Tinubu Unleashes $21.5bn Infrastructure Tsunami — SE Rail, Power & Ports Get Lion’s Share.
Abuja, Nigeria — July 23, 2025
The Nigerian Senate has officially approved a six-year external borrowing plan submitted by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, which totals $21.5 billion, €2.1 billion, and ¥150 billion (Japanese Yen). The funds are earmarked for major infrastructure projects across transportation, power, security, and youth empowerment.
The borrowing plan is expected to span several fiscal years and not solely the 2025 budget cycle, according to Senator Sani Musa. He assured that Nigeria remains consistent in servicing its existing debts, dismissing concerns of default.
Major Projects Under the Loan Plan
A significant portion of the funds will be channeled into transport infrastructure, especially rail and road networks. Key projects include:
Eastern Rail Line (Port Harcourt–Maiduguri) – $3 billion
Lagos Green Line Rail Project – $2 billion
Kaduna–Kano Rolling Stock Procurement – $596.2 million
Akwanga–Jos–Bauchi–Gombe Dual Carriageway – $1.33 billion
Lekki Access Road (7th Axial Road Project) – $250 million
Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway – $700 million
Power Sector Upgrades
To address Nigeria’s long-standing energy challenges, funds will also support electricity generation and distribution:
Eastern Super Grid – $1.14 billion
Western Super Grid – $1.07 billion
Presidential Power Initiative (Electricity Distribution) – $100 million
High-Voltage Lines for Zungeru Hydropower Evacuation – $116 million
Port and Border Security
Modernisation of Eastern Ports – $508 million
Nigeria Border Security Project (Phase II) – $540 million
Health, Climate & Youth Projects
Several projects are focused on social investment and regional development:
Youth Entrepreneurship Investment Programme (AfDB) – $100 million
Sokoto State Health Infrastructure Project (AfDB) – $45 million
Yobe State Integrated Climate Action Project (AfDB) – $50 million
Emergency Food Security Programme (JICA) – ¥150 billion
Political Reactions
The loan plan has drawn mixed reactions across the political spectrum. However, it received praise from Senator Victor Umeh (Anambra Central), who hailed the $3 billion earmarked for the Eastern Rail Line.
“This is the first time I’ve seen such a commitment to southeastern infrastructure. That alone justifies my full support,” he stated during plenary.
Observers have described the move as a strategic economic masterstroke by President Tinubu, aimed at unlocking long-overdue infrastructure and national integration. Meanwhile, opposition elements—especially from the ADC Coalition—have criticized the plan, calling for transparency and fiscal discipline.
Nonetheless, the Tinubu administration appears resolute in leveraging external financing for national development, as Nigeria looks to modernize its infrastructure backbone over the next six years.
