By Nafisat Abdulrahman
The Director General and Chief Executive Officer, Raw Materials Research and Development Council (RMRDC), Professor Nnanyelugo Ike-Muonso, has described the policy reforms introduced by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration as strategic interventions capable of repositioning Nigeria’s economy for industrial growth, value addition, and sustainable development.
According to Professor Ike-Muonso, the administration’s focus on local production, research commercialisation, industrial competitiveness, and economic diversification reflects a growing commitment to addressing structural challenges that have historically limited Nigeria’s industrial progress.
He noted that the current policy direction aligns closely with the Council’s mandate of promoting the development and optimal utilisation of Nigeria’s raw materials resources as a foundation for industrialisation.

Since assuming office in May 2023, President Tinubu has introduced a series of reforms under the Renewed Hope Agenda aimed at strengthening economic productivity, improving competitiveness, and reducing the nation’s dependence on imports. Several of these initiatives have direct implications for the raw materials sector and the broader manufacturing industry.
One of the most significant policy directions under the Tinubu administration is the growing emphasis on value addition, particularly through the proposed 30 percent value addition bill requiring a minimum level of local processing before export of raw materials when signed into law.
The 30 percent Value Addition bill is a landmark initiative of the Raw Materials Research and Development Council (RMRDC), driven by the leadership of the DG/CEO, Professor Nnanyelugo Ike-Muonso. It seeks to ensure that at least 30 percent processing is carried out on raw materials before export. The initiative reflects the Council’s long-standing advocacy for value addition as a means of reducing raw material export in its crude form, strengthening local manufacturing, and retaining greater economic value within the country. It is also positioned as part of the broader efforts of the RMRDC to align Nigeria’s raw materials sector with the Renewed Hope industrialisation drive of the Federal Government, while promoting job creation, import substitution, and the development of competitive local industries.
Professor Ike-Muonso described the policy direction as a critical turning point in Nigeria’s industrial evolution, noting that it aligns directly with the mandate of the Raw Materials Research and Development Council to promote optimal utilisation of the nation’s abundant resource base.
He further observed that no economy achieves sustainable industrialisation by exporting raw materials in their crude form while importing finished goods at high cost, stressing that the current reforms are gradually correcting this imbalance.
Another major pillar of the current administration’s economic direction is the renewed emphasis on research commercialisation and innovation driven development.
The recently strengthened push for commercialisation of research outputs is designed to bridge the longstanding gap between laboratories and industries, ensuring that innovations generated within research institutions translate into real economic value.
The Director General of RMRDC noted that this policy shift is fundamental to building an innovation ecosystem capable of supporting industrial scale production, adding that Nigeria must move beyond research for publication to research for production
He explained that the Council is increasingly positioning itself as a bridge between research outputs and industrial application, particularly in areas such as agro processing, mineral beneficiation, and materials development.
The President Tinubu led administration has also strengthened interministerial coordination on research, innovation, and industrial development as part of ongoing efforts to improve policy coherence and enhance the commercialisation of research outputs. The framework, implemented through relevant ministries and agencies, is aimed at fostering closer collaboration between government institutions, research bodies, and industry stakeholders to ensure that innovation translates more effectively into industrial and economic value.
Professor Ike Muonso noted that effective coordination remains essential for industrial transformation, stressing that innovation cannot thrive in silos if it is expected to deliver national economic impact.
He added that strengthened institutional collaboration would significantly enhance the efficiency of resource utilisation and accelerate the commercial deployment of locally developed technologies.
The administration’s continued emphasis on local content development and import substitution has also been identified as a key driver of industrial growth.
These policy directions are designed to encourage domestic production, reduce reliance on imports, and strengthen the competitiveness of local industries.
From the raw materials perspective, this approach creates opportunities for increased utilisation of locally available resources in manufacturing processes, thereby deepening industrial linkages within the economy.
The Director General observed that Nigeria’s industrial future depends on its ability to convert comparative advantage in raw materials into competitive advantage in finished goods production.
Recent policy measures restricting the export of certain strategic raw materials like shea nuts have also been interpreted as part of a broader value retention strategy aimed at strengthening domestic industries.
By prioritising local processing over raw export, the policy is expected to stimulate investment in processing plants, encourage industrial clustering, and enhance Nigeria’s position within global value chains.
According to Professor Ike Muonso, such measures are necessary to protect and deepen the nation’s industrial base while ensuring that raw materials contribute meaningfully to domestic economic growth.
Beyond sector-specific interventions, broader macroeconomic reforms, including foreign exchange adjustments, infrastructure development initiatives, and investment climate reforms, are also contributing to the evolving industrial landscape.
While these reforms have introduced short-term adjustment pressures across sectors, policy analysts argue that they are necessary foundations for long term economic stability and industrial competitiveness.
As Nigeria continues to implement its economic reform agenda, the alignment between national policy direction and institutional mandates such as that of the Raw Materials Research and Development Council presents a significant opportunity for industrial transformation.
The alignment between the Tinubu administration’s reform priorities and the Council’s strategic objectives reflects a shared commitment to building a production driven economy anchored on value addition, innovation, and sustainable utilisation of local resources.
However, the success of these reforms will ultimately depend on effective implementation, institutional coordination, and sustained investment in domestic industrial capacity.
As Professor Ike Muonso noted, Nigeria’s future prosperity lies not in the abundance of its raw materials, but in its ability to transform them into high value industrial products capable of competing globally.






