ADVERTISEMENT
Apples Bite Int'l Magazine
  • News Bite
    • All
    • Arts
    • Events
    • International
    • National
    • Politics
    • Press Release
    • Security
    • Show Biz
    • Sports
    Police Rescue Former Minister Adelabu’s Sister, Twin Sons in Daring Oyo Operation

    Police Rescue Former Minister Adelabu’s Sister, Twin Sons in Daring Oyo Operation

    NECO: 58,187 Candidates Sit for 2026 Common Entrance as Registration Declines

    NECO: 58,187 Candidates Sit for 2026 Common Entrance as Registration Declines

    Yvonne Jegede slams Tinubu administration over insecurity, says Nigerians are not “doormats”

    Yvonne Jegede slams Tinubu administration over insecurity, says Nigerians are not “doormats”

    Former UNILORIN Vice-Chancellor, Prof. AbdulGaniyu Ambali, Dies at 68

    Former UNILORIN Vice-Chancellor, Prof. AbdulGaniyu Ambali, Dies at 68

    Tinubu Celebrates Iyalode of Remoland, Sade Ogunbiyi, on 80th Birthday

    Tinubu Celebrates Iyalode of Remoland, Sade Ogunbiyi, on 80th Birthday

    U.S. Court Throws Out Lilian Onoh’s Defamation Case Against SaharaReporters Again

    U.S. Court Throws Out Lilian Onoh’s Defamation Case Against SaharaReporters Again

    NSCDC Raids Illegal Detention Centre in Lagos, Rescues 24 Victims and Arrests Four Foreign Nationals

    NSCDC Raids Illegal Detention Centre in Lagos, Rescues 24 Victims and Arrests Four Foreign Nationals

    Forbes: Messi Now Worth $1.1 Billion

    Forbes: Messi Now Worth $1.1 Billion

    Kidnappers Demand Release of Terror Suspects, ₦1bn Ransom for Abducted Oyo Pupils and Teachers

    Kidnappers Demand Release of Terror Suspects, ₦1bn Ransom for Abducted Oyo Pupils and Teachers

    • Politics
    • International
    • National
    • Show Biz
    • Events
    • Security
    • Sports
    • Press Release
  • Lifestyle Bite
    • Fitness
    • Nutrition
    • Personal Growth
    • Travel
  • Health Bite
    • Doctor’s Diagnosis
  • Brand & Business Bite
    • Energy
  • Fashion Bite
  • Opinion Bite
    • Featured Story
    • Fiction & Poetry
    • Career
    • Teachings
    • ABM Staff Blog
    • ABM True Stories
    • Research
    • Tech
  • More
    • Latest Magazine Issue
    • Leadership 360°
    • Religion
    • Education
    • Law
    • Metro
    • Romance
      • Love
      • Sex and Relationship
      • ABM TV
      • Interviews
      • Movies
      • Red Carpets
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • News Bite
    • All
    • Arts
    • Events
    • International
    • National
    • Politics
    • Press Release
    • Security
    • Show Biz
    • Sports
    Police Rescue Former Minister Adelabu’s Sister, Twin Sons in Daring Oyo Operation

    Police Rescue Former Minister Adelabu’s Sister, Twin Sons in Daring Oyo Operation

    NECO: 58,187 Candidates Sit for 2026 Common Entrance as Registration Declines

    NECO: 58,187 Candidates Sit for 2026 Common Entrance as Registration Declines

    Yvonne Jegede slams Tinubu administration over insecurity, says Nigerians are not “doormats”

    Yvonne Jegede slams Tinubu administration over insecurity, says Nigerians are not “doormats”

    Former UNILORIN Vice-Chancellor, Prof. AbdulGaniyu Ambali, Dies at 68

    Former UNILORIN Vice-Chancellor, Prof. AbdulGaniyu Ambali, Dies at 68

    Tinubu Celebrates Iyalode of Remoland, Sade Ogunbiyi, on 80th Birthday

    Tinubu Celebrates Iyalode of Remoland, Sade Ogunbiyi, on 80th Birthday

    U.S. Court Throws Out Lilian Onoh’s Defamation Case Against SaharaReporters Again

    U.S. Court Throws Out Lilian Onoh’s Defamation Case Against SaharaReporters Again

    NSCDC Raids Illegal Detention Centre in Lagos, Rescues 24 Victims and Arrests Four Foreign Nationals

    NSCDC Raids Illegal Detention Centre in Lagos, Rescues 24 Victims and Arrests Four Foreign Nationals

    Forbes: Messi Now Worth $1.1 Billion

    Forbes: Messi Now Worth $1.1 Billion

    Kidnappers Demand Release of Terror Suspects, ₦1bn Ransom for Abducted Oyo Pupils and Teachers

    Kidnappers Demand Release of Terror Suspects, ₦1bn Ransom for Abducted Oyo Pupils and Teachers

    • Politics
    • International
    • National
    • Show Biz
    • Events
    • Security
    • Sports
    • Press Release
  • Lifestyle Bite
    • Fitness
    • Nutrition
    • Personal Growth
    • Travel
  • Health Bite
    • Doctor’s Diagnosis
  • Brand & Business Bite
    • Energy
  • Fashion Bite
  • Opinion Bite
    • Featured Story
    • Fiction & Poetry
    • Career
    • Teachings
    • ABM Staff Blog
    • ABM True Stories
    • Research
    • Tech
  • More
    • Latest Magazine Issue
    • Leadership 360°
    • Religion
    • Education
    • Law
    • Metro
    • Romance
      • Love
      • Sex and Relationship
      • ABM TV
      • Interviews
      • Movies
      • Red Carpets
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Apples Bite Int'l Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Adron Homes Sallah promo
Home Opinion Bite

The Invisible Commodity: Why Charcoal Is Not on Nigeria’s Economic Map

Seunmanuel Faleye by Seunmanuel Faleye
September 4, 2025
in Opinion Bite
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0
The Invisible Commodity: Why Charcoal Is Not on Nigeria’s Economic Map
0
SHARES
16
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

When the federal government announced at the 2025 Forest Economy Summit its plan to unlock $2 billion from Nigeria’s forest economy, it sounded like real progress. The Vice President, Kashim Shettima, stressed urgency, warning that over 90% of our original forest cover is already gone.

Yet, there’s a contradiction at the heart of this initiative: while advocating a sustainable forest economy, the government is quietly restricting charcoal exports, a forest product with huge export potential. It’s like finding treasure but blocking the path to it. We can’t talk about “trees into trillions” while sidelining the very product tied most directly to them.

True, the federal government lifted the charcoal export ban in mid-2023, but it wasn’t a full repealit was conditional. Customs issued Circular No. 8 mandating that all charcoal exports must now carry approval letters from the Ministry of Finance and identification from forest officers at ports. Exporters who fail to meet these conditions, or if Nigeria misses the EU’s December 2025 deadline for non-deforestation sourcing, risk facing another full ban. In reality, this isn’t freedom; it’s regulation by exclusion.

Charcoal, though often controversial, is more than fuel. It is a biofuel, an export asset, and a source of livelihood for rural communities. In a nation battling climate change, there’s a clear paradox: our forests are shrinking, yet charcoal remains invisible in national policy. By refusing to classify it as a formal commodity, Nigeria is missing the chance to regulate its production, establish export frameworks, and set price benchmarks. The result is continued forest loss driven by decades of unsustainable practices and a lack of regulatory structure.

We must move from damage control to sustainability. That requires supporting afforestation, reforestation, and policies that recognise forest-based livelihoods rather than erase them. Ignoring these systems means losing more than treeswe lose communities, culture, and people.

The shift we need is to see forest products like charcoal not as threats but as assets: managed responsibly, regulated wisely, and integrated into a greener economy that serves everyone, especially the next generation.

Charcoal Is Powering Other Economies; Why Not Ours?

Take Namibia, a country of just 3 million people with a semi-arid landscape. In 2023, Namibia exported 270,000 tonnes of charcoal worth $80.5 million. Compare that to Nigeria, with a far larger population and richer forests, which exported only 443 tonnes that same year, valued at just $119,470. Of this, $54,000 went to the UAE; the rest trickled into Europe. Let that sink in: a country six times smaller is earning hundreds of times more from one forest product.

This isn’t a production problem; it’s a policy failure. Nigeria has greater reserves, stronger climatic advantages, and steady demand from the UAE, EU, and Asia. Yet we don’t regulate, protect, or price the industry. Instead, we allow income to leak away through informal channels and black-market trading.

The UAE, for instance, allows very few natural exports from Nigeria, and charcoal is one of them. But with weak documentation, many shipments remain unrecorded. While our neighbours formalise trade, we let ours operate in disguise.

Industry research projects the global charcoal market to hit $11.4 billion by 2030. Nigeria is losing more than 99% of its potential revenue due to the absence of a formal export policy or commodity status for charcoal.

RelatedPosts

Kidnappers Demand Release of Terror Suspects, ₦1bn Ransom for Abducted Oyo Pupils and Teachers

South-West Forests, Highways Under Security Watch as Kidnapping Threat Grows

June 6, 2026
Omoluabi: The Story of Service, Sacrifice and Leadership Style Of Otunba Gbenga Danie

Omoluabi: The Story of Service, Sacrifice and Leadership Style Of Otunba Gbenga Daniel

June 4, 2026
Renewed Hope @3: How Prof. Audi Abubakar's NSCDC is Forging Nigeria's Economic Defence | By Oladapo Sofowora

Renewed Hope @3: How Prof. Audi Abubakar’s NSCDC is Forging Nigeria’s Economic Defence | By Oladapo Sofowora

June 4, 2026

This vacuum has ripple effects. Producers face exploitation and underpricing. Government earns no tax revenue from a booming informal export sector. Climate finance and carbon credits are out of reach because the industry isn’t tracked. Worst of all, local communities where over 70% of charcoal collectors are women and youth, particularly in the north-central and southwest, remain trapped in poverty.

Towards a Smarter Policy

Instead of tightening restrictions, Nigeria should recognise charcoal as a valuable commodity central to its $2–3 billion forest economy agenda.

The recent forest economy summit showed renewed interest in land use and non-oil revenue. But unless charcoal is included in that conversation as a registered, regulated, and priced commodity, the effort risks being counterproductive. We’re producing the resource, but killing its potential through policy neglect.

The solution is not prohibition it’s formalisation. Charcoal must be recognised as a legal commodity within trade and forest policies. We need clear export frameworks backed by sustainability protocols to meet global demand. Local cooperatives must be empowered with training and access to markets. Digital monitoring systems should be deployed to regulate harvesting and attract climate finance.

Charcoal is more than just fuel it is revenue, jobs, and foreign exchange. As the world shifts toward sustainable biomass, the answer isn’t restriction but smart regulation. Nigeria has the potential to lead, but only if we build a smarter and sustainable policy.

Mr. Ebenezer Akarah
CEO/Founder, Bricks to Crib Group of Companies

Seunmanuel Faleye
Seunmanuel Faleye

Seunmanuel Faleye is a brand and communications strategist. He is a covert writer and an overt creative head. He publishes Apple’s Bite International Magazine.

Tags: Charcoal

Related Posts

Atiku Receives ADC Presidential Nomination Receipt for 2027 Race
Opinion Bite

Atiku Narrows VP Search To Amaechi, Ihedioha, Duke

June 2, 2026
The Oriire 46 And The Ghost Of Agodi, The Surge By Boma Lilian Braide(Esq.)
Opinion Bite

The Oriire 46 And The Ghost Of Agodi, The Surge By Boma Lilian Braide(Esq.)

June 2, 2026
Rescue Mission @ 3: How Governor Dauda Lawal Dragged Zamfara Back from the Abyss | by Oladapo Sofowora
Opinion Bite

Rescue Mission @ 3: How Governor Dauda Lawal Dragged Zamfara Back from the Abyss | By: Oladapo Sofowora

May 30, 2026 - Updated on June 3, 2026
APC's Post-Primary Crisis Deepens as Defections, Feuds and Unresolved Grievances Threaten Party Ahead of 2027 by Seunmanuel Faleye
Opinion Bite

APC’s Post-Primary Crisis Deepens as Defections, Feuds and Unresolved Grievances Threaten Party Ahead of 2027 by Seunmanuel Faleye

May 29, 2026
Three Years of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu: A Comprehensive Assessment of His Administration by Tomisin Alabi
Opinion Bite

Three Years of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu: A Comprehensive Assessment of His Administration by Tomisin Alabi

May 29, 2026
Tinubu Meets NASS Leaders Over Push for State Police
Opinion Bite

Bola Tinubu: the man who took the bullet for Nigeria to survive | By Bayo Onanuga

May 29, 2026
Load More
Apples Bite Int'l Magazine

Apples Bite Magazine is your premier destination for updates in business, daily news, and entertainment. At Apples Bite, we serve insightful stories and in-depth analysis, curated to empower professionals, entrepreneurs, and forward-thinking individuals who thrive on staying ahead of the curve.

© 2026. All Rights Reserved. ApplesBite International Magazine.

No Result
View All Result
  • News Bite
    • Politics
    • International
    • National
    • Show Biz
    • Events
    • Security
    • Sports
    • Press Release
  • Lifestyle Bite
    • Fitness
    • Nutrition
    • Personal Growth
    • Travel
  • Health Bite
    • Doctor’s Diagnosis
  • Brand & Business Bite
    • Energy
  • Fashion Bite
  • Opinion Bite
    • Featured Story
    • Fiction & Poetry
    • Career
    • Teachings
    • ABM Staff Blog
    • ABM True Stories
    • Research
    • Tech
  • More
    • Latest Magazine Issue
    • Leadership 360°
    • Religion
    • Education
    • Law
    • Metro
    • Romance
      • Love
      • Sex and Relationship
      • ABM TV
      • Interviews
      • Movies
      • Red Carpets
  • Contact Us

© 2026. All Rights Reserved. ApplesBite International Magazine.