TRENDING
IOCs changing names to escape pollution liabilities – HOMEF • Lagos tops Nigeria’s ease of doing business rankings • Airstrikes hit Borno terrorists, Army acquires advanced combat drones • Consensus, protests trail APC primaries across states • APC primaries most competitive in history, says national chair • Bauchi Senator Shehu Buba pulls out of APC governorship primary • SDP crisis: Gabam faction dissolves NWC, expels Adebayo, 12 others • CONMESS disparity: UNILAG medical lecturers begin indefinite strike • غرف فارغة وإلغاءات من فيفا – فنادق الولايات المتحدة تخشى فشل كأس العالم • إيران تدرس “رداً أمريكياً جديداً”، وترامب يقول إن المفاوضات عند “مفترق طرق” • FG begins outstanding scholarship payments to foreign students • Rivers community seeks relocation as fresh gas leaks ignite fire • Tinubu, Soyinka, Ladoja relive NADECO battle at Opadokun’s book launch • NGOs launch safeguarding programme for child domestic workers • KBL Insurance pays N5bn claims, targets recapitalisation • W’Bank seeks $23bn private funding boost for Africa • Regional integration key to sustainable African growth — SIFAX chair • PalmPay drives financial inclusion for Kaduna, Kano women • Asharami expands aviation fuel footprint across Africa • Manufacturers switch to gas amid rising diesel prices • IOCs changing names to escape pollution liabilities – HOMEF • Lagos tops Nigeria’s ease of doing business rankings • Airstrikes hit Borno terrorists, Army acquires advanced combat drones • Consensus, protests trail APC primaries across states • APC primaries most competitive in history, says national chair • Bauchi Senator Shehu Buba pulls out of APC governorship primary • SDP crisis: Gabam faction dissolves NWC, expels Adebayo, 12 others • CONMESS disparity: UNILAG medical lecturers begin indefinite strike • غرف فارغة وإلغاءات من فيفا – فنادق الولايات المتحدة تخشى فشل كأس العالم • إيران تدرس “رداً أمريكياً جديداً”، وترامب يقول إن المفاوضات عند “مفترق طرق” • FG begins outstanding scholarship payments to foreign students • Rivers community seeks relocation as fresh gas leaks ignite fire • Tinubu, Soyinka, Ladoja relive NADECO battle at Opadokun’s book launch • NGOs launch safeguarding programme for child domestic workers • KBL Insurance pays N5bn claims, targets recapitalisation • W’Bank seeks $23bn private funding boost for Africa • Regional integration key to sustainable African growth — SIFAX chair • PalmPay drives financial inclusion for Kaduna, Kano women • Asharami expands aviation fuel footprint across Africa • Manufacturers switch to gas amid rising diesel prices
Oil exports drive Nigeria-UK trade to £7.6bn
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Oil exports drive Nigeria-UK trade to £7.6bn

Punch Nigeria about 2 hours 1 mins read
Nigeria-UK trade reached £7.6bn, marking a 10.8% increase, largely driven by Nigeria’s crude oil exports. Learn about the key trade figures and trends. Read More: https://punchng.com/oil-exports-drive-nigeria-uk-trade-to-7-6bn/

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