The U.S. Mission says it remains committed to expanding agricultural trade and strengthening commercial ties with Nigerian agribusinesses, supporting private sector growth and deepening economic engagement.
In a statement on Friday in Lagos, the mission said that its support for agricultural trade had been expanded through the revitalisation of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Export Credit Guarantee Programme known as GSM-102.
The GSM-102 programme provides U.S. Government-backed credit guarantees and serves as an important tool for Nigerian banks and importers to use when sourcing essential agricultural inputs from the U.S.
According to the mission, both countries continue to advance a strong and growing economic partnership, with two-way trade in goods and services reaching nearly $15 billion in 2025, up 14 per cent from 2024.
“Agricultural trade has been a major contributor to this expansion, increasing to $764 million – an 84 per cent rise from $415 million in 2024 – and underscoring Nigeria’s importance as a key partner,” the mission said.
The mission said that in a bid to increase awareness and utilisation of the GSM-102 programme in Nigeria, the Foreign Agricultural Service of the U.S. Consulate General hosted a two-day event.
The event brought together officials from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, Nigerian-American Chamber of Commerce, representatives of U.S. agricultural exporters, Nigerian banks, and agricultural importers.
The U.S. Consul-General in Lagos, Mr Rick Swart, described Nigeria as one of his country’s most important agricultural trade partners in Africa.
“Under the Trump administration, we are making a clear shift, from aid to trade.
“We are engaging Nigeria as an outstanding and unique commercial partner.
“That means we are looking for real-world solutions that foster the kind of business environment that enables entrepreneurs, innovators, and investors to build the future of U.S.-Nigeria commerce,” he said.
Demeteris “Dee” Hale, Senior Analyst for the Africa, Middle East, Türkiye, Caucasus, and Central Asia Region at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, said that, at its core, GSM-102 strengthened market confidence.
According to her, this happen by reducing risk, enabling lenders and exporters to move forward with transactions and expand into new opportunities.
“We are here to work with financial institutions, importers, exporters, and other stakeholders across the industry to build stronger linkages and drive increased agricultural trade,” she said.
In late 2025, Nigerian banks regained eligibility to participate in GSM-102.
Since then, credit limits have been extended to selected Nigerian banks, enabling renewed access to U.S.-backed trade financing and contributing to increased bilateral agricultural trade.





































































