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FATF grey list exit, game-changer for infrastructure financing in Nigeria: ICRC 

Nigeria’s removal from the Financial Action Task Force grey list is a significant milestone that strengthens the country’s financial credibility.

• October 31, 2025
EFCC chairman, Ola Olukoyede (credit: EFCC)
EFCC chairman, Ola Olukoyede (credit: EFCC)

Nigeria’s removal from the Financial Action Task Force grey list is a significant milestone that strengthens the country’s financial credibility.

Jobson Ewalefoh, the director-general of the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC), said this in a statement on Friday.

Mr Ewalefoh said the removal also repositions Nigeria as one of Africa’s most attractive destinations for investment.

He said the FATF grey list identifies countries with gaps in anti-money laundering and financial transparency controls.

Mr Ewalefoh said exiting the list signalled improved financial governance, reduced perceived investment risk, and reassured global investors of Nigeria’s commitment to international financial standards.

The director-general stated that the decision reflected the economic stability and reforms being implemented under the leadership of President Bola Tinubu.

He also acknowledged the role of key institutions, such as the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit, the Central Bank of Nigeria, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Ministries of Finance and Justice, in strengthening the compliance framework and achieving this feat.

According to Mr Ewalefoh, the delisting is expected to trigger a renewed influx of private capital into Nigeria’s infrastructure space, particularly in efforts to close the country’s well-documented infrastructure financing gap.

“Nigeria now carries a cleaner financial risk profile. This means lower risk premiums, easier cross-border transactions, and stronger investor confidence. For us at the ICRC, this directly supports our mission to attract innovative financing that will help bridge Nigeria’s infrastructure gap.

“Nigeria’s clean financial bill means lower risk premiums, smoother cross-border transactions, and renewed investor confidence. It directly strengthens our mission at ICRC to attract innovative financing that bridges Nigeria’s infrastructure gap,” he said.

The director-general stated that Nigeria’s infrastructure deficit, estimated at over $2.3 trillion, requires a sustained annual investment of about $100 billion until 2043.

He noted that renewed investor confidence after the FATF delisting will accelerate efforts to close the gap through well-structured public-private partnerships and private sector financing models.

“The ICRC believes this milestone will serve as a magnet for institutional investors, impact funds, and global financiers seeking credible, transparent, and rewarding investment opportunities in Nigeria’s infrastructure space,” he said.

Mr Ewalefoh said that since assuming office, Mr Tinubu’s policy direction had brought about the repositioning of the ICRC for efficiency and impact.

“Under this leadership, the ICRC has streamlined PPP processes to fast-track project delivery and secured and implemented Presidential approval for new project approval thresholds of N20 billion and N10 billion for MDAs to accelerate smaller projects. The commission has also issued a comprehensive regulatory framework providing clear, step-by-step guidelines from project conception to hand-back,” he stated.

He called on local and international investors to seize the opportunity to partner with the Nigerian government in developing key infrastructure projects in transportation, power, water, healthcare, and technology.

“Nigeria is open for business like never before. With FATF’s delisting and our strengthened PPP framework, the stage is set for a new wave of infrastructure investment that will redefine Nigeria’s economic landscape,” Mr Ewalefoh said.

(NAN)

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