A new $500 million World Bank-supported programme is set to target productivity, market access and job creation across selected agricultural value chains in Nigeria, as the country grapples with food inflation, weak farm yields and persistent supply-chain gaps.

Nigeria’s push to strengthen agricultural value chains has received a major boost through the Nigeria Sustainable Agriculture Value Chains for Growth project, known as AGROW, a $500 million programme backed by the World Bank.
Project documents show AGROW is structured as an Investment Project Financing operation and is being implemented by the Federal Government through the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, working with selected states.
The project is designed to support sustainable growth and job creation across selected agricultural value chains. It comes at a time when Nigeria is under pressure to raise productivity, improve storage and processing, widen market access, and reduce the heavy losses that continue to weaken food supply and rural incomes.
World Bank concept documents indicate that the financing is intended to address structural problems that have long constrained agriculture, including low yields, poor access to quality inputs, weak logistics, limited value addition, and barriers between smallholder producers and commercial off-takers.
Early project material points to rice, cocoa, cashew and cassava among the priority value chains under consideration. The broader design also reflects the government’s effort to use agriculture as a platform for jobs, economic diversification and stronger food security.
The financing is not framed as support for farm production alone. Project planning documents show a wider value-chain approach that includes aggregation, storage, processing, market standards, advisory services and stronger institutional support. The design also includes incentives meant to de-risk private sector participation, including credit guarantees and other risk-sharing tools.
That is important in Nigeria’s current context. Agriculture remains one of the country’s largest employers, but the sector continues to face low productivity, weak infrastructure and climate-related shocks. These constraints have fed into food insecurity and kept pressure on household budgets.
For Nigeria, the significance of AGROW lies in whether it can move beyond headline financing and deliver measurable improvements in output, turnover, jobs and market linkages. The project’s stated targets include better jobs in agricultural value chains, stronger food and nutrition security, mobilised private capital and improved turnover among beneficiaries in targeted chains.
The bigger test will be implementation. Large agriculture programmes in Nigeria often struggle at the point of coordination, state-level delivery, farmer access, and monitoring. AGROW’s success will depend on whether the financing reaches productive segments of the chain, strengthens commercial linkages, and avoids becoming another paper-heavy intervention with limited field impact.
Still, the project stands out as one of the clearest current financing signals in Nigerian agriculture. With food prices and farm productivity still central to the national economic debate, value-chain financing of this scale is likely to remain one of the sector’s most closely watched developments in the months ahead.









