
Mkpoikana Udoma
Port Harcourt — Nigeria’s mining sector has received a significant investment boost following the signing of a partnership agreement between the Africa Finance Corporation, AFC, and the Solid Minerals Development Fund, SMDF, to jointly fund three major initiatives, including a $1.3 billion alumina refinery.
The Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Dele Alake, who witnessed the signing, described the agreement as a decisive step toward repositioning mining as a meaningful contributor to Nigeria’s GDP.
“This means jobs, technology, foreign exchange, and real contribution to our GDP over the long term,” Alake stated. “The numbers are strong, but what matters more is viability.”
The proposed $1.3 billion alumina refinery is expected to deepen local value addition by processing raw minerals domestically rather than exporting them in unprocessed form, a long-standing structural gap in Nigeria’s mining ecosystem.
The partnership signals a shift from policy rhetoric to capital-backed implementation, particularly as Nigeria seeks to diversify its revenue base beyond oil and gas.
“This is how we grow mining’s real contribution to our economy,” the Minister said. “We have the minerals. With this partnership, we are putting serious capital behind developing them properly.”
The initiative is expected to generate employment across the mining value chain, facilitate technology transfer, and improve foreign exchange earnings through refined mineral exports.
SweetCrude Reports noted that large-scale industrial projects such as alumina refining can serve as anchor investments, stimulating infrastructure development, logistics expansion, and downstream manufacturing.
The agreement reinforces the Federal Government’s strategy of leveraging development finance institutions to unlock long-term capital for strategic mineral assets, positioning solid minerals as a pillar of Nigeria’s economic diversification agenda.


