Nigeria loses $20b to untapped blue economy potential yearly, says SEREC

Weak implementation of policies, poor enforcement of maritime laws and underutilisation of related industries, like steel, and revenue leakages have continued to cost Nigeria the $20 billion yearly projected revenue generation from the blue economy sector.

This was disclosed yesterday at the Sea Empowerment and Research Center (SEREC) Policy Brief for National Economic Renewal titled: “Blue Economy, Broken Promises: Where Are Nigeria’s Maritime Billions?”

In its weekly bulletin signed by the Head of Research, Dr Eugene Nweke, SEREC highlighted the staggering financial losses and missed opportunities in the maritime sector, estimating that the country loses over $3 billion every year to smuggling and illicit activities alone.

SEREC stated that the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) once projected that the country’s blue economy could generate over $20 billion yearly, but the gap remained vast.

The research body also pointed out that while nations, like the Philippines, earn $6 billion yearly from seafarer remittances, Nigeria has failed to fully leverage its vast youth population and underutilise its manpower advantage for global maritime labour markets.

Similarly, the centre noted that the collapse of the Ajaokuta Steel Complex and related plants had crippled shipbuilding, repair yards, and port infrastructure, which it said was a gap that continued to erode Nigeria’s competitiveness.

The research body also highlighted that the periodic congested functional western ports, undeveloped ports, abandoned fishing harbours, and underdeveloped inland waterways hamper trade facilitation.

The research body warned that chronic underperformance threatens not just economic diversification but also job creation. SEREC also pointed to weak enforcement of the Cabotage Act and Local Content Law, which had left foreign vessels dominating cabotage and offshore trade.

This, the centre stated, had resulted in the continuous export of Nigerian jobs and profits, while the country also underperformed in West and Central Africa despite being the continent’s largest economy and now Chair of the World Customs Organisation Council.

The group also warned that repeated policy announcements without measurable implementation had eroded stakeholders’ confidence and public trust, even as Nigeria recently approved a National Policy on Marine and Blue Economy.

The research centre recommended that the government establish a Blue Economy Delivery Unit under the Presidency with clear performance indicators on the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) contribution, jobs, and revenue.

The body further urged the revival of strategic assets such as Ajaokuta and Delta Steel to support shipbuilding and marine infrastructure, alongside the expansion of seafarer training to replicate the Philippines’ multibillion-dollar remittance model.

SEREC also called for tighter Navy–Customs–NIMASA collaboration and the deployment of maritime domain awareness tools to curb smuggling and revenue leakages.

SEREC stressed that without urgent reform, Nigeria risks missing out on billions in sustainable revenue, millions of jobs, and its role as a maritime hub in West and Central Africa.

Join Our Channels