Nigeria plans to tighten rules to reduce the export of raw minerals and encourage the shipment of processed products, a move aimed at creating jobs and boosting the value of its exports.
“You can’t take our minerals away without adding value locally,” Dele Alake, the minister for solid minerals, said in an interview.“Which means you must start a factory to produce something that is associated with the mineral that you are taking out.”
Africa’s largest crude producer is banking on its mineral reserves to provide an alternative source of income as oil output dwindles.
The country has lithium, gold, bitumen and iron ore deposits and is intent on emulating nations such as Indonesia in climbing up the commodities value chain and boosting employment. Indonesia’s nickel exports surged tenfold in five years after it forced buyers to set up refineries in the country.
Previous Nigerian governments have unsuccessfully tried to revive the mining and quarrying industry. A decade ago, then-President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration set a target of boosting mining’s contribution to gross domestic product to three per cent by 2015. The sector accounted for just 0.2 per cent of output last year, according to PwC.
Encouraging foreign companies to refine minerals in-country remains challenging — investors have to contend with an unreliable electricity supply and weak domestic demand, while most minerals are extracted by illegal miners. Northern Nigeria has also long been plagued by insecurity, with armed gangs carrying out mass abductions and killings. The gangs have also displaced local communities, making way for illegal mining, Alake said.