Nigeria, UK £746m Deal Unclogs Ports, Visa Hurdles

Nigeria and the United Kingdom have concluded a series of bilateral agreements aimed at reducing administrative barriers to trade and investment, following state visit discussions between President Bola Tinubu and UK officials in London.

The centrepiece is a £746 million infrastructure financing package to modernise Nigeria’s key maritime gateways, the Apapa and Tin Can Island Ports in Lagos. The funding, arranged with UK Export Finance and Citibank, will support a transition to fully automated, digital port operations. This addresses chronic congestion that has contributed to inflation and hindered commerce. A £70 million component involves British Steel supplying specialised materials for rail and terminal upgrades, with the goal of reducing vessel turnaround from weeks to days and restoring Nigeria’s position as a dominant Atlantic trade hub.

Complementing the infrastructure investment, the nations signed a Memorandum of Understanding to reform business visa processes. This introduces a “Trusted Partner” designation for UK-based companies with substantial Nigerian operations. Qualified firms will receive expedited visa processing for executives and technical staff, moving away from physical passport stickers toward a digital system—a change already implemented for all Nigerian travellers to the UK from February 2026. The scheme aims to facilitate the rapid deployment of personnel for critical projects.

The economic measures are paired with a new three-year strategic migration plan. Administratively, Nigeria’s Immigration Service will now accept “UK Letters” as valid travel documents for the repatriation of individuals without passports, a move linked to managing irregular migration. Furthermore, a joint “Fusion Cell” intelligence initiative will enable Nigerian and British banks to share data to combat financial fraud associated with illegal immigration, often referred to locally as “Japa” syndicates.

For Nigerian businesses and consumers, the port automation is projected to lower import costs and accelerate export procedures. The visa reforms should accelerate projects involving UK expertise, while the financial monitoring component increases scrutiny on cross-border transactions linked to migration fraud.

The agreements signal a concerted effort to recalibrate the bilateral relationship around tangible economic deliverables and managed mobility. By targeting port efficiency and skilled business travel, the deal seeks to stimulate trade, while parallel security collaboration addresses leakage from increased movement. The implementation of these coordinated reforms will be closely observed as a test of the partnership’s capacity to deliver sustained growth and orderly migration management.

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