European development finance institutions are deepening their investment commitment to Nigeria, unveiling a fresh €20 million financing facility while signalling that more funding is on the way after committing over €500 million to the country within the past year, in a vote of confidence in ongoing economic reforms.
The new commitments, announced at the 10th Nigeria–European Union Business Forum in Abuja, underscore a growing shift by European financiers from traditional development assistance to long-term investment partnerships aimed at supporting infrastructure, renewable energy, agriculture, healthcare, digital infrastructure and small businesses.
Officials from the European Investment Bank (EIB) disclosed that the institution alone signed more than €500 million in financing for Nigeria over the past 12 months across public and private sector projects, with additional transactions expected before the end of the year.
“We have signed last year over €500 million of financing in the country, in the public sector and in the financial sector mostly,” said Loic Le Ruyet, Senior Investment Officer in the Corporate Division of the European Investment Bank.
According to Le Ruyet, the EIB’s financing portfolio spans Lagos waterways transport, healthcare manufacturing through the Bank of Industry, agricultural value chains in cocoa and dairy production, renewable energy, digital infrastructure and credit lines channelled through the Development Bank of Nigeria to expand lending to priority sectors.
Alongside the EIB’s investment programme, European financiers launched a €20 million Nigeria Country Window under the European Union’s Agrifi and Electrifi blended finance platforms.
The facility, jointly implemented by Dutch development bank FMO and the European Development Finance Institutions Management Company (EDFI MC), will provide financing to small and medium-sized enterprises operating in agribusiness and rural electrification while mobilising additional private investment into Nigeria.
Development financiers said the blended finance structure is designed to crowd in commercial investors by reducing investment risks in sectors considered critical to Nigeria’s long-term economic transformation.
Speaking at the launch, Edilberto Jose Baquero of FMO said agriculture and rural energy remain among Nigeria’s biggest development financing gaps.
“It is important to recognise that in Nigeria agriculture is a key driver of the economy, and access to energy remains a challenge, specifically in rural communities,” he said.
“Bringing together these two facilities creates an opportunity to support more integrated and sustainable investment that aligns with the needs and priorities of Nigeria,” he added.
William Barrault of EDFI Management Company said the objective extends beyond direct financing.
“We want to be catalytic. This is the entire ecosystem we try to develop,” he said, explaining that the platform is expected to attract additional co-investment from other European development finance institutions.
The fresh commitments come as Nigeria seeks to increase long-term foreign capital inflows following a series of macroeconomic reforms, including foreign exchange liberalisation, fuel subsidy removal and ongoing tax reforms intended to improve the country’s investment climate.
Speaking during the investment session, Doris Uzoka-Anite, minister of state for budget and economic planning,described the financing commitments as an endorsement of the Federal Government’s reform agenda.
According to her, the investments align with the Renewed Hope National Development Plan 2026–2030 and will support infrastructure expansion, healthcare value chains, digital transformation and improved access to finance for businesses.
“The facilities being announced today take on their strategic significance. They are not isolated initiatives. These are integral to the Renewed Hope National Development Plan 2026 to 2030,” she said.
Uzoka-Anite added that the growing pipeline of European investments reflects increasing confidence in Nigeria’s economic direction.
“They speak to the confidence that the European Union has in this government’s reforms, the credibility of our economic agenda and the capabilities of Nigerian businesses,” she noted further.
The latest commitments reinforce an evolving investment relationship between Nigeria and the European Union, with development finance institutions increasingly deploying blended finance structures to leverage private capital rather than relying solely on concessional funding.
Market analysts say the approach is particularly significant as Nigeria seeks to narrow its infrastructure financing gap and stimulate private sector-led growth without placing additional pressure on public finances.






