TRENDING
APC primaries: More aspirants protest alleged imposition, irregularities • 2027: Opposition hails as court voids INEC deadlines • Lagos Assembly aspirants, Obasa disagree over primaries • June 12: NADECO honours PUNCH, others for pro-democracy contributions • Kaduna APC lawmakers pledge development, unity after primaries • Gowon: East was misled over Aburi Accord • Terror war not over despite gains, Shettima warns • Keyamo pushes five priorities for African aviation growth • Lagos records 1,437 child abuse cases, over 5,700 interventions • JAMB and Nigerians’ right to education • NIMASA graduates 492 combat personnel, expands maritime project • LSSTF donates sports equipment to 1,020 Lagos schools • Lagos graduates 500 youths from vocational training scheme • LASG saves N1.25bn, frees 397 inmates in justice reform • NCDC AND THE EBOLA ALERT • FG, Meta launch AI chatbot for public services • BAT seeks stronger UK-Nigeria trade collaboration • Crude drops to $102 on possible US-Iran peace deal • A GOVERNMENT OF LOOKERS AND LISTENERS • BATTLE FOR THE PRESIDENCY • APC primaries: More aspirants protest alleged imposition, irregularities • 2027: Opposition hails as court voids INEC deadlines • Lagos Assembly aspirants, Obasa disagree over primaries • June 12: NADECO honours PUNCH, others for pro-democracy contributions • Kaduna APC lawmakers pledge development, unity after primaries • Gowon: East was misled over Aburi Accord • Terror war not over despite gains, Shettima warns • Keyamo pushes five priorities for African aviation growth • Lagos records 1,437 child abuse cases, over 5,700 interventions • JAMB and Nigerians’ right to education • NIMASA graduates 492 combat personnel, expands maritime project • LSSTF donates sports equipment to 1,020 Lagos schools • Lagos graduates 500 youths from vocational training scheme • LASG saves N1.25bn, frees 397 inmates in justice reform • NCDC AND THE EBOLA ALERT • FG, Meta launch AI chatbot for public services • BAT seeks stronger UK-Nigeria trade collaboration • Crude drops to $102 on possible US-Iran peace deal • A GOVERNMENT OF LOOKERS AND LISTENERS • BATTLE FOR THE PRESIDENCY
Nigeria’s agric investment surges 224%
Back to Home

Nigeria’s agric investment surges 224%

Business Day about 2 months 1 mins read

Nigeria’s agricultural sector has seen a significant surge in investment, rising 224 percent in one year amid escalating insecurity in the country. Data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) capital importation report showed that foreign direct investment (FDI) in the agric sector hit $167.3 million in 2025, up 224 percent from $51.7 million in […]

read more Nigeria’s agric investment surges 224%

This article was sourced from an external publication.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Want to join the discussion?

Sign in to post comments and engage with the community.

Be the first to comment!

OneClick Africa Logo

Africa's premier digital hub for impactful news, entertainment, and business insights.

© 2026 OneClick Africa. All rights reserved.