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The Lagos Port Complex and Tin Can Island Port Have a £746 Million Lifeline

Here is the thing. The ports are getting a lifeline. A huge sum from the UK. £746 million. For Lagos Port Complex and Tin Can Island. So here we are. Can this money fix the old problems? Will trade finally move faster? We will see.

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A business owner surveys the port infrastructure, a key site for a major new international investment deal aimed. (Digital Illustration: GoBeyondLocal)

The Lagos Port Complex and Tin Can Island Port Have a £746 Million Lifeline

Published: 21 March, 2026


Can a single signature on a £746 million document unclog Nigeria’s main economic artery? On March 18, 2026, the Federal Government of Nigeria signed a financing agreement with UK Export Finance to find out. The target: the comprehensive rehabilitation of the Lagos Port Complex in Apapa and the Tin Can Island Port. The deal, structured as a buyer credit facility, commits the government to repay the sum over a 15-year period, as Premium Times reported in 2026. This agreement follows a technical assistance grant from the same agency for the initial project design and feasibility studies, noted by The Guardian Nigeria back in 2025.


A Long-Awaited Intervention for a Choked Artery

Consider this: these two ports handle over 70% of Nigeria’s seaborne trade. The Lagos Port Complex alone accounted for roughly 55% of the total container throughput in 2024. The Nigerian Ports Authority released that data in 2025. Decades of neglect created a system famous for its legendary congestion. The average vessel turnaround time here was 5.2 days in 2024. Contrast this with less than 24 hours at major ports in South Africa and Egypt, according to the World Bank Logistics Performance Index for 2025.

This inefficiency has a price tag. A 2025 study by the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry estimated that port congestion adds an average of 30-40% to the cost of goods cleared through Apapa and Tin Can. The cost of exporting a container from Nigeria remained 65% higher than the global average, the International Trade Centre confirmed that same year. For the ordinary Nigerian, this isn’t a logistics report. It’s the higher price for everything from rice to refrigerators.


What The Money Is Meant For

The scope of work targets the most critical failures. At the Lagos Port Complex, the project will involve the reconstruction of the Quay Aprons at several berths, which have deteriorated beyond simple repair. The Apapa Port’s electrical systems, last upgraded in the 1990s, will undergo a total overhaul to support modern, automated cargo handling equipment. The contract also includes dredging the port channels to accommodate larger vessels—a move long demanded by shipping lines, as outlined by the Federal Ministry of Transportation in 2026.

At Tin Can Island Port, the focus shifts to crumbling transit sheds and the complete replacement of the port’s drainage system, which fails during every heavy rain. The project document specifies new gantry cranes and a modern, integrated digital platform for cargo documentation. This platform aims to replace the current paper-heavy process that is a primary source of delays, according to a 2026 Nigerian Ports Authority technical brief.

This is not just about concrete and cranes. It is about rebuilding the confidence of the global trading community in our ports. – Mr. Mu’azu Sambo, Minister of Transportation, at the signing ceremony on March 18, 2026.


A contractor inspects industrial valve with tools port.
A port contractor inspects critical infrastructure, his focus reflecting the precision required for major maritime refurbishment projects. (Digital Illustration: GoBeyondLocal)

The UK’s Strategic Interest in a Functional Lagos Port

But there is a catch. UK Export Finance exists to support British businesses. This £746 million facility is tied to the procurement of goods and services from United Kingdom companies. Major UK engineering firms like Balfour Beatty and Atkins are already positioned as lead contractors for the design and supervision phases, BusinessDay reported in 2026. The deal guarantees work for British suppliers for the better part of a decade.

The United Kingdom remains one of Nigeria’s top five trading partners. In 2025, the total trade volume between the two countries stood at £, according to the UK Department for Business and Trade in 2026. Smoother ports in Lagos mean British exports reach Nigerian markets quicker. They also mean Nigerian exports, particularly agricultural produce, can reach UK shelves in better condition. The financing is a direct investment in the UK’s own trade corridor.


The Ghost of Previous Port Reforms

The trouble is, many Nigerians view large infrastructure announcements with a healthy skepticism. The history of port reform here is littered with ambitious plans that delivered partial results. The port concession program of 2006 improved some operational aspects but failed to address the fundamental decay of the civil infrastructure, which remained the responsibility of the Nigerian Ports Authority. The result was private operators running efficient businesses inside publicly owned, crumbling facilities.

Take the Lagos-Ibadan rail line. It terminates at the Lagos Port Complex and was meant to decongest the port by moving containers by rail. While operational, its capacity remains a fraction of the port’s output. As of 2025, it moved less than 5% of the containers leaving Apapa, with the overwhelming majority still relying on trucks. That’s according to Nigerian Railway Corporation data from that year. A refurbished port without a solution for hinterland connectivity simply moves the bottleneck from the quayside to the gate.


Where the Real Test Will Happen

The success of this investment hinges on factors beyond construction. The first is project governance. The agreement establishes a joint implementation committee with representatives from the Federal Ministry of Transportation, the Nigerian Ports Authority, and UK Export Finance. This committee will oversee procurement and disbursements. Its transparency will determine whether the funds achieve their full impact, a 2026 Federal Ministry of Finance press statement made clear.

The second factor is the digital transformation component. The plan to implement a National Single Window trade platform is critical. Ghana implemented a similar system in 2020 and reduced average cargo clearance times from two weeks to four days, the Ghana Revenue Authority reported in 2025. In Nigeria, powerful interests benefit from the current opaque, manual system. Resistance to a transparent digital process is a certainty.

The infrastructure is one battle. Changing the process and the people in the system is the war. We have the money for the battle now. Do we have the will for the war? – A senior official at the Nigerian Shippers’ Council, speaking anonymously in March 2026.


The Ripple Effect On The Economy of Nigeria

Efficient ports function as a direct stimulus. When the cost and time of importing raw materials fall, local production becomes more viable. The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria has consistently cited high logistics costs, driven by port inefficiencies, as a primary reason for factory closures. In 2025, the sector’s contribution to the Gross Domestic Product remained below 10%, the National Bureau of Statistics confirmed in 2026. A reliable port could help reverse that trend.

For the government, increased port efficiency means higher revenue collection. The Nigeria Customs Service collected N4.2 trillion in 2025, according to the Federal Ministry of Finance in 2026. Faster cargo processing allows for higher throughput. But there is a catch. The 15-year repayment plan for the UK loan ties a portion of future customs revenue to servicing this debt. Port performance now has a direct link to national fiscal obligations.


A View from the Road to Apapa

The truck driver who spends five days in a queue to enter the Lagos Port Complex has a simple measure of success. He will believe the refurbishment works when his turnaround time drops to two days. The importer clearing a container will believe it when her demurrage charges stop being a major line item in her budget. The success of this £746 million deal will be judged not in ministry press releases, but in the reduced cost and increased predictability of moving goods.

This brings us to the core issue. The deal with UK Export Finance provides the capital that has been missing for a generation. It addresses the physical decay. The greater task remains the reform of the ecosystem around the port—the customs processes, the trucking system, the rail and road links. Without parallel action on these fronts, the new cranes and quays will simply look down on the same old congestion from a greater height.


Track the Contractor’s Mobilization

The first tangible sign of progress will be the mobilization of the lead contractors to the site. The Nigerian Ports Authority is required to publish monthly progress reports on its official digital platform, detailing work completed and funds disbursed. Monitoring these reports offers the public a tool to hold the authorities accountable. This project is too large, and its cost to the treasury too significant, to be left in the shadows.

The refurbishment of the Lagos Port Complex and Tin Can Island Port is a necessary endeavor. Its execution over the coming years will reveal much about the capacity of the Nigerian state to deliver complex, transformative infrastructure. The money is now available. The blueprint is signed. The clock starts now.

Nigeria, UK Sign 746m Euro Deal To Upgrade Apapa, Tin Can Ports. – FirstNext News. (Digital Illustration: GoBeyondLocal)

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Economy

Multinational Exodus in Nigeria Deepens with N94 Trillion Loss

Here is the thing. Multinational exits cost Nigeria N94 trillion. Official rates may stabilize. But the manufacturing crisis stays. So here we are.

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Rusted padlock on a closed industrial metal gate.

The Multinational Exodus in Nigeria Deepens with a N94 Trillion Hole

Published: March 24, 2026


How do you measure an economy bleeding out? Start with N94 trillion. Add over 20,000 direct jobs. That is the quantified damage from major international companies leaving Nigeria since 2021. A report from the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria confirms this accelerating trend through the first quarter of this year, as Premium Times noted in March 2026. The domestic market cannot replace this lost output. Not even close.


Here is the thing about the numbers

The N94 trillion figure is an aggregation. It covers divestments, asset sales, and profits that could not be repatriated over five years. The trouble is, new money is not coming in to replace it. Data from the National Bureau of Statistics shows foreign direct investment inflows have declined for four consecutive years (NBS, 2025). The job losses, concentrated in manufacturing, ripple outwards. They hit supply chains and service providers hard.

Look at the names. Procter & Gamble, GSK, and Sanofi have exited manufacturing. Unilever stopped making home care and skin cleansing products. Bolt Food and Jumia Food shut down in late 2023. Each closure cited a similar cluster of problems.


What exactly are companies running from?

Ask any business operator in Lagos or Port Harcourt. The list is short and brutal. A survey by the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry pins the primary constraints as foreign exchange volatility, persistent insecurity, and unreliable power (LCCI, 2025). The cost of generating electricity with diesel alone consumes massive chunks of operational budgets.

But there is a catch. Even though the Central Bank of Nigeria has unified the exchange rate window, access to foreign currency remains a daily struggle. As BusinessDay reported in early 2026, implementation gaps frustrate corporate treasury departments. You cannot plan when you cannot source dollars for raw materials.

You cannot run a factory where you cannot source inputs, guarantee staff safety, or predict your energy cost from one week to the next. The Director-General of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, Segun Ajayi-Kadir, stated in January 2026.

Insecurity along major transit routes inflates logistics costs and insurance premiums. Moving goods from Lagos to Abuja can cost as much as shipping a container from China to Lagos. These are the mundane realities that kill profitability.


The policy response feels like a broken record

The government of President Bola Tinubu has announced interventions. The 2024 and 2025 budgets allocated funds for national security and infrastructure. The rhetoric is all about improving the ease of doing business.

Here is the reality check. The total capital expenditure in the 2025 budget was approximately N11.99 trillion (Budget Office of the Federation, 2025). The amount lost to corporate exits in five years is nearly eight times that single year’s capital budget. The scale of the outflow dwarfs planned public investment.

Tax incentives exist on paper. The experience on the ground involves navigating delays at the Federal Inland Revenue Service and the Nigeria Customs Service. A company choosing between Nigeria and Ghana will weigh these operational headaches heavily.


Who fills the space left behind?

The exit creates opportunities. Local conglomerates like the Dangote Group, BUA Group, and Flour Mills of Nigeria have expanded into vacated segments. This shift promises greater domestic ownership.

But capacity has limits. The Aliko Dangote-owned refinery represents exceptional scale. Most local manufacturers lack the balance sheet to absorb the massive capital expenditure and technology the departing multinationals possessed. The quality and variety of goods may decline.

Job creation from local firms is slower and more cautious. They face the same headwinds, often with less access to global financing. The net result is a shrinkage in formal sector employment.

Local production is growing, but it is a marathon, not a sprint. We cannot replace 50 years of multinational investment in two years. The CEO of a major Nigerian food and beverage company commented anonymously to Vanguard in February 2026.


Hands using tools to unscrew bolts on industrial machinery in warehouse setting
Hands work to dismantle heavy industrial equipment as production lines are decommissioned following the departure of firms. (Digital Illustration: GoBeyondLocal)

The view from the street in Ikeja or Apapa

For workers, it means fewer stable, pensionable jobs. The 20,000 lost positions were mostly formal roles with benefits. Many move into the informal sector or precarious gig work. The unemployment rate is officially 4.1% (NBS, Q3 2023), though a methodology change affects comparability. Underemployment is the larger issue on the ground.

Consumers face higher prices and reduced choice. Imported alternatives get more expensive with currency depreciation. Locally produced substitutes may have inconsistent quality. The standard of living adjusts downward.

Landlords in industrial areas see vacancies rise. Local vendors lose their largest clients. The economic ecosystem around a major plant deteriorates fast. The impact is hyper-local and deeply felt.


Is there a path to reverse the trend?

Stopping the exodus requires treating root causes. Foreign exchange management needs consistency and transparency. Investors require a predictable window to repatriate dividends. The Central Bank of Nigeria has made commitments, yet market confidence lags, as The Cable reported in 2026. The official rate has stabilized around N1,384 per dollar, but access liquidity stays constrained.

Security of life and property is non-negotiable. Investment in policing must show results. The power sector remains a national emergency. The cost of alternative power makes manufacturing a heroic undertaking.

This brings us to coordination. Policy across the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, the Central Bank, and the Ministry of Finance lacks urgency. Businesses receive mixed signals.


A single, tangible step forward

The government could establish a dedicated Presidential Delivery Unit for the top five investor complaints. This unit would track and publicly report monthly progress on foreign exchange access, port clearance times, diesel prices, and security on trade corridors. Transparency builds accountability.

It would have the authority to cut through inter-agency delays. Its mandate would focus exclusively on removing bottlenecks for existing businesses. Success would be measured by a halt in closure announcements. The current approach of generic assurances has lost credibility.

Such a unit needs a leader with direct presidential access and a small, technically competent team. Its reports should be published online in a simple dashboard. Nigerians and the international business community can then monitor progress with specific metrics. This move signals a shift from talking to doing.


So here we are

The multinational exodus in Nigeria is a story of capital, jobs, and confidence leaving. The total of N94 trillion and 20,000 jobs makes it quantifiable. The reasons are well-documented.

Reversal is possible with focused, sustained action on power, security, and foreign exchange. The alternative is a continued contraction of the formal industrial base, higher unemployment, and import dependence. The choice for policymakers in Abuja is that straightforward.

The next closure announcement may come tomorrow. The time for a different response is today.

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Economy

Nigeria Food Prices and the Tax Burden on the Supply Chain

Here is the thing. Food prices keep rising. Why? Look at the supply chain. Farmers pay. Transporters pay. Market sellers pay. So here we are. Your wallet feels it. The tax burden moves down the line until it stops with you.

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A half-empty sack sits next to a scale and coins, illustrating the strained economics staples. (Digital Illustration: GoBeyondLocal)

The Price on Your Plate

Published: 24 March, 2026


What is the true cost of a bag of rice. It is no longer just the price of seeds, labour, and milling. The figure you see today is a ledger of levies, a receipt for every checkpoint between the farm and your kitchen. The National Bureau of Statistics reported that the food inflation rate hit 37.92% in February 2026. That number confirms the pain. But it does not explain the chaos behind it.


From Farm to Market, a Trail of Tickets

Food does not just travel in Nigeria. It pays. A truck moving tomatoes faces a gauntlet. Each state government, and the local councils within them, demands a fee. The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria documented over 50 different taxes and levies affecting businesses in 2025. Many target goods in transit.

But wait, it gets more complex. A report by Premium Times in late 2025 tracked a single truck of onions. The driver paid 14 separate informal levies on the trip from Kano to Port Harcourt. Receipts. Rarely issued. Farmers pay. Transporters pay. Aggregators pay. Each layer adds a government charge long before the produce ever sees a market stall.


Who Collects What, and Where Does It Go

The trouble is the thicket of authority. The Federal Government collects Value Added Tax. State governments impose Personal Income Tax and their own Road Tax. Local governments then add market fees and sanitation charges. The theory is a division. The practice is a chaotic overlap where the same activity gets charged by three different tiers. The Joint Tax Board admits this confusion crushes small businesses.

This brings us to revenue. Many states struggle fiscally. Internally Generated Revenue is a priority. The easiest targets are moving goods. So checkpoints multiply. The money collected, however, vanishes into a system with little transparency. Citizens see the high Nigeria food prices. They rarely see better roads or cleaner markets.

“The multiplicity of taxes is killing agriculture. A farmer is taxed on his seedlings, his harvest, and the vehicle that carries it. By the time the food gets to the city, the price is beyond the reach of the common man.”
Kabiru Ibrahim, National President, All Farmers Association of Nigeria, speaking at a policy dialogue in Abuja, January 2026.


The Mathematics of a Bag of Rice

Take a 50kg bag. Start at the miller. He pays an electricity levy, a business premises fee, corporate tax. He factors it in. The transporter pays for a road worthiness certificate, a state levy, a loading fee. He also budgets for unofficial settlements.

By the time that bag lands in a Lagos warehouse, its base cost has swollen by an estimated 25-30%. This is according to by Financial Derivatives Company in 2026. The warehouse owner pays property rates. The retailer pays market fees. Each actor passes the cost forward. The final consumer bears the full accumulated burden. The farm gate price is a distant memory.


The Policy Tangle and the Search for Harmony

The Federal Ministry of Finance talks about tax harmonization. The goal is to streamline. Progress is slow. The National Tax Policy imagines one agency collecting and sharing revenue. State governments guard their fiscal autonomy fiercely. They see centralization as a threat.

But there is a catch. In 2025, a committee chaired by the Vice President office recommended scrapping 15 specific nuisance taxes. Implementation across 36 states and 774 local governments is inconsistent. A federal law means little without state cooperation. The gap between policy and practice is wide enough for a truck full of taxes to drive through.


When More Taxes Mean Less Revenue

Here is the paradox. Excessive taxation can kill the trade it feeds on. High costs discourage movement. Transporters take longer, worse routes to avoid checkpoints. Spoilage increases. Some farmers quit the market entirely, growing only for themselves. The tax base shrinks.

Governments then raise rates on those left. A vicious cycle. As The World Bank noted in 2025, this complexity is a major constraint on business. For food logistics, that constraint has a direct price tag. The government might collect more per bag, but the total number of bags moving formally drops. Everyone loses.

“We are not against paying taxes. We are against harassment and duplication. Let there be one fee for using the road, paid electronically. Let that money show in the budget for road repair. What we have now is chaos that benefits only the touts at the checkpoints.”
Yusuf Lawal, Secretary-General, Nigerian Association of Road Transport Owners, interview with The Guardian, February 2026.


The Human Face of the Food Price Crisis

Walk into any market. The conversation is the same. A pepper seller in Daleko Market, Lagos, lists her daily charges, market ticket, sanitation fee, association dues, a levy for the area boys. She adds it to the price of each basket.

The office worker on a fixed salary feels every naira. Food takes over 50% of the average household spending. When Nigeria food prices rise, it is a direct cut to living standards. It fuels tension. It kills spending on anything else. The political consequences are visible. The economic damage is deep.


Is There a Path Through This Thicket

Some states are trying. Kaduna State implemented a unified electronic billing system for goods transporters. One receipt, recognised across the state. Early data from the Kaduna State Internal Revenue Service in 2025 showed reduced transit times and slightly moderated price increases. It requires political will.

The federal government could use its power over interstate commerce. Mandate a single, electronic federal levy for road transport of goods. Share the revenue with states based on the mileage. This would need a constitutional amendment. It needs immense political negotiation. The alternative is the relentless climb.


A Single Receipt on a Single Screen

The technology exists. A national logistics platform is possible. A transporter logs a and pays one fee online. The Federal Ministry of Transport and the Federal Inland Revenue Service have discussed it. The challenge is 36 state revenue agencies. Without their buy-in, it fails.

The benefit for states is predictable, automated revenue with less leakage. For the farmer and the consumer, it is a more predictable cost. Unofficial levies become obsolete. Food prices would still reflect fertilizer costs and climate. But the artificial inflation from a predatory, fragmented tax system would fall.


What You Can Do Tomorrow

Ask for a receipt. This simple act holds power. When you pay any fee, demand a proper, stamped receipt. It makes it official. It creates a record. It reduces the chance the money ends in a private pocket. If enough people demand accountability, the system feels pressure.

Engage your local councilor. The most oppressive levies often start at the local government level. Attend town hall meetings. Question every market fee. Demand to see the budget for how that revenue improves the market. Citizen pressure can force transparency. It can rebuild the connection between tax paid and service delivered. That connection is the foundation.


So here we are. The price of food is a thermometer. The reading is high. Multiple taxation on the food supply chain is a self-inflicted wound. It raises short-term cash but strangles long-term wealth. Fixing it requires moving from a culture of endless extraction to one of facilitation. The goal is , a system where the price on your plate reflects the true cost of production, not the accumulated cost of bureaucracy.

Nigeria Food Prices: Buhari’s New Price Monitoring Task Force , Channels Television. (Digital Illustration: GoBeyondLocal)

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Economy

Lagos Tries Again to Fix Its Broken Building Permit Machine

Here is the thing. Lagos tries again to fix its building permit machine. Another digital system. Another promise of speed. So here we are. Will this time be different?

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Digital approval construction permit on a tablet with paper blueprints. (Digital Illustration: GoBeyondLocal)

Lagos Tries Again to Fix Its Broken Building Permit Machine

Published: 23 March, 2026


Mr. Tunde Oke submitted his application for a block of six flats in late February. He received an acknowledgment with a tracking number the same day. Within seven working days, he received the permit approval. For a developer in Lagos, that is not normal. It is revolutionary.

The Lagos State Government launched a new electronic platform for building permit approvals in February 2026. The system promises to collapse a process that routinely takes months into 10 working days for clean applications. But there is a catch. Lagos has attempted digital reforms before. The results have been mixed.


A Process Known for Its Delays

For years, developers described the permit process as a marathon. A painful one. Applications required physical visits to multiple offices. Paper files moved between departments for stamps and signatures.

The agency responsible, the Lagos State Physical Planning Permit Authority (LASPPPA), operated an old manual system. It created room for long delays. It created room for informal negotiations.

A 2025 report by BusinessDay cited industry sources who claimed the average wait time could stretch to six months. The report contrasted this with the agency’s official service charter, which promised 28 days. The gap between promise and reality defined the experience.

The new e-system aims to erase that gap. It is called the Electronic Physical Planning Process System (EPPPS). Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu launched it at a ceremony in Alausa. He framed it as critical for his second-term agenda.

This is a fundamental shift. We are moving the entire value chain of planning permits online. Applicants will receive updates at every stage, and our officers will be accountable to the clock on the dashboard. , Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, February 10, 2026 (Official State House Press Release)


How the New Digital System Is Meant to Work

The technical blueprint involves a single online portal. Applicants upload drawings and land documents. The system assigns a tracking number.

A built-in workflow routes the application to relevant officers in sequence. This brings us to the integration. The system integrates with the state’s geographic information system (GIS). This allows for automated checks against the master plan. The Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Dr. Oluyinka Olumide, explained the logic. He said digital checks flag violations early. This prevents an applicant spending money only to be rejected later.

The system also generates the permit as a digitally signed document with a QR code. This tackles the problem of forged permits. LASBCA (Lagos State Building Control Agency) officers can now scan the code in the field for instant verification.

The QR code is key. Any law enforcement officer or community member can scan it and confirm the authenticity of the permit instantly. This brings transparency. , Dr. Oluyinka Olumide, Commissioner, February 2026 (Ministry Technical Briefing)


The Infrastructure That Makes This Possible

A digital permit system needs more than software. It needs reliable internet, digital identity verification, and electronic payment channels. Lagos has invested in some of this backbone.

For payments, the platform uses the Lagos State PayEasy system. The National Identity Number (NIN) is mandatory for individuals. For corporate entities, the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) registration number is required. These linkages aim to curb fraud.

The real test is in the government offices. Do officers have the devices and training? A pilot program ran in late 2025 across three district offices. The state has now expanded to 57 district offices. A January 2026 report by Premium Times noted initial resistance from some staff. The report also highlighted power supply issues at some offices.


Why Previous Attempts Stumbled

This is not the first move of Lagos. A similar initiative was announced around 2018. It faced implementation challenges. The old system lacked full integration. Applicants often started online but finished physically. This hybrid model defeated the purpose.

Corruption presented another hurdle. The manual process had opaque steps where unofficial fees could be introduced. A digital system with a fixed fee schedule and a visible audit trail threatens those informal streams. Past attempts faced passive sabotage from within.

The political will appears stronger now. The launch event in 2026 had a different tone. Top officials spoke about strict compliance. The governor mentioned direct reporting on performance metrics. This top-level attention may provide the push needed.


What follows from this

For the average person, the promise is simple: speed and certainty. Take Mr. Tunde Oke, the civil engineer in Ibeju-Lekki. He submitted an application in late February 2026. He got his tracking number the same day. Within seven working days, the system notified him of a required adjustment to his drainage plan. He made the change. He received provisional approval two weeks later. The entire process took about a month.

I have done this for fifteen years. I have never seen a response that fast from the planning office. If they can keep this up, it will change everything. The cost of delay is huge, bank interest, idle workers, security on site. , Mr. Tunde Oke, Civil Engineer and Developer, March 2026 (Interview with the author)

The cost of delay is a real economic burden. When a project is stalled, capital is tied down. Loan interest accrues. Construction materials can be stolen. A faster permit process directly reduces the financial risk.


The Larger Picture for Urban Planning

Beyond convenience, a digital permit system offers a powerful tool for urban management. Every approved application adds data to a central repository. Over time, the government will have a real-time map of all construction across Lagos.

This is invaluable for infrastructure planning and disaster management. The Lagos State Urban and Regional Planning Bill of 2025 provides the legal framework for this data-driven . With accurate digital records, the government can identify illegal structures more systematically. It can plan roads and water lines to match actual development.

As a 2025 policy paper from the Lagos State Research and Development Council noted, efficient land administration could increase the state’s Internally Generated Revenue. Property taxes are easier to collect when there is a reliable digital record of all buildings.


The road ahead

No reform is without challenges. The first hurdle is digital literacy. Not all applicants, particularly older homeowners, are comfortable online. The government has set up help desks at physical offices.

The second hurdle is system integrity. Can the platform handle the volume from a megacity? What happens during server downtime? The Ministry says there is a business continuity plan for a fallback process. This fallback could become a permanent loophole.

The third and most sensitive hurdle is internal resistance. Some officers may find ways to create new digital bottlenecks. They might delay the routing of files or insist on endless physical verification visits. Sustained political oversight is crucial.


So what is really happening?

Lagos often serves as a laboratory for Nigeria. Other states watch closely. The success or failure of this e-permit system will influence initiatives in Abuja, Port Harcourt, and Kano.

The federal government’s ease of doing business council has highlighted construction permits as a major constraint. A successful Lagos model could provide a template for a national standard.

As The Guardian noted in March 2026, the Director-General of the Lagos State Public Procurement Agency, Mr. Fatai Onafowote, linked the reform to larger economic goals. He argued predictable regulation attracts investment. A transparent digital system makes Lagos a more calculable market.


What You Can Do Right Now

The system is live. The portal is accessible through the Lagos State government digital platform. Gather all necessary documents in digital format first. Use the official fee calculator. Make payments only through the integrated channels.

Keep your tracking number. Check the status regularly. If the system stalls beyond the promised 10 working days, use the official escalation channel. Public demand for the system to work is part of what will keep it accountable.

The launch is a significant event. It can reshape how the city grows. The reality will be determined in the coming months, as thousands of applications flow through the digital pipeline. Lagos is trying to fix a broken machine. The whole country is watching.

Lagos Govt Launches Building Planning Permit Sensitisation Tools , Official launch and sensitisation for the new EPPPS digital permit system. (Digital Illustration: GoBeyondLocal)

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