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Enobong Calls for Urgent Reform of Nigeria’s Trade, Logistics System
Joe Enobong, a logistics expert and founder of Parcels Mart Solutions Limited, said Nigeria must urgently improve its trade and logistics system to compete globally.
With over 20 years of experience working with companies like Samsung, UPS, and DHL, he understands the challenges in moving goods across borders. In this interview with THISDAY explains the problems slowing down trade in Nigeria and what the country must do to build a stronger and more efficient logistics sector.
Can you briefly share your experience in trade, logistics, or cross-border commerce in Nigeria and Africa?
I am the founder and chief executive officer of Parcels Mart Solutions Limited, a logistics and supply-chain company focused on facilitating trade within Nigeria and across global markets. Our work supports industries ranging from manufacturing and energy to procurement and international commerce.
I am also the founder of Gemba Hotel and Resort, a luxury hospitality development designed to elevate experiential tourism and regional economic growth.
My professional journey has largely been centered on understanding how systems connect, how goods move across borders, how markets interact, and how infrastructure supports economic expansion.
Logistics is often invisible to the public, yet it quietly determines the speed, cost, and reliability of global commerce. When supply chains function efficiently, economies expand seamlessly. When they fail, markets become fragmented and opportunity remains unrealised.
From your perspective, how would you describe the current state of trade within Nigeria and across the African continent?
Africa stands at a fascinating economic inflection point. The continent possesses enormous economic potential: a rapidly expanding population, increasingly urbanised markets, and a growing generation of entrepreneurs. Yet the structures supporting trade have historically been fragmented. Intra-African trade remains relatively modest compared with other regions of the world. This does not reflect a lack of opportunity.
Rather, it reflects decades of infrastructure limitations, regulatory fragmentation, and underdeveloped logistics corridors. Encouragingly, the narrative is changing. Across the continent there is growing recognition that Africa’s long-term prosperity will depend not only on exporting to global markets but also on strengthening trade relationships within the continent itself.
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What are the most significant trade barriers currently affecting businesses in Nigeria?
The barriers are multifaceted. Logistics inefficiencies remain one of the most visible challenges. Port congestion and extended cargo clearance timelines can introduce unpredictability into supply chains.
Regulatory complexity is another factor. Businesses often navigate multiple authorities with overlapping responsibilities. Infrastructure constraints also contribute to delays, particularly when cargo moves from ports to inland markets. Individually, these issues may appear manageable. Collectively, however, they create friction within the systems that support commerce.
How do these barriers differ from those faced in other African countries?
Nigeria’s challenges are often amplified by scale. As one of Africa’s largest economies, the country processes enormous trade volumes through infrastructure systems that were not originally designed for such capacity. In smaller economies the primary constraint may be market size or industrial capacity. Nigeria, by contrast, has significant demand and entrepreneurial activity. The challenge lies in ensuring that the systems supporting that economic scale operate efficiently.
Would you say these challenges are more structural, policy-driven, or operational?
They intersect across all three categories. Infrastructure gaps represent structural challenges that require long-term investment. Policy inconsistencies create regulatory uncertainty.
Operational inefficiencies arise when systems lack coordination. However, it is important to note that many of the bottlenecks businesses encounter today are operational rather than structural. With improved coordination, digital systems, and policy clarity, significant improvements could be achieved relatively quickly.
Poor infrastructure is often cited as a major constraint. How does this impact trade efficiency in Nigeria?
Infrastructure determines the economics of trade. When transport corridors are efficient, goods move predictably and businesses operate with confidence. When infrastructure is strained, supply chains become slower, more expensive, and less reliable.
For businesses, predictability is as important as speed. A shipment that reliably arrives in seven days is manageable. But when delivery timelines fluctuate unpredictably, supply chains become fragile. Infrastructure therefore functions not merely as a physical asset but as a strategic economic advantage.
What role do ports, road networks, and border systems play in limiting or enabling trade?
Ports serve as the gateways of commerce. Their efficiency sets the tone for the entire logistics chain. Road networks determine how effectively goods move from ports to domestic markets and industrial centers. Border systems determine how smoothly trade flows between countries. When these systems operate cohesively, trade corridors flourish. When they operate in isolation, bottlenecks emerge.
How can Nigeria improve its logistics ecosystem to compete regionally?
Three priorities are particularly important. First is digitalisation. Automating customs documentation, cargo tracking, and regulatory approvals can significantly improve efficiency. Second is infrastructure investment, particularly around port expansion, rail connectivity, and inland logistics hubs. Third is policy coordination. Regulatory agencies must operate within a streamlined framework that reduces duplication and accelerates decision-making. If these elements align, Nigeria could emerge as one of the most competitive logistics hubs in West Africa.
How do government policies and regulatory frameworks hinder or support trade?
Policy shapes the environment in which commerce operates. When regulations are transparent, predictable, and aligned with international standards, they encourage investment and support business growth. Conversely, when policies are unclear or inconsistently applied, businesses face uncertainty that discourages expansion. Predictability is essential for long-term economic development.
Are there specific policies you believe should be urgently reformed?
Trade facilitation policies should prioritize simplification. Reducing redundant documentation, expanding digital customs systems, and improving inter-agency coordination would significantly streamline trade processes. Efficiency and compliance should reinforce each other rather than compete.
What impact do tariffs, customs procedures, and bureaucracy have on businesses?
Tariffs themselves are rarely the most significant challenge. Many businesses can adapt to tariff structures. The greater difficulty often lies in procedural complexity. When customs procedures are slow or unpredictable, supply chains become disrupted and costs increase. Predictability in customs operations therefore becomes as important as policy itself.
What opportunities does the African Continental Free Trade Area present for Nigeria and African businesses?
The African Continental Free Trade Area represents one of the most ambitious economic integration initiatives in modern history. By connecting more than fifty economies into a single trade framework, it creates the potential for a truly continental marketplace. For Nigeria, this provides an opportunity to leverage its entrepreneurial ecosystem and industrial potential within a much larger regional economy.
Why has intra-African trade remained relatively low despite such initiatives?
Historically, Africa’s trade architecture was oriented outward rather than inward. Infrastructure networks, shipping routes, and supply chains were largely designed to facilitate exports to global markets rather than trade within the continent. Reorienting those systems requires infrastructure investment, regulatory alignment, and stronger regional supply chains.
What must Nigeria do to fully maximise AfCFTA benefits?
Nigeria must strengthen both its production capacity and its logistics competitiveness. Trade agreements create market access, but businesses must still be able to produce goods competitively and deliver them efficiently across borders. Investment in manufacturing, logistics modernisation, and export support will be essential.
What role can financial institutions play in easing cross-border transactions?
Financial institutions are critical to the trade ecosystem. They provide trade finance, facilitate cross-border payments, and support currency settlement systems that enable businesses to transact internationally. Without efficient financial frameworks, even the most promising trade agreements cannot reach their full potential.
What are the biggest challenges Nigerian businesses face when trying to export within Africa?
Beyond logistics and regulatory differences, many businesses struggle with market intelligence. Africa is not a single market. Each country has distinct regulatory environments, consumer behaviors, and distribution systems. Successful exporters often invest significant effort in understanding these differences.
What role do digital platforms and fintech solutions play in facilitating trade?
Digital platforms are transforming trade across the continent. Fintech solutions enable faster cross-border payments, while digital logistics platforms provide transparency and visibility across supply chains. Technology is gradually removing inefficiencies that historically slowed commerce.
How can governments across Africa collaborate to create a more stable trade environment? Regional collaboration must focus on regulatory alignment, infrastructure connectivity, and policy consistency. Economic integration succeeds when institutions collaborate as effectively as markets do.
What immediate steps should the Nigerian government take to reduce trade barriers?
Accelerating customs digitalization, improving port efficiency, and streamlining regulatory oversight would produce immediate improvements. These reforms would significantly reduce transaction costs for businesses.
Looking ahead, how optimistic are you about the future of intra-African trade?
I remain deeply optimistic. Africa’s demographic expansion, technological innovation, and economic integration are converging in ways that could reshape the continent’s role in global commerce. If infrastructure development, policy reform, and private-sector innovation continue to align, Africa has the potential to become one of the most dynamic trade regions of the twenty first century. And when that transformation occurs, logistics will once again demonstrate a quiet truth of global commerce: the movement of goods ultimately determines the movement of opportunity.







