Nigeria and Brazil Launch $2.5 Billion Ranching Venture

Nigeria teams up with Brazil on a $2.5 billion ranching project, announced at the G20 Summit in Brazil last November. President Bola Tinubu seals the deal, aiming to modernize Nigeria’s livestock sector.
The partnership targets Niger State for a massive cattle ranch and meat processing hub. The project allocates 1.2 million hectares of land, promising 50,000 jobs and training for 37,000 youths in livestock farming.
Minister Idi Maiha leads a site visit in Minna this week with Brazilian investors. They inspect the Tagwai Dam and a processing zone near the local airport. Brazil’s JBS S.A., a global meat giant, drives the technical side, leveraging its 200 million cattle expertise.
Nigeria, with 20.9 million cattle, seeks to cut its $1.5 billion beef import bill. Fabio Maia, JBS’s expansion director, plans further evaluations before construction starts.
Governor Mohammed Umaru Bago, via his deputy Yakubu Garba, guarantees security and a business-friendly setup. The initiative tackles Nigeria’s farmer-herder clashes and boosts food security, Maiha says.
It also aims to lift the livestock sector’s $32 billion GDP share. The story traces back to Nigeria’s new Livestock Ministry, launched in 2024 under Tinubu’s reform push.
Brazil’s Beef Export Strategy Eyes Nigeria’s Growing Market
Brazil, a top beef exporter, sees Nigeria’s 400 million future population as a protein goldmine. The project blends modern ranching with sustainable water use from the Tagwai Dam.
Transitioning from talks to action, the partnership eyes a 100,000-bull ranch and export markets like Europe. Nigeria’s 258.5 million poultry and 88.2 million goats signal untapped potential.
Yet, challenges like land disputes and infrastructure gaps linger, observers note. The $2.5 billion venture signals big business, with projections of a $74 billion sector by 2035 if successful.
Investors watch closely as technical teams assess soil and water next. The collaboration could reshape Africa’s meat trade, blending Brazilian know-how with Nigeria’s resources.
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