The Executive Director/Chief Executive Officer of the NEPC, Nonye Ayeni. Credit: NEPC
The Nigerian Export Promotion Council has reported that the nation’s non-oil exports rose to $3.225bn in the first half of 2025, reflecting a 19.59% increase from the $2.696bn recorded during the same period in 2024.
The Executive Director/Chief Executive Officer of the NEPC, Nonye Ayeni, disclosed this in Abuja on Sunday while presenting the council’s First Half-Year Progress Report on Nigeria’s non-oil export performance.
She said the shipment volume also rose to 4.04 million metric tonnes from 3.83 million metric tonnes in the first half of 2024, driven by strong global demand for Nigerian products from emerging markets such as India, Brazil, Vietnam, and other African countries.
According to Ayeni, the report offers a comprehensive overview of the council’s achievements, challenges, and prospects as the year draws to a close.
“Gentlemen of the press, it is on this note that I am pleased to inform you that non-oil products exported in the first half of 2025 were valued at $3.225bn. This shows an increase of 19.59 per cent as against the sum of $2.696bn recorded for the first half of the year 2024,” she said.
The NEPC boss noted that the growth in export value was matched by a rise in shipment volume, recalling that in the first quarter alone, non-oil exports were valued at $1.791bn, a 24.75 per cent rise over the $1.436bn posted in Q1 2024.
Volumes in the same quarter increased to 2.416 million metric tonnes, up 24.3 per cent from the 1.937 million metric tonnes shipped in the corresponding period last year.