adplus-dvertising
NgGossips.com
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Society
  • Sports
  • World
No Result
View All Result
Sunday, March 8, 2026
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Society
  • Sports
  • World
No Result
View All Result
NgGossips.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

BUA Group Chairman, Abdul Samad Rabiu, Calls for Shift from Extraction to Value Addition at AFC Event during Mining Indaba 2026

by News Break
February 11, 2026
in Business
0
BUA Group Chairman, Abdul Samad Rabiu, Calls for Shift from Extraction to Value Addition at AFC Event during Mining Indaba 2026
152
SHARES
1.9k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp



Cape Town, South Africa

Founder and Executive Chairman of BUA Group, Abdul Samad Rabiu CFR CON, has called for a decisive shift in Africa’s development strategy, urging governments, financiers, and the private sector to move the continent from raw material extraction to large scale industrial processing and value addition.

See Videos Here

Rabiu made the remarks as Special Guest of Honour at an Africa Finance Corporation forum during Mining Indaba 2026, where African leaders, policymakers, financiers, and industry executives gathered to discuss the future of mining, industrialisation, and real sector development on the continent.

Commending AFC for its role in mobilising long term capital for Africa’s industrial sectors, Rabiu noted that the institution’s leadership and recent S&P Global rating with a positive outlook underscored the importance of strong development finance institutions in shaping Africa’s growth trajectory.

Drawing from BUA Group’s experience, he recounted the company’s decision over sixteen years ago to transition from cement importation to local production in Nigeria, despite the capital intensity and long gestation periods associated with mining and heavy industry.

“At the time, Nigeria was importing cement despite being richly endowed with limestone,” Rabiu said. “We were spending more time chasing foreign exchange than selling cement. The real question was not whether the resources existed, but whether there was enough conviction to stop importing and start producing locally.”

Today, he noted, BUA mines and processes about forty thousand tonnes of limestone daily, producing roughly one million tonnes of cement every month. That shift has helped Nigeria move from being a cement importer to a net exporter, saving the country billions of dollars in foreign exchange annually.

See Videos Here

Rabiu stressed that such transformation would not have been possible without patient, long term financing from DFIs, particularly the Africa Finance Corporation, which has supported BUA’s cement and industrial operations with over four hundred million dollars in financing.

He added that a significant portion of those facilities has already been repaid, demonstrating that well structured African industrial projects are not only developmental but also commercially viable and recyclable.

Turning to the broader continental picture, Rabiu highlighted what he described as a structural paradox: Africa remains one of the world’s most resource rich regions, yet exports the bulk of its minerals and agricultural produce in raw or minimally processed form.

He cited examples across gold, cobalt, copper, iron ore, diamonds, and cocoa, noting that while Africa supplies much of the world’s raw inputs, it captures only a fraction of the value created downstream.

“Africa does not lack resources,” he said. “What it lacks is processing capacity, industrial scale, and disciplined execution.”

He argued that the same challenge extends beyond mining into agriculture, where Africa holds a majority of the world’s arable land yet continues to import billions of dollars’ worth of food annually.

Rabiu called for coordinated action among governments, DFIs, and the private sector, urging DFIs to scale long term financing targeted at beneficiation and industrial value chains, while governments adopt deliberate policies that incentivise local processing and invest in power, transport, and industrial infrastructure.

“Industrialisation does not happen by accident,” he said. “Countries that industrialised did so by design, not by chance. Africa must do the same.”

He concluded by stressing that Africa’s opportunity lies in aligning private enterprise, patient capital, and supportive policy to move the continent from extraction to transformation, and from potential to shared prosperity.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




Cape Town, South Africa

Founder and Executive Chairman of BUA Group, Abdul Samad Rabiu CFR CON, has called for a decisive shift in Africa’s development strategy, urging governments, financiers, and the private sector to move the continent from raw material extraction to large scale industrial processing and value addition.

Rabiu made the remarks as Special Guest of Honour at an Africa Finance Corporation forum during Mining Indaba 2026, where African leaders, policymakers, financiers, and industry executives gathered to discuss the future of mining, industrialisation, and real sector development on the continent.

Commending AFC for its role in mobilising long term capital for Africa’s industrial sectors, Rabiu noted that the institution’s leadership and recent S&P Global rating with a positive outlook underscored the importance of strong development finance institutions in shaping Africa’s growth trajectory.

Drawing from BUA Group’s experience, he recounted the company’s decision over sixteen years ago to transition from cement importation to local production in Nigeria, despite the capital intensity and long gestation periods associated with mining and heavy industry.

“At the time, Nigeria was importing cement despite being richly endowed with limestone,” Rabiu said. “We were spending more time chasing foreign exchange than selling cement. The real question was not whether the resources existed, but whether there was enough conviction to stop importing and start producing locally.”

Today, he noted, BUA mines and processes about forty thousand tonnes of limestone daily, producing roughly one million tonnes of cement every month. That shift has helped Nigeria move from being a cement importer to a net exporter, saving the country billions of dollars in foreign exchange annually.

Rabiu stressed that such transformation would not have been possible without patient, long term financing from DFIs, particularly the Africa Finance Corporation, which has supported BUA’s cement and industrial operations with over four hundred million dollars in financing.

He added that a significant portion of those facilities has already been repaid, demonstrating that well structured African industrial projects are not only developmental but also commercially viable and recyclable.

Turning to the broader continental picture, Rabiu highlighted what he described as a structural paradox: Africa remains one of the world’s most resource rich regions, yet exports the bulk of its minerals and agricultural produce in raw or minimally processed form.

He cited examples across gold, cobalt, copper, iron ore, diamonds, and cocoa, noting that while Africa supplies much of the world’s raw inputs, it captures only a fraction of the value created downstream.

“Africa does not lack resources,” he said. “What it lacks is processing capacity, industrial scale, and disciplined execution.”

He argued that the same challenge extends beyond mining into agriculture, where Africa holds a majority of the world’s arable land yet continues to import billions of dollars’ worth of food annually.

Rabiu called for coordinated action among governments, DFIs, and the private sector, urging DFIs to scale long term financing targeted at beneficiation and industrial value chains, while governments adopt deliberate policies that incentivise local processing and invest in power, transport, and industrial infrastructure.

“Industrialisation does not happen by accident,” he said. “Countries that industrialised did so by design, not by chance. Africa must do the same.”

He concluded by stressing that Africa’s opportunity lies in aligning private enterprise, patient capital, and supportive policy to move the continent from extraction to transformation, and from potential to shared prosperity.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

RelatedPosts

CRC unveils app to expand financial services access

Nigerians repaid N1.33tn personal loans in one year – CBN

Digital lending, retail funding to shape finance sector — Crystal Finance boss




Cape Town, South Africa

Founder and Executive Chairman of BUA Group, Abdul Samad Rabiu CFR CON, has called for a decisive shift in Africa’s development strategy, urging governments, financiers, and the private sector to move the continent from raw material extraction to large scale industrial processing and value addition.

Rabiu made the remarks as Special Guest of Honour at an Africa Finance Corporation forum during Mining Indaba 2026, where African leaders, policymakers, financiers, and industry executives gathered to discuss the future of mining, industrialisation, and real sector development on the continent.

Commending AFC for its role in mobilising long term capital for Africa’s industrial sectors, Rabiu noted that the institution’s leadership and recent S&P Global rating with a positive outlook underscored the importance of strong development finance institutions in shaping Africa’s growth trajectory.

Drawing from BUA Group’s experience, he recounted the company’s decision over sixteen years ago to transition from cement importation to local production in Nigeria, despite the capital intensity and long gestation periods associated with mining and heavy industry.

“At the time, Nigeria was importing cement despite being richly endowed with limestone,” Rabiu said. “We were spending more time chasing foreign exchange than selling cement. The real question was not whether the resources existed, but whether there was enough conviction to stop importing and start producing locally.”

Today, he noted, BUA mines and processes about forty thousand tonnes of limestone daily, producing roughly one million tonnes of cement every month. That shift has helped Nigeria move from being a cement importer to a net exporter, saving the country billions of dollars in foreign exchange annually.

Rabiu stressed that such transformation would not have been possible without patient, long term financing from DFIs, particularly the Africa Finance Corporation, which has supported BUA’s cement and industrial operations with over four hundred million dollars in financing.

He added that a significant portion of those facilities has already been repaid, demonstrating that well structured African industrial projects are not only developmental but also commercially viable and recyclable.

Turning to the broader continental picture, Rabiu highlighted what he described as a structural paradox: Africa remains one of the world’s most resource rich regions, yet exports the bulk of its minerals and agricultural produce in raw or minimally processed form.

He cited examples across gold, cobalt, copper, iron ore, diamonds, and cocoa, noting that while Africa supplies much of the world’s raw inputs, it captures only a fraction of the value created downstream.

“Africa does not lack resources,” he said. “What it lacks is processing capacity, industrial scale, and disciplined execution.”

He argued that the same challenge extends beyond mining into agriculture, where Africa holds a majority of the world’s arable land yet continues to import billions of dollars’ worth of food annually.

Rabiu called for coordinated action among governments, DFIs, and the private sector, urging DFIs to scale long term financing targeted at beneficiation and industrial value chains, while governments adopt deliberate policies that incentivise local processing and invest in power, transport, and industrial infrastructure.

“Industrialisation does not happen by accident,” he said. “Countries that industrialised did so by design, not by chance. Africa must do the same.”

He concluded by stressing that Africa’s opportunity lies in aligning private enterprise, patient capital, and supportive policy to move the continent from extraction to transformation, and from potential to shared prosperity.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




Cape Town, South Africa

Founder and Executive Chairman of BUA Group, Abdul Samad Rabiu CFR CON, has called for a decisive shift in Africa’s development strategy, urging governments, financiers, and the private sector to move the continent from raw material extraction to large scale industrial processing and value addition.

Rabiu made the remarks as Special Guest of Honour at an Africa Finance Corporation forum during Mining Indaba 2026, where African leaders, policymakers, financiers, and industry executives gathered to discuss the future of mining, industrialisation, and real sector development on the continent.

Commending AFC for its role in mobilising long term capital for Africa’s industrial sectors, Rabiu noted that the institution’s leadership and recent S&P Global rating with a positive outlook underscored the importance of strong development finance institutions in shaping Africa’s growth trajectory.

Drawing from BUA Group’s experience, he recounted the company’s decision over sixteen years ago to transition from cement importation to local production in Nigeria, despite the capital intensity and long gestation periods associated with mining and heavy industry.

“At the time, Nigeria was importing cement despite being richly endowed with limestone,” Rabiu said. “We were spending more time chasing foreign exchange than selling cement. The real question was not whether the resources existed, but whether there was enough conviction to stop importing and start producing locally.”

Today, he noted, BUA mines and processes about forty thousand tonnes of limestone daily, producing roughly one million tonnes of cement every month. That shift has helped Nigeria move from being a cement importer to a net exporter, saving the country billions of dollars in foreign exchange annually.

Rabiu stressed that such transformation would not have been possible without patient, long term financing from DFIs, particularly the Africa Finance Corporation, which has supported BUA’s cement and industrial operations with over four hundred million dollars in financing.

He added that a significant portion of those facilities has already been repaid, demonstrating that well structured African industrial projects are not only developmental but also commercially viable and recyclable.

Turning to the broader continental picture, Rabiu highlighted what he described as a structural paradox: Africa remains one of the world’s most resource rich regions, yet exports the bulk of its minerals and agricultural produce in raw or minimally processed form.

He cited examples across gold, cobalt, copper, iron ore, diamonds, and cocoa, noting that while Africa supplies much of the world’s raw inputs, it captures only a fraction of the value created downstream.

“Africa does not lack resources,” he said. “What it lacks is processing capacity, industrial scale, and disciplined execution.”

He argued that the same challenge extends beyond mining into agriculture, where Africa holds a majority of the world’s arable land yet continues to import billions of dollars’ worth of food annually.

Rabiu called for coordinated action among governments, DFIs, and the private sector, urging DFIs to scale long term financing targeted at beneficiation and industrial value chains, while governments adopt deliberate policies that incentivise local processing and invest in power, transport, and industrial infrastructure.

“Industrialisation does not happen by accident,” he said. “Countries that industrialised did so by design, not by chance. Africa must do the same.”

He concluded by stressing that Africa’s opportunity lies in aligning private enterprise, patient capital, and supportive policy to move the continent from extraction to transformation, and from potential to shared prosperity.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Related Posts

CRC unveils app to expand financial services access
Business

CRC unveils app to expand financial services access

March 8, 2026
CBN raises gold reserves to $3.5bn
Business

Nigerians repaid N1.33tn personal loans in one year – CBN

March 8, 2026
Digital lending, retail funding to shape finance sector — Crystal Finance boss
Business

Digital lending, retail funding to shape finance sector — Crystal Finance boss

March 8, 2026
Stanbic IBTC Regional Economic Outlook Series Positions Investors for Confident 2026 Decision Making
Business

Stanbic IBTC Regional Economic Outlook Series Positions Investors for Confident 2026 Decision Making

March 7, 2026
Five Game-Changing Facts About FirstBank’s MREIF Home Loan
Business

Five Game-Changing Facts About FirstBank’s MREIF Home Loan

March 7, 2026
Alpha Morgan Bank Deepens Presence in Abuja with New Branch in Utako
Business

Alpha Morgan Bank Deepens Presence in Abuja with New Branch in Utako

March 7, 2026

Trending

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
If You Have Ever Slept With My Husband, Let Me Know, I Will Pay You – Actress Lizzy Anjorin Dares Ladies (Video)

If You Have Ever Slept With My Husband, Let Me Know, I Will Pay You – Actress Lizzy Anjorin Dares Ladies (Video)

March 4, 2026
Man who travelled to US in 1995, married American woman set to be deported after falsifying details

Man who travelled to US in 1995, married American woman set to be deported after falsifying details

March 5, 2026
Protest Erupts In Nigeria Over K!lling Of Iran Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei (Video)

Protest Erupts In Nigeria Over K!lling Of Iran Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei (Video)

March 1, 2026
FEC approves enhanced exit benefits for retiring civil servants

FEC approves enhanced exit benefits for retiring civil servants

March 5, 2026
Vihiga family in mourning after 3 cousins die together while headed to school

Vihiga family in mourning after 3 cousins die together while headed to school

February 25, 2026
Yaytseslav Truhov leaks new video with another Kenyan woman, netizens react: "Should be arrested"

Yaytseslav Truhov leaks new video with another Kenyan woman, netizens react: "Should be arrested"

February 28, 2026
Trump Criticizes Supreme Court Justices After Global Tariffs Ruling

US Announces Destruction Of Iranian Force’s HQ, First US Deaths

March 2, 2026
Kenyan mum fires househelp after watching on home CCTV what she did

Kenyan mum fires househelp after watching on home CCTV what she did

February 27, 2026
Insecurity: ADC Chieftain Hails Nigeria-U.S. Security Collaboration, Demands Stronger Domestic Strategy

Global Anglicans Quit Canterbury, Inaugurate Governing Council in Abuja 

March 8, 2026
NDPHC Targets 2027 for Completion of 570mw Alaoji Power Plant 

NDPHC Targets 2027 for Completion of 570mw Alaoji Power Plant 

March 8, 2026
“I Refuse Blind Faith”- Tobi Adegboyega Urges Believers To Probe Scripture

“I Refuse Blind Faith”- Tobi Adegboyega Urges Believers To Probe Scripture

March 8, 2026
Ebonyi distributes N70m relief to Okporojo attack victims

Ebonyi distributes N70m relief to Okporojo attack victims

March 8, 2026
Forest Guard, Police Special Squad smash kidnap hideout in Enugu forest, rescue 12 victims, recover AK-47 rifles

Forest Guard, Police Special Squad smash kidnap hideout in Enugu forest, rescue 12 victims, recover AK-47 rifles

March 8, 2026
Senator Tinubu: God is speaking to us as a nation

Senator Tinubu: God is speaking to us as a nation

March 8, 2026
“Divorced But Unstoppable”- Caroline Danjuma Celebrates Motherhood And Strength

“Divorced But Unstoppable”- Caroline Danjuma Celebrates Motherhood And Strength

March 8, 2026
Endvocas, AHI sign MoU to promote environmental sustainability in varsities

Endvocas, AHI sign MoU to promote environmental sustainability in varsities

March 8, 2026
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
© 2025 Nggossips. All rights reserved.
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Society
  • Sports
  • World