Overview
Nigeria’s Third Voluntary National Review (VNR), published in June 2025, presents a comprehensive whole-of-society assessment of the country’s progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) since the adoption of the 2030 Agenda in September 2015. With an estimated population of 232.7 million in 2024 and a GDP of $362.81 billion in 2023, Nigeria has integrated the SDGs into national and sub-national frameworks through initiatives such as the establishment of the Office of the Senior Special Assistant to the President on SDGs (OSSAP-SDGs) in 2016, the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (2017–2020), the Medium-term National Development Plan (2021–2025), and the launch of the Integrated National Financing Framework (INFF) in September 2022. Despite these commitments, the VNR highlights serious development setbacks, including 63% of Nigerians (133 million people) living in multidimensional poverty in 2022, 73.4% of households experiencing food insecurity in 2021, GDP per capita declining from $2,679.6 in 2015 to $1,621.1 in 2023, and 53% of the urban population living in slums in 2023. The report therefore demonstrates that, although progress has been made in areas such as ICT growth, solar energy expansion, and education access, Nigeria remains significantly off-track in achieving the 2030 Agenda.
Recommendations
- Strengthen domestic revenue mobilisation and increase public investment in health, education, and social protection sectors.
- Improve national statistical systems and expand disaggregated SDG data collection for better monitoring and policymaking.
- Expand access to healthcare, especially maternal and child health services, while reducing out-of-pocket expenditure.
- Increase investment in electricity, sanitation, roads, housing, and waste management infrastructure.
- Strengthen enforcement of laws addressing child marriage, trafficking, gender-based violence, and female genital mutilation.
- Accelerate climate adaptation and environmental protection measures, particularly flood management and plastic waste reduction.
- Promote formal employment, youth skills development, and industrialisation to reduce unemployment and informality.
- Strengthen institutional coordination among MDAs and improve accountability in SDG resource allocation.
- Increase awareness and localisation of SDGs at community and local government levels.
- Enhance security and stability in vulnerable regions to support effective SDG implementation.
Conclusion
Nigeria’s Third Voluntary National Review (VNR), published in June 2025, demonstrates the country’s continued commitment to the 2030 Agenda despite significant economic, social, and environmental challenges. Since adopting the SDGs in September 2015 and establishing the Office of the Senior Special Assistant to the President on SDGs (OSSAP-SDGs) in 2016, Nigeria has integrated the SDGs into the Medium-term National Development Plan (2021–2025), Nigeria Agenda 2050, and the Renewed Hope Agenda. Important progress includes the launch of the Integrated National Financing Framework (INFF) in September 2022, an increase in primary school attendance from 60.9% in 2016 to 68.4% in 2021, growth of ICT contribution to GDP to 18% in Q2 2022, expansion of solar capacity from 4 megawatts in 2014 to 112 megawatts in 2023, and recovery of diaspora remittances to $20.16 billion in 2022. However, major challenges remain severe, including 63% of Nigerians (133 million people) living in multidimensional poverty in 2022, food insecurity affecting 73.4% of households in 2021, 25 million people projected to be food insecure in 2024, GDP per capita declining to $1,621.1 in 2023, 53% of the urban population living in slums in 2023, and Nigeria ranking 180 out of 192 countries in climate-response readiness in 2022. Moving forward, Nigeria aims to strengthen data systems, improve financing, deepen stakeholder engagement, expand inclusive economic growth, and accelerate action in health, education, gender equality, infrastructure, and climate resilience through stronger institutional coordination and whole-of-society participation.