Nigeria, Germany Sign €65m Development Cooperation Agreement

Cultural Diplomacy Economic Diplomacy

 

Highlighting the impact of existing Nigeria-Germany cooperation programmes, he revealed that more than 16,000 small and medium-sized enterprises had increased their incomes through joint initiatives, while about 600,000 smallholder farming households had benefited from training programmes that boosted productivity and incomes by up to 90 per cent.

 

The Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Abubakar Bagudu, and the Minister of State, Doris Uzoka-Anite, joined senior officials of the German Government, development institutions and members of the diplomatic corps to sign the Summary Record of the Nigeria-German Government Negotiations.

 

The Agreement was signed at the German Embassy in Abuja, marking a major milestone in the strengthening of bilateral development cooperation between the two countries.

Speaking on Thursday on behalf of the Federal Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning, Dr Uzoka-Anite described the agreement as a reaffirmation of the enduring partnership between Nigeria and the Federal Republic of Germany, grounded in mutual trust, shared priorities and a common commitment to sustainable development and inclusive economic growth.

According to a statement from the ministry, Dr. Uzoka-Anite said the negotiations reflected both countries’ determination to deepen collaboration across strategic sectors critical to Nigeria’s development agenda, including agricultural transformation and food systems, climate and energy transition, sustainable economic development, skills acquisition and employment, health systems strengthening, and peaceful and inclusive societies.

She expressed appreciation to the German government for its renewed commitment to financial and technical cooperation worth €65 million, as well as the additional €300 million Export Credit Guarantee financing framework designed to support investment mobilisation and long-term financing for strategic development projects in Nigeria.

The minister noted that the partnership comes at a critical stage in Nigeria’s reform journey under President Bola Tinubu, emphasising that ongoing reforms are foundational to unlocking long-term economic growth and prosperity.

“We recognise that development cooperation must increasingly catalyse investment, innovation and sustainable financing. This partnership is therefore not merely procedural; it is a concrete affirmation of our shared commitment to improving our people’s lives,” she stated.

She reaffirmed Nigeria’s commitment to ensuring that all programmes within the partnership remain nationally owned and aligned with the National Development Plan 2026–2030 and the broader Agenda 2050.

In her opening remarks, the German Ambassador to Nigeria, Annett Günther, described the signing ceremony as the culmination of extensive bilateral engagements to review achievements, refine priorities and chart a stronger path for future cooperation between Nigeria and Germany.

She highlighted the broad participation of stakeholders from both countries, including representatives from nine Nigerian ministries, German development institutions such as BMZ, GIZ and KfW, development partners, members of the European Union and the diplomatic community.

Günther noted that the breadth of participation reflected the depth and strategic importance of Nigeria-Germany relations across multiple sectors and institutions.

She commended all implementing partners and stakeholders for their contributions to the success of joint programmes and reiterated Germany’s commitment to strengthening its long-standing cooperation with Nigeria.

Speaking at the ceremony, Deputy Director General of Germany’s Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), Philip Knill, reaffirmed Germany’s commitment to a long-term, reliable and transformative partnership with Nigeria, describing the country as “a giant in Africa” and a critical partner in regional economic integration, peace and security.

Knill disclosed that the German delegation held extensive engagements during its visit to Nigeria, including high-level government negotiations, meetings with Nigerian and German businesses in Lagos, visits to energy infrastructure sites and discussions with key stakeholders across the power, agriculture, digital economy and industrial sectors.

He said leading German companies, including Siemens, SAP, Bayer and STIHL, are already exploring opportunities to support Nigeria’s industrialisation, energy expansion, digital transformation and agricultural mechanisation.

He commended Nigeria’s ongoing macroeconomic reforms, particularly efforts to liberalise the exchange rate, reform taxes and improve food security, noting that Germany views Nigeria’s reform agenda as critical to unlocking greater economic opportunities and attracting long-term investment.

Knill further announced that Germany’s Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy had offered a €300 million export credit line to support bilateral trade and investment.

Highlighting the impact of existing Nigeria-Germany cooperation programmes, he revealed that more than 16,000 small and medium-sized enterprises had increased their incomes through joint initiatives, while about 600,000 smallholder farming households had benefited from training programmes that boosted productivity and incomes by up to 90 per cent.

He added that more than 70,000 Nigerians are currently benefiting from mini-grid energy projects under the partnership.

Knill also reaffirmed Germany’s support for Nigeria’s Presidential Power Initiative, particularly efforts to expand electricity grid capacity to 25 gigawatts through ongoing collaboration with Siemens, noting that the initiative would significantly improve access to reliable and cleaner energy for millions of Nigerians.

The signing ceremony concluded with both governments reaffirming their commitment to translating dialogue into measurable development outcomes through stronger institutional collaboration, private sector mobilisation and strategic investments aimed at accelerating inclusive growth and sustainable development in Nigeria.