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Nigeria, UK Customs Deepen Ties On Trade, Border Management

Both parties had a high-level bilateral meeting held in London under the framework of the Nigeria–United Kingdom Enhanced Trade and Investment Partnership.


The Comptroller-General of Customs, Adewale Adeniyi, and the Head of International Customs and Border Engagement at HMRC, Ms Megan Shaw, at a pre-arrival data exchange framework between their respective digital customs platforms to enhance risk management, improve data reconciliation, and strengthen compliance monitoring.

 

The Nigeria Customs Service and His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs of the United Kingdom have agreed to explore establishing a structured pre-arrival data exchange framework between their respective digital customs platforms.

NCS National Public Relations Officer, Abdullahi Maiwada, disclosed this in a statement obtained by Channels Television on Thursday.

Maiwada, a Deputy Controller of Customs, noted that the move is to enhance risk management, improve data reconciliation, and strengthen compliance monitoring.

According to him, both parties had a high-level bilateral meeting held in London on Wednesday under the framework of the Nigeria–United Kingdom Enhanced Trade and Investment Partnership, on the margins of the State Visit of President Bola Tinubu to the United Kingdom.

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He explained that the visit was also in furtherance of its commitment to enhancing international customs cooperation and advancing trade facilitation.

Comptroller-General of Customs, Adewale Adeniyi, and the Head of International Customs and Border Engagement at HMRC, Ms Megan Shaw, led the bilateral engagement.

“Both administrations acknowledged the existence of some gaps in bilateral trade data, identifying it as a structural issue requiring coordinated resolution. Available statistics indicate that while approximately £504m in UK-origin goods were recorded as imports into Nigeria in 2024, the United Kingdom reported exports to Nigeria valued at approximately £1.7bn for the same period,” the statement read.

Maiwada highlighted that discussions during the meeting centred on advancing customs modernisation, strengthening data transparency in bilateral trade flows, and expanding operational cooperation between both administrations, with a view to improving efficiency and integrity across the Nigeria–United Kingdom trade corridor.

“To address this gap, both parties agreed to explore establishing a structured pre-arrival data exchange framework between their respective digital customs platforms to enhance risk management, improve data reconciliation, and strengthen compliance monitoring,” he said.

Speaking during the visit, the Comptroller-General of Customs, Adewale Adeniyi, emphasised that effective customs cooperation remains a critical enabler of economic growth and sustainable trade development.

Adeniyi stated that Nigeria and the United Kingdom share a long-standing economic relationship supported by active trade across key sectors, including industrial goods, agriculture, energy, and consumer products.

According to him, the customs administrations serve as the frontline institutions responsible for ensuring that trade flows between both countries are transparent, secure, and mutually beneficial.

The engagement provided an opportunity for both administrations to present their respective customs modernisation programmes, including the United Kingdom’s advancements in artificial intelligence-driven trade tools, digital verification systems, and real-time analytics capabilities.rf

The discussions underscored the importance of deeper collaboration in technology deployment and digital border management, while also producing key outcomes, including the development of a Customs Mutual Administrative Assistance Framework, the commencement of technical scoping for capacity-building and knowledge exchange, and the establishment of a joint technical engagement mechanism under the ETIP framework.