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Nigeria’s airport operator eyes over $270m as cashless policy looms

FAANโ€™s cashless shift may boost revenue while reducing aviation-sector leakages.
FAAN cashless policy
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As the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) enforces full cashless operations by February 28, 2026, a deep dive into its revenue history underscores the policyโ€™s potential to drive fiscal gains, amid expert optimism for enhanced transparency. Industry observers highlight how digital payments could curb leakages, bolstering accountability in Nigeriaโ€™s aviation sector.

FAANโ€™s internally generated revenue (IGR) has shown resilience post-pandemic. In 2022, the agency remitted $22.8 million (โ‚ฆ30.53 billion) to the federation account, estimating total IGR at around $71.6 million (โ‚ฆ96 billion) based on a 32% remittance ratio derived from multi-year data.

By 2023, IGR climbed to approximately $126.9 million (โ‚ฆ170 billion), with $116 million (โ‚ฆ155.49 billion) recorded from January to November, reflecting seasonal adjustments and efficiency drives like waste reduction, as noted in Senate briefings. Remittances reached $40.5 million (โ‚ฆ54.3 billion) that year.

The 2024 figures marked a leap to $267.3 million (โ‚ฆ358.2 billion), dominated by Lagos at $191.1 million (โ‚ฆ256.07 billion) 67% and Abuja at $60.6 million (โ‚ฆ81.22 billion), 21.3%, fueled by tariff hikes and prepaid metering for vendors despite infrastructure hurdles requiring $432.8 million (โ‚ฆ580 billion) in investments. Remittances hit $84.2 million (โ‚ฆ112.82 billion), signalling over 100% growth from 2023. The three-year average thus hovers at $155.2 million (โ‚ฆ208 billion), providing a baseline for projections.

PROMOTED

Leveraging the 75% anticipated revenue uplift from the cashless mandate, which digitises gates, parks, lounges, and fees, post-implementation IGR could reach $271.6 million (โ‚ฆ364 billion) annually, assuming seamless rollout.

Chart: Gabon charges the highest air travel tax in Africa at $298, 229 times more than Libyaโ€™s $1.30 fee
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What this means

FAAN Managing Director Olubunmi Kuku emphasised: โ€œWe project a 50 per cent increase in revenue collection at this pilot stage, rising to 75 per cent as we integrate more points, with the goal of tripling revenue within the first year.โ€

Director of Commercial and Business Development Joy Adebola Agunbiade echoed this, stating: โ€œWe project a 50 per cent increase in revenue collection at this pilot stage, rising to 75 per cent as we integrate more points, with the goal of tripling revenue within the first year of full implementation.โ€

Industry observers align with these ambitions. As one analyst noted in sector reports, โ€œStricter enforcement of the Cashless Policy could improve audit trails and real-time revenue tracking. Electronic systems create transparent records that reduce opportunities for diversion or under-reporting.โ€

Another observer highlighted: โ€œStricter enforcement of the policy could help reduce revenue leakages and strengthen accountability in public finance.โ€ Emeka Chukwuka, a digital finance expert, praised the shift on LinkedIn:

โ€œExciting development in Nigeriaโ€™s aviation sector! The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria is fully transitioning to cashless operationsโ€ฆ This will enhance efficiency, security, and passenger experience.โ€

Broader economic studies support the optimism. Researchers like Emmanuel Okeme and Lewis Dormaa Gbarayorks, in analysing Nigeriaโ€™s cashless policies, found that โ€œall cashless transactions showed a noteworthy long-term impact on economic performance,โ€ suggesting FAANโ€™s move could amplify sectoral growth. Another study concluded a โ€œcausal association between implementing a cashless policy and economic growth,โ€ with non-cash instruments positively affecting GDP.

Yet, challenges loom. Analysts warn of digital divides in regional airports, potentially hindering adoption. FAANโ€™s partnership with Paystack for NFC tech aims to mitigate this, aligning with Treasury directives. Under President Tinubuโ€™s agenda, this could set a precedent for MDAs, fostering fiscal modernisation. Stakeholders call for infrastructure upgrades to sustain gains.

NB: For conversions, the current exchange rate is approximately โ‚ฆ1,340 per USD, based on todayโ€™s blended data:

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