Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison - Business - Nairaland
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| Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by Sam8891(op): 6:20am On Jul 14 |
Cement For ₦15,000 While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper — See The Numbers If you've priced a building project in the last two years, you already know the pain. A bag of cement that should be a routine line item has become a whole budget event. I put together the numbers across 20 African countries. Nigeria is verified from a news report, most others are structural estimates (marked clearly so nobody quotes me wrong). Long read, but worth it. WHAT'S CONFIRMED Nigeria: The Guardian reported on 7 July 2026 that a 50kg bag sells for about ₦15,000, and called it "nearly double Africa's average." At ₦1,382–1,425/$1, that's $10.53–10.85 a bag. And this is happening despite Nigeria having a cement GLUT — we produce more than we use. Tanzania: The Citizen reported manufacturers pushing prices toward Sh18,000/bag (9 July 2026). I couldn't verify a clean USD conversion so treat that one as unverified, roughly $6.50–7.50. Ghana: CemNet reported cement inflation at NEGATIVE 14.5% year on year as of 26 June 2026. No exact cedi price was in that report, so ignore any specific figure floating around — the confirmed part is that prices are falling there, not rising. If Nigeria's price is "nearly double" the continental average, that puts the African average around $5.30–5.70/bag. We're paying roughly 85–105% above that. THE FULL 20-COUNTRY SPREAD (USD per 50kg bag, mid-2026. Only Nigeria is verified, Tanzania's conversion is unverified, everything else below is a structural estimate — not a quoted price.) West Africa - Nigeria — $10.53–10.85 (verified) — producer pricing power, glut notwithstanding - Ghana — inflation −14.5% YoY (unverified price level) — easing - Côte d'Ivoire — $6.50–7.50 (estimate) — coastal hub, branded premium - Senegal — $6.00–7.00 (estimate) — import + regional producers - Cameroon — $6.50–7.50 (estimate) — dual factory + import - Mali/Burkina/Niger — $8.00–10.00 (estimate) — Sahel logistics, import dependence East Africa - Tanzania — $6.50–7.50 (unverified) — manufacturer hikes, clinker import - Kenya — $6.50–7.50 (estimate) — imported inputs, FX pressure - Uganda — $5.50–6.50 (estimate) — landlocked, supplied via neighbours - Ethiopia — $5.00–6.00 (estimate) — state-linked integrated plants - Sudan — $8.00–10.00 (estimate) — conflict-disrupted supply North Africa - Egypt — $4.50–5.50 (estimate) — big local capacity, cheap gas - Algeria — $4.50–5.50 (estimate) — state-linked integrated plants - Morocco — $6.50–7.50 (estimate) — CIMAF hub, coal energy cost - Tunisia — $5.00–6.00 (estimate) — mature local industry Southern Africa - South Africa — $6.00–7.00 (estimate) — mature oligopoly - Zambia — $5.50–6.50 (estimate) — power-cost pressure - Zimbabwe — $7.00–8.50 (estimate) — FX disorder, power shortage - Angola — $5.00–6.00 (estimate) — oil revenue offsets import - Mozambique — $5.50–6.50 (estimate) — coastal, regional trade - DRC — $8.00–9.50 (estimate) — near-landlocked, logistics penalty Continental weighted average is roughly $5.30–6.50/bag. WHY THE PRICES DIFFER SO MUCH 1. Energy — kilns run on coal, petcoke or gas. Algeria and Egypt have cheap domestic energy and sit at the bottom. Anyone importing energy for their kilns pays more, full stop. 2. Local vs imported clinker — an integrated plant grinds its own clinker locally and is shielded from freight shocks. A grinding-only market imports clinker and eats freight and currency risk at the same time. That's a big reason East Africa runs pricier than North Africa. 3. Freight and landlocked penalty — inland transport adds real cost per kilometre. Uganda, Zambia, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, and near-landlocked DRC pay an estimated extra $1–3 a bag just moving it inland. DRC is the worst case on the continent. 4. Exchange rate (and a correction people keep getting wrong) — a lot of people blame the naira. That's not it. The naira was actually appreciating over this period. Nigeria's Works Minister pinned the price on producer pricing power, not currency. FX is a real driver in Zimbabwe and Kenya — it's just misapplied to Nigeria. 5. Producer concentration — fewer producers, higher prices. Nigeria is the textbook case: Dangote and BUA dominate, and we lead the continent on price despite having surplus capacity. South Africa's big three do something similar. Egypt, Algeria and Morocco (where CIMAF forces real competition) price lower because supply is either state-linked or genuinely competitive. THE OWNERSHIP MAP HAS QUIETLY CHANGED Most people are still arguing about this with outdated info. In the last 12 months: - Lafarge Africa — still called a Holcim company by a lot of people — was actually acquired by Huaxin Cement of China in August 2025. - Bamburi Cement (Kenya) went to Amsons Group of Tanzania in 2025–2026. - Dangote Cement is still Dangote Industries. - BUA is still BUA Group. - CIMAF runs out of Morocco across West Africa. - Heidelberg Materials still holds North/Southern Africa footprint. - Suez Cement (Egypt) sits under Titan Cement International. - Mugher (Ethiopia) is state-linked. - PPC and AfriSam (South Africa) remain domestic. - East African Portland Cement has been rising in Tanzania under Edha Nahdi. The old "Holcim and Lafarge run African cement" story is dead. Chinese and Tanzanian capital now sit where European names used to be. WHAT THIS MEANS IF YOU'RE A BUYER OR INVESTOR Shipping finished bags across borders to arbitrage the price gap doesn't work — cement is heavy and low-value (about 1.5 tonnes per cubic metre), and freight plus handling alone eats $0.80–1.50 a bag before inland logistics finish the job. Also correcting myself here — clinker moves across borders not because it's "higher value" than finished cement, it's actually the opposite. Clinker is the lower-value semi-finished input; it trades on bulk and shelf-life, not on value density. The real openings are: clinker/grinding supply into deficient markets, energy-efficient kiln and packing tech into high-margin markets like Nigeria and DRC, agency deals with low-cost producers, and low-carbon certification once the EU's carbon border rules reach construction materials. BOTTOM LINE A documented glut plus a near-double-average retail price is the signature of pricing power, not scarcity. Ghana shows the alternative — prices actually falling because the market structure allows it. Nigeria's price doesn't have to stay this high if competition and distribution improve. It's not the naira. The minister said so, and the currency moved the other way while prices climbed. The real question: in a country that makes more cement than it uses, why is the citizen paying almost double the African average? Sources - Guardian Nigeria, 7 July 2026 — "Despite glut, local cement price nearly doubles Africa's average" - The Citizen (Tanzania), 9 July 2026 — cement prices toward Sh18,000 - CemNet, 26 June 2026 — Ghana cement inflation −14.5% YoY - Billionaires.Africa, 3 June 2026 — Nigeria cement sector Q1 2026 profit - eciks.org — Abdul Samad Rabiu comments on BUA pricing - Exchange rate ₦1,382–1,425/$1, July 2026 If you have the real factory-to-retail landing cost, drop it. If your state buys cheaper or dearer than ₦15k, say so with location. If you're in the industry and can confirm or correct the ownership list, floor is yours. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by Thewrath: 10:15am On Jul 14 |
To be a Nigerian is a full time job on its own! |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by chatinent: 10:16am On Jul 14 |
For people like me that's more interested in the Naira conversion: West Africa 1. Nigeria — ₦14,552–15,461 (verified) — producer pricing power, glut notwithstanding 2. Ghana — inflation −14.5% YoY (unverified price level) — easing 3. Côte d'Ivoire — ₦8,983–10,688 (estimate) — coastal hub, branded premium 4. Senegal — ₦8,292–9,975 (estimate) — import + regional producers 5. Cameroon — ₦8,983–10,688 (estimate) — dual factory + import 6. Mali/Burkina/Niger — ₦11,056–14,250 (estimate) — Sahel logistics, import dependence East Africa 7. Tanzania — ₦8,983–10,688 (unverified) — manufacturer hikes, clinker import 8. Kenya — ₦8,983–10,688 (estimate) — imported inputs, FX pressure 9. Uganda — ₦7,601–9,262 (estimate) — landlocked, supplied via neighbours 10. Ethiopia — ₦6,910–8,550 (estimate) — state-linked integrated plants 11. Sudan — ₦11,056–14,250 (estimate) — conflict-disrupted supply North Africa 12. Egypt — ₦6,219–7,838 (estimate) — big local capacity, cheap gas 13. Algeria — ₦6,219–7,838 (estimate) — state-linked integrated plants 14. Morocco — ₦8,983–10,688 (estimate) — CIMAF hub, coal energy cost 15. Tunisia — ₦6,910–8,550 (estimate) — mature local industry Southern Africa 16. South Africa — ₦8,292–9,975 (estimate) — mature oligopoly 17. Zambia — ₦7,601–9,262 (estimate) — power-cost pressure 18. Zimbabwe — ₦9,674–12,112 (estimate) — FX disorder, power shortage 19. Angola — ₦6,910–8,550 (estimate) — oil revenue offsets import 20. Mozambique — ₦7,601–9,262 (estimate) — coastal, regional trade 21. DRC — ₦11,056–13,538 (estimate) — near-landlocked, logistics penalty Continental weighted average is roughly ₦7,325–9,262. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by bentenny(m): 10:17am On Jul 14*. Modified: 10:39am On Jul 14 |
It's about production cost. The cost of locally producing a single item in Nigeria is extremely expensive compared to other countries around Nigeria. This is why most imported products dominate the Nigerian market despite humongous taxes on such products. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by Kingpele(m): 10:17am On Jul 14 |
The government is still after Peter obi and looting public funds, they're not aware that dangote wants to use Nigerians to overtake Elon mask |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by ccollins(m): 10:17am On Jul 14 |
Terrible wickedness of Nigerians to their fellow Nigerians. It's sad that many Nigerians do not see good things for being called Nigerians apart from the evil tribalism discrimination |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by Gotocourt: 10:18am On Jul 14*. Modified: 11:03am On Jul 14 |
Cameroon — $6.50–7.50 (estimate) — dual factory + import When cement is smuggled across border to Cameroon, through cross rivers (ikom) and Adamawa (mubi) .
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| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by okrikaboi: 10:18am On Jul 14 |
What is the real cost of producing a bag of cement? |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by veekid(m): 10:18am On Jul 14 |
Aiye gbogbo yin ti baje danu |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by cyril10(m): 10:18am On Jul 14 |
Nigeria has become an unfortunate Nation because of the greedy leaders that are leading the Country out of selfishness. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by fineboynl(m): 10:19am On Jul 14*. Modified: 11:08am On Jul 14 |
Dangote cement in Ghana Benin and Togo is cheaper and they are exported from Nigeria. Let me tell you something. Those countries already have a competition market before dangote break in so. In Nigeria we just run things as we like here. Bribing and corruption. Middle men and criminal minded. The exploitation has chain reaction. House are costly now. Rent skyrocket as a result of the chain reaction. The economy is now so choked and destroyed. Capitalist or whatever for one man to inspire to be so rich is not for we Africans. Certain things will not work here. We should look towards china and Indian anything that worked for those countries will work in Nigeria. Wages are very low and we are coping capitalism it's suicidal. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by forgiveness: 10:20am On Jul 14 |
Greed! That's the answer to your question. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by DuttyChuks: 10:21am On Jul 14 |
Dangote and co rubbing the masses massively to enrich himself and his gangs of thieves.. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by themanderon: 10:24am On Jul 14 |
Everything we suffer in Nigeria is as a result of wicked, thoughtless and self serving interests of those in government. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by Sheuns(m): 10:25am On Jul 14 |
Nigeria’s issue may have been caused by heavy and multiple taxation. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by jmoore(m): 10:25am On Jul 14 |
I bought a bag of cement in Aba last two weeks for 12,000 naira. The cost of producing things in Nigeria is expensive. If rice is not being imported, we will buy a bag of rice for 100k. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by CodeTemplar: 10:26am On Jul 14 |
Acts 19:23–41Since the days of Paul, union and cartel have been running things. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by SlavaUkraini: 10:27am On Jul 14 |
Dangote and Co. dey use our head to cash out |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by 1144AK(m): 10:29am On Jul 14 |
Please provide verified amounts instead of estimates everywhere. This will allow for a better comparison. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by greatiyk4u(m): 10:29am On Jul 14 |
Restore IBETO GROUP licence and see prices of cement go down very low |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by iwaeda: 10:32am On Jul 14 |
It is as if God created Nigerians for suffering and exploitation. ![]() |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by DeltaBachelor(m): 10:33am On Jul 14 |
Chai. A whole giANT of Africa ! |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by Basicend: 10:33am On Jul 14 |
A Chinese firm just staked about $1 billion in Lafarge Cement. Chinese are good at crashing prices. Hopefully, once the FDI is fully integrated, they will spoil market for Dangote and BUA by cutting down their end price. Dangote is well know for milking high profit margins from struggling Nigerians. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by Heffalump(m): 10:35am On Jul 14 |
Goverment should open the border to cement importation and see how prices will crumble locally. Nigerian producers and middlemen are very heartless to the core. Very selfish people. : ![]() |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by kgr8mike(m): 10:39am On Jul 14*. Modified: 4:26pm On Jul 14 |
At this rate we are heading no where When Goodluck Jonathan was in Aso Rock, I bought 20 bags of cement N20,000 but today I am buying the same 20 bags at N250,000 in my area. Question is: what changed? Why is Nigeria like this? Why is our country this way? From N20,000 to N250,000 for the same quantity of cement. Oh my God! I will never vote for incompetence. I will never! |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by boxypane: 10:39am On Jul 14 |
Gotocourt:How you buy 15k thing come smuggle am go sell for 8k.... |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by CodeTemplar: 10:39am On Jul 14 |
Heffalump:Evwn the cows of his people milk us for free before we pay for milk. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by gabbasin(m): 10:40am On Jul 14 |
Cement is 13k, still high though. If we are to make comparisons we need not exaggerate prices. How do you want me to believe prices in other climes when you don't get the price here right. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by EdiskyHarry: 10:40am On Jul 14 |
Nigeria is a failed state. The only area Nigeria is currently doing better than other countries is Mass killing of innocent people, corruption, borrowing and kidnapping. |
| Re: Cement Sold For ₦15k While The Rest Of Africa Buys Cheaper (See Price Comparison by Gotocourt: 10:41am On Jul 14 |
boxypane:The write up is not true, just like Dangote fuel is the cheapest in the subregion. |
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