Nigeria's transport and infrastructure sectors are revealing systemic weaknesses that demand immediate attention from foreign investors and operators. Recent incidents across multiple segments—from fatal road accidents to abandoned government projects and airport security breaches—paint a concerning picture of regulatory oversight, maintenance standards, and project delivery capabilities that directly impact investment viability across the continent's largest economy. The Lagos-Epe Expressway collision that claimed four lives and injured four others exemplifies the broader road safety crisis affecting Nigeria's critical commercial corridors. This expressway serves as a vital artery connecting Lagos's business districts to surrounding economic zones, yet accident frequencies suggest inadequate traffic management protocols, poor road maintenance, and insufficient enforcement of safety standards. For logistics companies, transport operators, and businesses relying on this route, such incidents represent operational risk, liability exposure, and potential supply chain disruptions that must be factored into operational planning and insurance calculations. The situation deteriorates when examining project completion rates. In Nasarawa State, an N865 million (approximately €2.1 million) road infrastructure contract awarded in 2018 remains abandoned, with government funds already disbursed to contractors. This pattern—contractual award followed by payment, then project abandonment—suggests deeper governance and project management issues that extend beyond Nasarawa. Such failures indicate weak oversight
Gateway Intelligence
European logistics, transport, and infrastructure operators entering Nigeria must implement enhanced risk premiums (15-25% additional operational costs) for road-dependent supply chains and conduct forensic due diligence on any government infrastructure partnerships before capital deployment. Conversely, companies offering safety technology, project management software, or maintenance solutions have genuine market entry opportunities addressing these documented system failures—positioning themselves as essential infrastructure modernizers in Africa's largest economy.