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Tag: Lagos

  • Sidel grows sustainable footprint in Lagos, Nigeria

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    Sidel has opened a new office in Lagos to strengthen its operations and sustainable packaging initiatives across West Africa.

    Located in Phoenix, Ikeja, the new hub is expected to enhance project management, engineering, and customer services for clients in Nigeria, Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire, and nearby markets.

    The company, known for its packaging solutions in beverages, food, and personal care, said the Lagos base will help it respond more efficiently to local needs and drive the adoption of sustainable packaging technologies across the region.

    The Lagos site becomes Sidel’s third major location on the continent, following offices in South Africa and Kenya. According to the company, this expansion supports its long-term strategy of promoting local partnerships and industrial growth.

    Pietro Cassani, President and CEO of Sidel, said the move reflects the company’s belief in “local talent and continuous innovation across all packaging materials – PET, can, and glass.”

    By operating closer to customers, Sidel aims to provide better technical support and foster knowledge-sharing in packaging sustainability.

    Nigeria’s position as Africa’s largest consumer market makes it a key location for packaging development.

    With a population exceeding 230 million, the country’s food and drink sector was valued at USD 54.1 billion in 2024 and is projected to expand by around 6% annually through 2033.

    Across West Africa, growing consumer awareness of health, quality, and sustainability is shaping packaging trends.

    The demand for recyclable and lightweight materials—such as PET bottles, glass, and aluminium cans—is driving companies to adopt more efficient and eco-friendly production methods.

    Sidel’s technologies, including EvoBLOW, EvoFILL Glass, and Super Combi, are designed to reduce material waste and energy use while maintaining high production performance. These innovations align with the region’s wider transition towards circular and sustainable packaging systems.

    Sidel has already developed partnerships with several African companies. In Nigeria, it worked with StrongPack to install one of the continent’s fastest PET water lines, incorporating Actis™ coating technology to extend bottle shelf life.

    In Ghana, the company equipped Twellium Industrial’s Kumasi plant with high-speed PET packaging lines and advanced labelling systems.

    The new Lagos office will also focus on developing local engineering skills, creating jobs, and supporting customers’ sustainability goals.

    Following its opening, Sidel hosted a customer innovation seminar titled Driving Packaging Innovation and Sustainability for Tomorrow, which brought together industry leaders from Nigeria and Ghana to discuss the future of sustainable packaging in West Africa.

    “Sidel grows sustainable footprint in Lagos, Nigeria” was originally created and published by Packaging Gateway, a GlobalData owned brand.

     


    The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site.

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  • Nigeria bans exports of raw shea nuts used for cosmetic products to help grow local economy

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    LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — Nigeria’s government has banned the export of raw shea nuts, an essential raw material in many cosmetic products, in a bid to grow the country into a global supplier of refined shea butter and other skincare ingredients.

    The immediate ban on the crop will be in place for six months and then reviewed, Vice President Kashim Shettima said.

    Nigeria follows a growing list of other West African countries, including Burkina Faso, Mali, Togo, Ivory Coast and Ghana, that have banned or restricted export of the crop in the past two years.

    “The ban will transform Nigeria from an exporter of raw shea nut to a global supplier of refined shea butter, oil, and other derivatives,” Shettima said Tuesday.

    He added that the decision was not “an anti-trade policy but a pro-value addition policy designed to secure raw materials for our processing factories” and boost income and jobs for rural workers.

    Raw shea nut is pulverized and processed to produce shea butter, a key ingredient for manufacturing products like lotion, shampoos, conditioners and moisturizers.

    “It is one of the most important bases for skincare, especially now that a lot of people are tilting toward nontoxic skincare,” said Zainab Bashir, an Abuja-based dermatologist.

    While Nigeria accounts for 40% of the world’s supply of the crop, it contributes to just 1% of the $6.5-billion global market share in shea products, according to the vice president.

    The measure came weeks after the northern Niger state opened a shea butter processing plant that officials described as one of Africa’s largest.

    Authorities said that if the export ban remains in force, it is expected to generate $300 million in the short term and $3 billion by 2027.

    Experts have argued that such efforts must come with more investment to grow domestic industries.

    “The ban seems to suggest that the government has identified a supply-gap issue, but an export ban does little actually to lock in current in-country production solely for Nigerian processors,” Ikemesit Effiong, a partner at SBM Intelligence, a Lagos-based risk advisory firm, told The Associated Press.

    The move appeared to contradict the long-standing trade policy of Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu, who has positioned the country as a free-market economy by removing a series of subsidies on essential commodities such as fuel and electricity. Tinubu has also floated the country’s currency and reversed a ban on the import of dozens of items by the former government.

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  • Nigerians to vote in governorship polls as ruling party scrambles to regain lost ground in key states | CNN

    Nigerians to vote in governorship polls as ruling party scrambles to regain lost ground in key states | CNN

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    Lagos, Nigeria
    CNN
     — 

    Nigerians will on Saturday vote in delayed governorship polls, weeks after a controversial and disputed presidential election.

    The gubernatorial race will be decided in 28 of Nigeria’s 36 states as the ruling party scrambles to regain lost ground in key states.

    But all eyes will be on the tense contest for control of the country’s wealthy Lagos State, which analysts say will be the “most competitive” in the state’s history.

    “This may be the most competitive governorship election in Lagos State,” political analyst Sam Amadi tells CNN.

    “Many have tried to upturn Lagos in the past and failed because of the entrenched power of Bola Tinubu. As President-elect, his influence may have grown in Lagos but the Obidients are strong,” Amadi says, speaking of supporters of Labour Party presidential candidate Peter Obi.

    Obi caused shockwaves when it emerged he beat President-Elect Bola Tinubu in his Lagos home turf but placed third in the presidential poll.

    Obi has rejected Tinubu’s victory and is contesting the results in the courts.

    The presidential elections on February 25 were widely criticized for widespread delays, outbreaks of violence and attempts at voter suppression.

    Several observers including the European Union also said the election fell short of expectations and “lacked transparency.”

    The battle for Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial hub and one of Africa’s largest cities has typically been a two-party race that has never been won by the opposition.

    This is partly credited to political godfather and kingmaker, Bola Tinubu, who is said to have handpicked every Lagos governor since leaving office in 2007.

    Tinubu’s firm grip on Lagos politics now faces an unprecedented threat in Obi’s third-force Labor Party, after losing on home turf.

    Obi is the first presidential candidate from the opposition to win in Lagos.

    Amadi says his popularity with young people might be the game changer in the Lagos gubernatorial poll.

    “They (Obidients) won Lagos in the last (presidential) poll but feel cheated and suppressed. So we might see a more vehement fight. It depends on how motivated and aggrieved the Obidients feel now,” he said.

    Fifteen candidates are seeking to unseat incumbent Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of the ruling All Progressives Congress party, who is seeking a second term. But only two are viewed as real threats to his reelection.

    Considered a long shot only a few weeks ago, Labor Party’s Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour is now riding on Obi’s wave and has gained momentum following his party’s surprise win in Tinubu’s stronghold,

    The People’s Democratic Party’s Azeez Olajide Adediran, also known as Jandor, is another strong contender aiming to clinch the Lagos seat for his party for the first time.

    Adediran’s party has polled second in every governorship vote in Lagos since the return to civilian rule in 1999.

    Both men tell CNN they are confident of victory. “For the first time, PDP is going to take Lagos, and I’m going to be the governor,” says Adediran. “People are really tired … the streets of Lagos are yearning for a breath of fresh air and that is what we represent,” he adds.

    A wall is decorated with campaign posters of Lagos gubernatorial candidate of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Abdul-Azeez Olajide Adediran (Jandor) and running mate Funke Akindele in Lagos, on March 7, 2023.

    Rhodes-Vivour told CNN the time to liberate Lagos from “state capture” has come, and he’s next in line to govern the state.

    “I’m next governor of Lagos state,” he declared. “You cannot stop an idea whose time has come. The idea of a new Lagos … that is powered by the people and works for the people as opposed to state capture; that idea, its time has come and no matter what they do, they can’t stop it. That’s where the confidence comes from.”

    Governor Sanwo-Olu has asked voters to re-elect him because of his achievements, which he touts have brought “significant progress” to Lagos, including his commendable handling of the COVID pandemic.

    Lagos gubernatorial candidate of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) Babajide Sanwo-Olu is seen in Lagos on January 24, 2023.

    But the governor has failed to pacify angry young people who accuse him of playing a role in the shooting of peaceful protesters railing against police brutality in 2020 by Nigerian soldiers.

    Sanwo-Olu admitted to CNN at the time that footage showed uniformed soldiers firing on peaceful protesters but recently denied ordering the shooting.

    Analyst Amadi tells CNN the gubernatorial poll in Lagos will be a contest between retaining or evicting the old guard.

    “Lagos is a fight between status quo and change,” Amadi said.

    “The incumbent Sanwo-Olu has a good chance of holding his job. But he faces a serious challenge from Gbadebo (Rhodes-Vivour) who has the momentum (of the Obi wave). Jandor (Adediran) is left behind because PDP had been dismantled in southern Nigeria and has no enthusiasm factor in Lagos,” Amadi said.

    “Sanwo-Olu has not been spectacular but is believed to have performed well in some aspects of keeping Lagos going. He may survive the popular revolt on Saturday … but watch out for an upset if the scaremongering of APC and the loss of trust in INEC’s integrity do not demotivate the young voters,” he added.

    Besides attempts at voter suppression, a widespread loss of confidence in the electoral body’s ability to conduct credible elections has eroded the electorate’s trust in the democratic process.

    Only 26% of Nigeria’s more than 93 million registered voters turned up to vote in the last election. This was much lower than the 2019 poll when a third of registered voters ended up voting.

    David Ayodele of civic group EiE Nigeria, tells CNN the February 25 election “deepened the trust deficit between the (electoral) commission and the electorates.”

    Ayodele urged the electoral body to redeem itself in the weekend poll by “naming and prosecuting INEC officials who were caught tampering with the electoral process.”

    Last month, Lagos police authorities said they were investigating an audio clip, in which two men were heard threatening residents of a local community to vote for candidates of the ruling APC or risk being evicted from the area.

    Polls will open from 8:30 a.m. local time (3:30 a.m. ET) Saturday and are expected to close at 2:30 p.m. (9:30 a.m. ET).

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  • Widespread voting delays hinder tense Nigerian election as millions go to the polls | CNN

    Widespread voting delays hinder tense Nigerian election as millions go to the polls | CNN

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    Abuja, Nigeria
    CNN
     — 

    Widespread delays overshadowed a crucial presidential election in Nigeria Saturday, as millions voted to elect their new leader. The hotly contested poll is being held simultaneously with elections for representatives for the country’s parliament.

    CNN confirmed reports from eyewitnesses of isolated violence at two polling stations in Lagos, with the military forced to intervene. CNN has reached out to INEC for comment.

    In chaotic scenes at a polling unit in Maraba, an Abuja suburb, a large crowd of voters struggled to cast their ballot, a CNN team witnessed. Those who did manage to cast a ballot did so in the full glare of those standing next to them, in contravention of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) guidelines which establish privacy for voters.

    “People are voting in exposed spaces, and everyone can see who they are voting for. There’s no privacy. I won’t be surprised if this polling unit is canceled,” Elias Ajunwa, one registered voter, said.

    Ajunwa expressed unease about the situation. “There’s the possibility of any hooligan carting away INEC materials because of how vulnerable the INEC officials and their materials are,” he added.

    About 93 million Nigerians in a country of 200 million people are registered to vote, according to electoral body INEC, but only 87 million are holders of a permanent voter card (PVC), a main requirement to cast a ballot. The election will be Africa’s largest democratic exercise.

    Nigeria's Labour Party's candidate Peter Obi casts his vote during the presidential elections in Agulu, Nigeria.

    The Chief Observer of European Union Observation Mission to Nigeria, Barry Andrews, told CNN it was premature to make any conclusions about widespread delays.

    “We’ve taken note of those reports and we will look across the country to see whether this a pattern or whether it has in any way hindered the exercise of people’s political rights to vote or caused frustration or caused people to turn away. For the moment, it’s premature to make any conclusions about it.”

    People were still waiting to cast their ballots despite polls being expected to close at 2:30 p.m. local time (8:30 a.m. ET). Voting did not start until after the scheduled opening time in some polling stations.

    One polling station in Lagos delayed opening as officials were still setting up after polls were meant to open, a CNN team witnessed. An official urged eager voters to be calm and “treat each other with love” as they continued to wait.

    The same issue dogged several other voting locations, including in northern Kano State and southern Bayelsa State, with no election officials in sight at 8:30 a.m. local time, according to Reuters. In previous elections, voters in some areas have complained that polling stations opened hours late or did not materialize at all.

    Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) officials set up voting materials at a polling station in Ojuelegba, Lagos, on February 25, 2023, before polls opened.

    All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate Bola Tinubu and his wife Oluremi Tinubu arrive to vote at a polling station in Lagos on Saturday during Nigeria's presidential and general election.

    Ballots will be counted at polling places at the close of voting and transmitted electronically in real-time to INEC’s Result Viewing portal (IReV), a first of its kind in Nigeria, the commission tells CNN.

    “With the electronic transmission system (IREV), people will already know the winners before the official announcement is made,” adds Rotimi Oyekanmi, a spokesman for INEC’s chairperson.

    To win, a candidate must garner a sufficient number of ballots to meet the 25% vote spread in 24 of Nigeria’s 36 states. In the absence of this, a second round run-off between the top two candidates will be held within 21 days.

    Eighteen candidates are on the ballot for Nigeria’s top, but three are leading the race for the popular vote, according to pre-election surveys.

    One of the key contenders is Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the candidate of term-limited President Muhammadu Buhari’s party, the All Progressives Congress (APC). Another is the main opposition leader and former vice president Atiku Abubakar, of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). And third strong contender, Peter Obi, is running under the lesser known Labour Party, and altered early predictions of the presidential vote, which has typically been two-horse races between the ruling and opposition parties.

    Seventy-year-old Tinubu, 70, is a former governor of Nigeria’s wealthy Lagos State, who wields significant influence in the southwestern region where he is acclaimed as a political godfather and kingmaker.

    He boasts of aiding the election of Buhari to the presidency and declares it is now his turn to lead the country.

    Candidate of the opposition party PDP Abubakar, 76, is a former Nigerian vice president and a staunch capitalist who made his fortune investing in various sectors in the country.

    Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Peter Obi, and Atiku Abubakar

    Here’s what to know about Nigeria’s presidential election

    Abubakar’s presidential bid (his sixth attempt) had fueled concern that it might usurp an unofficial arrangement to rotate the presidency between Nigeria’s northern and southern regions, since he is from the same northern region as the outgoing leader, Buhari.

    Labor Party’s Obi is a two-time former governor of southeastern Anambra State and has been touted as a credible alternative to the two major candidates by his hordes of supporters, mostly young Nigerians who call themselves ‘Obidients.’

    Obi is also the only Christian among the leading candidates. His southeastern region has yet to produce a president or vice president since Nigeria returned to civil rule in 1999.

    Labour Party presidential candidate Peter Obi (C) talks to the media at outside a polling station in Amatutu in western Anambra State on Saturday.

    The ruling party’s Tinubu, from the religiously mixed southwestern part of the country, is a Muslim and also chose a Muslim running mate, despite the country’s unofficial tradition of mixed-faith presidential tickets.

    All top three candidates are confident they can turn Nigeria’s fortunes around if voted into power, as the country battles myriad economic and security problems that range from fuel and cash shortages to rising terror attacks, high inflation, and a plummeting local currency.

    One voter, Wandu, told CNN’s Larry Madowo in Lagos on Saturday that the most important issue is security: “We need someone that has a hold and an understanding of the security challenges that we have. The economy is in free fall. We need someone that has a fair understanding of what we need to be better.”

    A voter casts her ballot at a polling station in Amatutu in western Anambra State on Saturday.

    Nigeria’s security forces have mobilized personnel to ensure hitch-free electioneering across the country.

    The run-up to the polls has been fraught with violence that stemmed from protests against unpopular government policies and lethal attacks by armed criminal gangs.

    On Wednesday, a senatorial candidate for the Labour Party, was shot and burned in his campaign vehicle in the country’s southeastern Enugu State, police said.

    Electoral body INEC suspended the election in Enugu East Senatorial District following the death of the candidate, it tweeted on Saturday, adding that the election will now be held on March 11.

    Before the killing, violent protests had erupted across Nigerian states as citizens railed against the scarcity of gasoline in petrol outlets and a shortage of cash that followed a controversial currency redesign.

    INEC hasn’t been spared from the chaos; its facilities have been torched in parts of the country.

    Voting was canceled at more than 200 planned polling units across Nigeria and voters redirected to other poll locations, INEC said, due to security concerns.

    Ahead of the elections, national police ordered a restriction of non-essential vehicular and waterway movements from midnight on election day until 6 p.m., while the country’s immigration service has ordered the closure of Nigeria’s land borders from midnight Saturday until midnight Sunday.

    Weeks before polling day, the service had confiscated over 6000 voter cards from illegal migrants, whom it said had other national documents in their possession.

    A Department of State Services (DSS) official stands guard at a polling station in Amatutu in western Anambra State on Saturday.

    INEC spokesperson Oyekanmi nevertheless insists the poll results will be free and fair.

    “The experience Nigerians will have for the 2023 elections will be far better than previous elections and the integrity (of the polls) will be clear for everyone to see,”Oyekanmi told CNN days before the election.

    Final results are expected to be announced a few days after polling.

    Current President Buhari tweeted on Thursday: “There should be no riots or acts of violence after the announcement of the election results. All grievances, personal or institutional, should be channeled to the relevant Courts.”

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  • Police: 3-year-old son of Nigerian singer Davido has died

    Police: 3-year-old son of Nigerian singer Davido has died

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    ABUJA, Nigeria — The 3-year-old son of Nigerian music star Davido has died at his home in an apparent drowning, police said Tuesday.

    The singer, whose real name is David Adeleke, was not at the home at the time of Ifeanyi’s death Monday night. The child’s mother, Chioma Rowland, was also away, according to Lagos police spokesman Ben Hundeyin.

    Authorities are interviewing eight of the pop star’s employees who were at the Lagos residence, he added.

    Neither parent has spoken publicly about their son’s death, just two weeks after Ifeanyi’s third birthday.

    The global award-winning musician got engaged to Rowland, a popular chef, in 2019. The couple had said recently that they plan to wed next year.

    Lagos Gov, Babajide Sanwo-Olu mourned Ifeanyi’s death, tweeting that “death leaves a heartache no words can heal.”

    Peter Obi, one of the leading contenders in Nigeria’s presidential election next year said he cannot “begin to imagine the pains” both parents are going through.

    “No parents deserve what they are going through right now,” Nigerian pop star Peter Okoye said of Davido and Rowland in an Instagram post.

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  • Nigerian city celebrates its many twins with annual festival

    Nigerian city celebrates its many twins with annual festival

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    IGBO-ORA, Nigeria (AP) — Twins appear to be unusually abundant in Nigeria’s southwestern city of Igbo-Ora.

    Nearly every family here has twins or other multiple births, says local chief Jimoh Titiloye.

    For the past 12 years, the community has organized an annual festival to celebrate twins. This year’s event, held earlier this month, included more than 1,000 pairs of twins and drew participants from as far away as France, organizers said.

    There is no proven scientific explanation for the high rate of twins in Igbo-Ora, a city of at least 200,000 people 135 kilometers (83 miles) south of Nigeria’s largest city, Lagos. But many in Igbo-Ora believe it can be traced to women’s diets. Alake Olawunmi, a mother of twins, attributes it to a local delicacy called amala which is made from yam flour.

    John Ofem, a gynecologist based in the capital, Abuja, says it very well could be “that there are things they eat there that have a high level of certain hormones that now result in what we call multiple ovulation.”

    While that could explain the higher-than-normal rate of fraternal twins in Igbo-Ora, the city also has a significant number of identical twins. Those result instead from a single fertilized egg that divides into two — not because of hyperovulation.

    Taiwo Ojeniyi, a Nigerian student, said he attended the festival with his twin brother “to celebrate the uniqueness” of multiple births.

    “We cherish twins while in some parts of the world, they condemn twins,” he said. “It is a blessing from God.”

    ___

    Asadu reported from Abuja, Nigeria.

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