Geographical Indications: The untapped goldmine in Nigeria’s intellectual property landscape

For centuries, civilisations have consistently associated certain products with their places of origin. For instance, wines from Bordeaux, silks from Suzhou, olive oil from Tuscany and numerous similar examples.

The ancient Greeks and Romans in their wisdom, knew that the quality of a product(s) was shaped by the land it came from, and today, that timeless truth is enshrined in modern Intellectual Property law through what we now call Geographical Indications (GIs).

According to the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO), a GI is a sign used on products that originate from a specific place and possess specific qualities, reputation, or characteristics essentially attributable to that origin. GIs protect the reputation of producers, preserve traditional knowledge, and create commercial value by linking authenticity with geography.

For Nigeria, a country of extraordinary natural resources, agricultural diversity, and cultural craftsmanship, the absence of a clear legal framework for GIs represents a vast, unmined economic opportunity.

The Global Legal Framework

Geographical Indications are protected under several international agreements, two of which Nigeria is a party. Key among them are:

  • The Paris Convention (1883 – Nigeria is signatory) which is the first to recognise indications of source as part of industrial property.
  • The Madrid Agreement (1891) and its Protocol (1989), extending protection against false or deceptive indications of origin.
  • The Lisbon Agreement (1958) and Geneva Act (2015), creating an international system for registering and protecting appellations of origin.
  • The TRIPS Agreement (1994 – Nigeria is signatory) administered by the World Trade Organisation, which mandates GI protection and provides special safeguards for wines and spirits.

These instruments recognise that GIs are not merely marketing labels but legal rights tied to geography and reputation. They protect communities against misappropriation and ensure that the benefits of authenticity flow to the people and regions that created it.

Nigeria’s Legal Reality

Nigeria currently lacks a dedicated or sui generis Geographical Indications law. However, Section 43 of the Trademarks Act allows the registration of certification marks, which can indirectly serve GI-like functions by certifying the geographical origin or quality of goods.

This partial protection has enabled certain products, like Ofada rice, Ijebu garri, and Aso-Oke fabrics to gain regional distinction. Yet, without a specific GI regime, Nigeria cannot fully claim or enforce ownership over its indigenous brands internationally. Certification marks protect a product’s reputation but not the deep territorial and traditional link between place, people, and product, which is the very essence of GIs.

As WIPO’s 2019 Module on Geographical Indications notes, “the essential link between the product’s quality and its geographical environment is what distinguishes GIs from other forms of Intellectual Property protection.” That link remains legally invisible in Nigeria today.

Forcados Crude: A Case for Industrial GIs

Consider Forcados crude oil, produced in the Burutu area of Delta State. This light, sweet crude with a specific gravity of approximately 31.5° API and sulfur content of 0.22%, is prized globally for its high yield of valuable distillates like gasoil. Its composition is uniquely tied to the geology of the Niger Delta.

For example, in 2025, Forcados crude oil became the major driver of Nigeria’s total crude output. Yet, despite its distinctive geographical characteristics, it enjoys no clear GI protection or framework. The danger in such development is that international traders can blend or rebrand similar crude oils under the same name, eroding both value and origin identity.

If registered and protected as a Geographical Indication, Forcados crude could become Nigeria’s first industrial GI, demonstrating that GI protection laws apply not only to agricultural or artisanal goods but also to extractive resources with specific origin-based qualities. This approach could redefine Nigeria’s IP economy and strengthen its export credibility.

Why Geographical Indications Matter

Across the world, GIs have become powerful tools for economic development and cultural preservation.

  • India’s Darjeeling tea and Basmati rice have achieved global dominance through GI protection.
  • Ethiopia’s Sidamo and Yirgacheffe coffees generate premium prices for local farmers after reclaiming ownership from foreign brands.
  • South Africa’s Rooibos tea now commands a thriving export market thanks to GI certification.
  • The premium value attached to Swiss wristwatches perfectly illustrates the advantage of Geographical Indication protection. Because the use of the “Swiss Made” label is strictly regulated by law, only watches that meet specific standards of origin and quality can bear it, ensuring authenticity, maintaining consumer trust, and preserving the brand’s global reputation.

The lesson herein is clear: when a product’s reputation is tied to its origin and legally protected, value remains within the community. Producers gain bargaining power, consumers enjoy authenticity, and the state benefits from increased exports and tax revenue.

Nigeria, with its wealth of regional products such as Benue yam, Nsukka yellow pepper, Bida brass works, Kano leather, Aba shoes, Afikpo masks, and Forcados crude, has the raw material for a thriving GI ecosystem.

China’s Cultural Ambition and Africa’s Ownership Challenge

China’s recent announcement to establish its first national museum dedicated to African history and culture highlights a different but related challenge, which is cultural ownership. While this initiative may not breach GI law (since GIs protect goods, not institutions), it raises a vital question: who owns Africa’s identity and how is it represented globally?

If African artifacts, textiles, or symbols are curated and commercialised abroad without corresponding legal or economic returns to their countries of origin, it mirrors the same vulnerabilities seen in Nigeria’s unprotected GIs heritage without ownership and identity without income.

For Nigeria, the message is clear: just as our cultural heritage must be protected from misrepresentation, our geographical heritage, from oil to fabric to food and numerous others must be secured under the rule of law.

The Economic Roadmap Forward

To unlock the value of GIs, Nigeria should take the following steps:

  1. Enact a Geographical Indications Act, a standalone law that defines, registers, and enforces GIs in line with WIPO and TRIPS standards.
  2. Establish a GI Registry, preferably housed under the Trademarks, Patents, and Designs Registry to document and certify qualifying products.
  3. Empower Producers’ Associations: Cooperatives should manage production standards, traceability, and quality control for GI-certified goods.
  4. Launch Public Awareness Campaigns to educate farmers, artisans, and exporters on the financial benefits of GI protection.
  5. Engage International Partners: Nigeria can collaborate with WIPO, the African Regional Intellectual Property Organisation (ARIPO), and the African Union’s IP Office to secure reciprocal protection abroad.

These steps will not only elevate Nigeria’s reputation in international trade but also localise prosperity, ensuring that communities reap the rewards of their geographical uniqueness.

Conclusion: Law as a Catalyst for Prosperity

Geographical Indications are not mere technicalities of IP law; they are instruments of economic sovereignty. They transform culture into capital, identity into export power, and local heritage into global competitiveness.

Nigerian artisans, farmers, and innovators have long created products of global value. What remains missing is the legal machinery to capture that value. A dedicated GI framework could redefine Nigeria’s export economy, hence, ensuring that Forcados crude, Ofada rice, Aso-Oke and others command the recognition and premium they deserve.

“Now, imagine if the phrase ‘Made in Nigeria’ were not just a slogan, but a legally recognised mark of origin, a protected Geographical Indication reserved solely for products certified by competent regulatory agencies. Such a framework would transform perception into policy, instilling confidence in international consumers while empowering local producers to reap the full economic value of their innovation, craftsmanship, and authenticity. It would be more than branding; it would be a national economic strategy.”

Consequently, to fully unlock the benefits of Geographical Indication (GI) certification, Nigeria’s regulatory bodies, especially the Standards Organisation of Nigeria and related agencies must take a cue from Switzerland and urgently step up their efforts. They need to enforce strict quality control not only on imported  products, but on those originating from Nigeria before they are exported; ensuring that consumers everywhere can trust in the authenticity and premium quality of goods and services that bear the Nigerian name.

In a world increasingly defined by intellectual property, protecting the geography of our genius and effective quality control regulations may well be the next frontier of Nigeria’s economic independence.

 

About the Author
SOMADINA EUGENE OKORIE ESQ. is an advocate, Intellectual Property/Business Solicitor and researcher based in Lagos. His work explores how legal innovation can drive inclusive economic growth and cultural preservation in Africa.

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