01-13-2026, 09:02 PM
Nigeria’s handling of kola nut is one of its quietest but deepest economic failures.
Here is a tree the world values for its power and utility, yet at home we reduce it to ritual use.
Outside Nigeria, kola nut is not tradition. It is an industrial input.
It goes into:
- Natural caffeine extraction for energy drinks
- Cola flavour concentrates
- Pharmaceutical stimulants and appetite control products
- Herbal formulations and nutraceuticals
- Functional foods designed for focus and endurance
That is why it leaves the country silently.
While kola is being shared on trays during ceremonies, other countries are processing it, standardising it, packaging it, and selling the finished products globally, including back to Nigeria, in foreign currency.
This crop is not demanding. It lives long. It yields for decades. It does not require daily labour.
Plant it once and it can outlive you while producing value.
Yet what do we do?
We sell it unprocessed. Ungraded. Undervalued.
There is no serious value chain. No industrial thinking. No long term vision.
Inside a single kola nut is energy, medicine, flavour, export potential, and generational wealth.
At home, it is dismissed with "make we break am."
Consider the figures many prefer to ignore:
One acre accommodates roughly 40 to 60 kola trees
Fruiting begins in 4 to 7 years, or about 3 years with grafted varieties
Average yield per acre is about 0.2 to 0.3 tonnes annually
Raw kola sells locally at around N1m to N1.2m per tonne
Productive lifespan ranges from 50 to well over 100 years
This is a crop capable of sustaining households, supplying industries, driving exports, and building wealth across generations.
Still, we treat it as a ceremonial afterthought.
That is not a lack of knowledge. It is deliberate self destruction.
Here is a tree the world values for its power and utility, yet at home we reduce it to ritual use.
Outside Nigeria, kola nut is not tradition. It is an industrial input.
It goes into:
- Natural caffeine extraction for energy drinks
- Cola flavour concentrates
- Pharmaceutical stimulants and appetite control products
- Herbal formulations and nutraceuticals
- Functional foods designed for focus and endurance
That is why it leaves the country silently.
While kola is being shared on trays during ceremonies, other countries are processing it, standardising it, packaging it, and selling the finished products globally, including back to Nigeria, in foreign currency.
This crop is not demanding. It lives long. It yields for decades. It does not require daily labour.
Plant it once and it can outlive you while producing value.
Yet what do we do?
We sell it unprocessed. Ungraded. Undervalued.
There is no serious value chain. No industrial thinking. No long term vision.
Inside a single kola nut is energy, medicine, flavour, export potential, and generational wealth.
At home, it is dismissed with "make we break am."
Consider the figures many prefer to ignore:
One acre accommodates roughly 40 to 60 kola trees
Fruiting begins in 4 to 7 years, or about 3 years with grafted varieties
Average yield per acre is about 0.2 to 0.3 tonnes annually
Raw kola sells locally at around N1m to N1.2m per tonne
Productive lifespan ranges from 50 to well over 100 years
This is a crop capable of sustaining households, supplying industries, driving exports, and building wealth across generations.
Still, we treat it as a ceremonial afterthought.
That is not a lack of knowledge. It is deliberate self destruction.


