Nigeria’s agribusiness sector is undergoing a structural shift that is defined by integrated, industrial-scale agribusiness models capable of competing in a global marketplace. For decades, the industry struggled under the weight of structural inefficiencies like smallholder dominance, inconsistent yields, high post-harvest losses, and limited processing capacity.
Today, Macroeconomic pressures such as foreign exchange scarcity, rising food inflation, and heavydependence on imported raw materials have forced a shift toward large-scale, commercially driven agriculture. At the same time, global supply chain disruptions and climate-related shocks are pushing Nigerian agribusinesses to adopt more resilient, technology-enabled, and integrated operating models.
In the midst of this transformation, a new class of agribusiness operators is emerging. These are companies investing in land consolidation, mechanisation, processing infrastructure, and end-to-end value chain control. These players are shifting the sector away from subsistencefarming to industrial agriculture capable of delivering scale, efficiency, and export potential. Capital markets are also beginning to reward agribusiness models that demonstrate integration, diversification, and long-term profitability. Among this new generation of players, Ellah Lakes Plc (“Ellah Lakes” or “the Company”) stands out as one of the most forward-looking and strategically aligned players.
Beyond a Capital Raise — A Redefinition of What Nigerian Agribusiness Can Become
Ellah Lakes’ recent launch of a landmark capital raise and the listing of additional shares on the Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX) are not routine corporate events; instead, they signal a decisive pivot toward a new kind of agribusiness.
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Across more than 30,000 hectares of land spanning Enugu, Edo, Ekiti, and Ondo States, the Company has built one of the most geographically diversified agricultural footprints in the country. In an environment where climate variability, regional disruptions, and inconsistent production cycles can destabilise output, this type of multi-regional asset base is emerging as a key competitive advantage. This multi-regional footprint is more than geographic spread; it is a risk management strategy, a climate hedge, and an operational stabiliser.
Many Nigerian producers remain heavily dependent on third-party processors, often losing value to supply chain inefficiencies. With the commissioning of its 6-ton-per-hour Crude Palm Oil mill, Ellah Lakes has taken a decisive step toward production autonomy. This shift strengthens margins, provides operational stability, and reduces exposure to the bottlenecks that continue to slow Nigeria’s agricultural industrialisation.
This is the operating model that successful Southeast Asian agribusiness giants (Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand) used to catalyse their transformation decades ago. Nigeria is just beginning this journey, and Ellah Lakes is taking an early lead.
The Company’s multi-crop strategy spanning oil palm, cassava, and livestock (pigs) further underscores its industrial approach. Monoculture is simply too risky in a market defined by volatile commodity cycles. Ellah Lakes’ staggered revenue model provides a diversified earnings base. Oil palm offers long-term annuity-style cash flows; cassava provides shorter-cycle revenue and industrial input opportunities (starch, ethanol, feedstock);and the piggery creates fast-turnover income streams. This revenue model can absorb shocks, maintaining cash flow stability and scaling more predictably.
Strategic Acquisitions That Build an Industrial-Scale Platform
The 2019 reverse acquisition by Telluria Limited laid the foundation for an oil-palm-driven platform, while the acquisition of Agro-Allied Resources & Processing Nigeria Limited (ARPN) will expand its holdings with over 11,700 hectares of cultivated land, 2,093 hectares of cassava plantations, and more than 10,000 hectares available for future development. In a sector where scale is becoming the new currency of competitiveness, Ellah Lakes has positioned itself ahead of the curve.
The Company’s financial strategy has evolved with equal intentionality. The 2023 ₦2.9 billion rights issue and subsequent debt-to-equity conversion provided the balance sheet stability required for expansion. However, the newly launched ₦235 billion capital raise represents a leap into a different operational orbit. This is one of the largest capital raises in Nigeria’s agribusiness history, and its purpose is clear: accelerate expansion, boost processing infrastructure, and drive new acquisitions that could elevate Ellah Lakes into a regional agro-industrial force.
The future belongs to operators that integrate upstream and downstream activities, leverage technology, build large-scale land assets, and adopt capital-intensive models that unlock industrial-grade productivity. If Nigeria is to close its supply gaps, reduce imports, and build globally competitive value chains, such players will be the ones driving the transition.
Ellah Lakes is emerging as one of those players. By combining land scale, integrated processing, and a diversified crop strategy, the Company is positioning itself as a future agro-industrial powerhouse on the NGX. The Company’s renewed access to capital markets also gives it the leverage to accelerate growth, deepen regional penetration, and potentially expand beyond Nigeria’s borders into West Africa’s underserved agricultural corridors.


























