Welcome to Voice of Nigeria Forum

Customs rakes in ₦1.75trn revenue in 2025 first quarter - Voice of Nigeria Forum

Customs rakes in ₦1.75trn revenue in 2025 first quarter - Buzzyforum

Customs rakes in ₦1.75trn revenue in 2025 first quarter

Profile Picture by BishopNuel at 10:13 pm on April 22, 2025
The Nigeria Customs Service ( NCS) says it collected ₦1.75 trillion revenue in the first quarter of 2025, Comptroller General of Service Wale Adeniyi disclosed this on Tuesday.

Briefing the media on the activities of the Service first quarter of 2025, Adeniyi put duty exemptions on essential food imports between 2024 to the first quarter of 2025 at N95.1 billion. He said the waivers culminated in the current reduction in prices of maize, rice and sorghum being witnessed across the country.

Adeniyi, who said the Service aligned its duty exemptions in support of the federal government’s food security initiatives, noted that the implementation of directives led to a reduction in prices of essential foods.
A breakdown of exemptions granted within the period indicates that in the first quarter of 2025, customs granted ₦45.3 billion (FOB value on maize ), rice (₦751.6 million), and sorghum (₦2.3 billion) which contributed to lowering prices by 12-18% this year. “At the same time, the larger exemptions from 2024 on rice (₦45.9 billion FOB) and wheat (₦2.8 billion) are now showing their full effect after taking time to work through the supply chain. This combination of current and past exemptions helps explain the steady improvement in food affordability.”

“The 2024 measures initially faced delays in reaching markets but eventually increased supplies, while the 2025 waivers provided additional support. Together, these policies have helped stabilise prices by improving availability at different times, showing how customs adjustments can influence food costs both in the short term and over longer periods. The NBS price data reflects this pattern, where the benefits of duty relief emerge gradually but add up to make food more affordable. Results speak louder than plans; faster clearances through B’Odogwu, trusted traders in the AEO program, and measurable food price relief from our exemptions. We’ll keep scaling what works,” Adeniyi said.

The Service in the first quarter of 2025 exceeded its revenue target for the quarter by ₦106.5 billion, achieving 106.47% of its quarterly projection. The Service’s revenue collection for Q1 2025 totalled
₦1.75 trillion. This is against the Service’s annual target of N6.58 trillion; the first quarter’s proportional benchmark stood at ₦1.6 trillion.

“I’m proud to announce we’ve exceeded this target by ₦106.5 billion, achieving 106.47% of our quarterly projection. This outstanding performance represents a substantial 29.96% increase compared to the same period in 2024, where we collected ₦1,347,705,251,658.31.

“Our month-by-month analysis reveals even more encouraging details of this growth trajectory. January’s collection of ₦647,880,245,243.67 not only surpassed its monthly target of ₦548.33 billion by 18.12%, but also showed a remarkable 65.77% year-on-year growth. February’s ₦540,105,439,535.18 exceeded its target by 1.3% while achieving 19.97% growth over 2024 figures. March maintained this positive trend with ₦563,516,567,519.20, delivering 2.7% above target and an 11.22% improvement over March 2024. These results substantiate our effective measures to curb revenue losses while streamlining compliant trade. The 29.96% annual increase and steady monthly collections confirm our strategy is working. We’ll maintain this momentum through rigorous enforcement and strengthened partnerships,” the Customs CG said.

He added that the reviewed quarter (first quarter 2025) saw its officers working tirelessly at borders and ports nationwide which led to real progress on multiple fronts – from increasing revenue collections to intercepting dangerous shipments.

Concerning anti-smuggling/enforcement, the Service recorded 298 seizures with a total Duty Paid Value (DPV) of ₦7,698,557,347.67. The figure represents a significant 78.41% increase compared to the ₦4,315,162,568.35 recorded in Q4 2024, demonstrating heightened operational effectiveness. However, when compared to Q1 2024’s ₦9,587,256,998.05, the Service observed a 19.70% reduction in DPV. Rice seizure remains the most prevalent seized commodity, with 159 cases involving 135,474 bags valued at ₦939,309,698.00. Petroleum products followed with 61 seizures totalling 65,819 litres (₦43,336,160.81 DPV).

“Of particular note were 22 narcotics interceptions valued at ₦730. 7 million, reflecting our intensified focus on combating drug trafficking. The Service also recorded three high-value wildlife product seizures with a remarkable ₦5,653,522,600.00 DPV, underscoring both the lucrative nature of this illegal trade and our commitment to environmental protection under international conventions.



https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/04/customs-rakes-in-%e2%82%a61-75trn-revenue-in-2025-first-quarter/
Topic Image

Comments

No comments yet. Be the first to reply!

( Login to Reply )