing capacity, with BoI’s track record on disbursement speed and project monitoring carrying significant weight in determining whether the $200 million package produces measurable industrial output.
Olusi said the financing intervention will strengthen local manufacturing capacity and support Nigeria’s long-term industrial development goals, framing the partnership as a building block toward measurable export expansion and reduced dependence on imported industrial products.
Together with the FAPA grant, the AFAWA technical assistance and the SME and women-led set-aside, the package marks one of the more structurally complete AfDB facilities for Nigeria’s industrial sector in recent years.
Whether Nigerian manufacturers translate the cheaper, longer-tenor capital into actual production growth, exports and job creation will depend on the BoI’s appraisal discipline, the macroeconomic environment and how quickly the participating firms can absorb the financing. Yet for now, AfDB has placed a substantial multilateral bet on Nigerian industry, and Olusi’s BoI now carries the responsibility for converting that capital into output.


