Dangote Group and AfricaRice have launched a ₦1.8‑trillion partnership to scale rice production to 10 million tonnes by 2030.
The deal, announced by Engr. Sammy Adigun, Chairman of Niger Foods, promises high-quality locally produced rice, reduced dependence on imports and potentially hundreds of thousands of jobs.
Ambitious Production Goals
The agreement sets out to increase annual paddy rice production in Niger State from about 1.5 million metric tonnes to 10 million metric tonnes by 2030, according to multiple reports.
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Under the deal, Niger Foods will lead cultivation across 500,000 hectares, including both new commercial farms and micro, small and medium‑scale farms.
A substantial 5,000‑hectare seed farm will produce 25,000 tonnes of certified seed (breeder, foundation and certified) to support this scale of cultivation.

Job Creation and Value Chain Impact
According to public sources, the creation of over 100,000 jobs across the rice value chain is expected through the AfricaRice partnership alone.
In addition, a separate offtake agreement with Dangote Rice Limited, worth about ₦1.8 trillion, is projected to generate approximately 50,000 direct jobs over ten years via the development of about 25,000 hectares of commercial farms and support for 50,000 local farmers.
Engr. Adigun publicly claimed the partnership could create 500,000 jobs, which appears to be a more expansive projection — possibly including both direct and indirect roles (farm labour, processing, logistics, supply chain).
This is significantly higher than the figures cited in most reports, which mention 100,000+ or 50,000 direct jobs depending on the component. (No published source has yet confirmed the 500,000‑job number in detail.)
Key Provisions: Land, Water, Offtake, Technology
Niger Foods will cultivate commercial farms (some aligned with Dangote’s offtake agreement) and will support smallholder farmers.
Water access will be harnessed from the Rivers Niger and Kaduna, plus other sources, to support large‑scale irrigation and cultivation.
AfricaRice will bring technology and research support: climate-smart farming methods, certified seeds, sustainable production practices and improvements to post-harvest processing.
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Stakes and Impacts
If successful, the collaboration could significantly reduce Nigeria’s import dependence for rice, improve food security, and stimulate growth in rural economies through job creation, infrastructure development, and investment flow.
However, there are challenges to be addressed: securing continuous funding, managing the massive logistics and supply‑chain infrastructure, ensuring smallholder farmers are effectively integrated, and dealing with environmental risks such as water availability and climate variability.














