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Nigeria-UK trade officials are moving to close a roughly £1.2 billion gap in the way the two countries record their commerce, after bilateral talks put cross-border data, customs reform and dispute resolution at the top of the agenda. Both sides describe the mismatch as a structural problem that needs a coordinated fix rather than a one-off correction.

The discussions fall under the Nigeria–United Kingdom Enhanced Trade and Investment Partnership, known as ETIP, the main channel the two governments use to expand business between them. Officials say tightening how trade is measured is a first step toward unlocking more reliable investment flows.
What the Nigeria-UK trade gap is about
When Britain’s revenue and customs authority, HMRC, and the Nigeria Customs Service compared their figures, they found significant discrepancies in the bilateral trade data. The roughly £1.2 billion difference does not necessarily mean goods went missing; it points to the two systems counting and classifying the same trade in different ways.
Left unaddressed, that kind of gap makes it harder for policymakers and investors to judge the true size of the relationship. Cleaner numbers give exporters, banks and regulators on both sides a clearer picture of where the opportunities and the risks actually sit.
Customs cooperation at the centre
To tackle the problem, the two governments agreed to develop a Customs Mutual Administrative Assistance Framework, a formal arrangement that lets their customs services share information and line up their procedures. They also began technical scoping for capacity building and knowledge exchange between the agencies.
A joint technical engagement mechanism is being set up under ETIP to keep the work moving between high-level meetings. The aim is to turn broad commitments into practical steps, from matching trade codes to smoothing the paperwork that slows goods at the border.
What exporters stand to gain
For Nigerian businesses, the practical prize is smoother access to one of their most valuable export destinations. Producers of agricultural goods, processed foods and services have long complained that paperwork, classification disputes and slow clearance add cost and uncertainty to shipments bound for Britain. If the two customs services align their codes and share data more freely, those frictions could ease, helping smaller exporters compete. British firms selling into Nigeria would benefit from the same clarity, knowing their goods are recorded and taxed consistently. Accurate figures also help both governments design trade policy around the real flow of goods rather than estimates that quietly drift apart.
Why it matters
Britain is one of Nigeria’s most important Western trading partners, and the United Kingdom is home to a large Nigerian diaspora that drives demand for goods, services and investment in both directions. A more accurate and better-coordinated customs relationship could lower costs for exporters, reduce delays and build confidence among firms weighing deals between the two markets.
For Nigeria, the talks also fit a wider push to present itself as a reform-minded destination for foreign investment. Fixing the data behind Nigeria-UK trade is a technical task, but officials hope it sends a broader signal that the partnership is being managed with care.
The next phase will test whether the frameworks agreed on paper translate into faster clearance and steadier numbers. Both governments say they want measurable progress before the next round of bilateral engagement under ETIP.