By Douglas Maha, with agency reports

Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation, is also home to some of the continent’s wealthiest individuals. Their fortunes span oil and gas, cement, finance, telecoms, manufacturing, aviation, and technology. A closer look at these billionaires reveals how geography shapes industry dominance.

The North: Cement and Oil Dominance

  • Aliko Dangote (Kano) — $24.8B — Cement, sugar, salt, refinery
  • Abdulsamad Rabiu (Kano) — $7.9B — Cement, sugar, food (BUA Group)
  • Mohammed Indimi (Borno) — ~$1.3B — Oil exploration
  • Sayyu Dantata (Kano) — ~$1B — Oil trading
  • Sani Bello Family (Niger State) — ~$1B+ — Oil, telecom

The North boasts Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, whose empire spans cement, sugar, salt, and the Dangote Refinery. Abdulsamad Rabiu of BUA Group also dominates cement and sugar. Other northern billionaires, including Indimi, Dantata, and the Sani Bello family, focus on oil and telecoms, reflecting the region’s heavy industry and petroleum wealth.

The South-West: Oil, Telecoms, and Finance

  • Mike Adenuga (Oyo) — $6.5B — Telecom (Globacom), oil (Conoil)
  • Femi Otedola (Lagos) — $1.6B — Energy, oil trading
  • Folorunsho Alakija (Lagos) — $1.2B+ — Oil
  • Oba Otudeko (Oyo) — $1B+ — Diversified (Honeywell Group)
  • Tunde Folawiyo (Lagos) — ~$1B — Shipping, energy, finance
  • Adedeji Adeleke (Osun) — ~$900M–1B — Real estate, education
  • Samuel Adedoyin (Kwara/Ondo) — ~$800M–1B — Finance, industry
  • Jimoh Ibrahim (Ondo) — ~$800M–1B — Oil, insurance, hospitality

South-West billionaires reflect Nigeria’s old-money conglomerates. Mike Adenuga thrives in telecom and oil, while Femi Otedola and Folorunsho Alakija focus on energy. Other notable names like Oba Otudeko, Tunde Folawiyo, and Adedeji Adeleke showcase the region’s mix of oil wealth, banking, and diversified family empires.

The South-East: Manufacturing, Aviation, and Entrepreneurship

  • Cletus Ibeto (Anambra) — $3B — Auto parts, cement
  • Innocent Ifediaso Chukwuma (Anambra) — $2B — Automobiles
  • Allen Onyema (Anambra) — ~$2B — Aviation (Air Peace)
  • Cosmas Maduka (Anambra) — ~$1.5B — Automobiles, agriculture
  • Arthur Eze (Imo/Anambra) — $1B+ — Oil
  • Emeka Offor (Anambra) — ~$1B — Oil & gas
  • Orji Uzor Kalu (Abia) — ~$800M–1B — Logistics, media

The South-East is Nigeria’s hub of homegrown industrialists. Ibeto Group and Innoson Motors reflect local manufacturing prowess, while Air Peace dominates aviation. Entrepreneurs like Cosmas Maduka, Arthur Eze, and Emeka Offor show the region’s strength in automobiles, agriculture, and oil.

The South-South: Oil and Finance Powerhouses

  • Tony Elumelu (Delta) — $2.15B — Banking (UBA), energy
  • Benedict Peters (Delta) — ~$1B+ — Oil & gas (Aiteo)
  • Jim Ovia (Lagos) — $1B+ — Banking (Zenith Bank)
  • Gabriel Ogbechie (Delta) — ~$1B — Oil downstream
  • Michael Ibru Family (Delta) — ~$1B+ — Fisheries, shipping, real estate
  • E.K. Clark Family (Delta) — ~$800M–1B — Oil, real estate

The Niger Delta’s billionaires have built fortunes largely from petroleum and finance. Tony Elumelu leads in banking and energy, while Benedict Peters and Gabriel Ogbechie dominate oil. The Ibru and Clark families highlight diversification into shipping, fisheries, and property.

The Diaspora: Tech Innovators
A growing group of Nigerian-born billionaires are making waves globally in technology. Tope Awotona (Calendly) and Tom Ilube (tech, data, education) exemplify the global reach of Nigerian talent.

Industry Breakdown

  • Oil & Gas / Energy: 11 billionaires — largest source of wealth
  • Cement & Manufacturing: 4 billionaires — led by Dangote and Rabiu
  • Telecoms & Technology: 3 billionaires — including Adenuga and diaspora tech leaders
  • Banking & Finance: 3 billionaires — Tony Elumelu, Jim Ovia
  • Conglomerates / Diversified holdings: 5 billionaires — Oba Otudeko, Adedeji Adeleke
  • Aviation & Transport: 2 billionaires — Allen Onyema, Cosmas Maduka

Nigeria’s billionaire class illustrates the country’s industrial diversity and regional economic strengths, from the North’s cement and oil giants to the South-East’s entrepreneurial manufacturing leaders, and the South-South’s oil and finance titans.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *