The Federal Government has announced plans to transform cooperative societies through digitalisation, with the goal of modernising operations, enhancing transparency in financial reporting, improving record-keeping, and strengthening governance across more than 30,000 registered cooperatives nationwide.
The Minister of State for Agriculture and Food Security, Senator Dr. Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi, made this known in Abuja at a stakeholders’ meeting on the review of the Nigerian Cooperative Societies Act, Cap N98 LFN 2004, noting that digitalisation would drive efficiency, integrity, inclusion, and sustainable growth within the sector.
“Digitalisation will strengthen cooperative institutions, increase trust, improve service delivery, reduce fraud, and unlock new opportunities across the cooperative economy,” Abdullahi stated
He revealed that cooperatives would become a vital instrument for achieving capital mobilisation, inclusive growth, and shared wealth creation when properly structured and supported.
As the driver of the Renewed Hope Cooperative Reform and Revamp Programme (RH-CRRP), Abdullahi emphasised that the programme aligns with President Bola Tinubu’s vision to mobilise all sectors of the economy towards building a One Trillion Dollar Economy by 2030.
The minister described the RH-CRRP as a bold and transformational national framework designed to position cooperatives as a tool for community wealth creation, poverty eradication, and inclusive growth.
He noted that key areas of focus include digital registration, national cooperative database, digital membership identification system, electronic documentation, administration of cooperative societies, filings, and reporting.
Abdullahi maintained that “Cooperatives must no longer be treated as a side activity. They are strategic institutions capable of mobilising capital, empowering citizens, creating jobs, driving agricultural productivity, and strengthening the national economy.”
He acknowledged the efforts of CFN and International IDEA, but emphasised that by mandate and structure, this initiative should be led by the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security (FMAFS), the supervising Ministry responsible for cooperative development in Nigeria.
He revealed that the “Ministry has fixed a date for a broader harmonization process, consolidating the reviewed output from the Stakeholders’Meeting and the Ministry’s parallel work into a final national document.”
According to him: “This document will align with the International Cooperative Alliance – Africa Model Cooperative Law and the Africa Ministerial Declaration and Action Plan, which Nigeria co-signed with other African Ministers in Kenya during the 14th Africa Ministerial Cooperative Conference (AMCCO) in October 2025”.
He further revealed that the IDEA will join the Coalition of the Willing (CoW), a group of credible partners supporting the Renewed Hope Cooperative Reform and Revamp Programme (RH-CRRP).
He lauded the efforts of the critical stakeholders and the Federal Department of Cooperatives.
In her remarks, the President of the Cooperative Federation of Nigeria (CFN), Mrs. Hannatu Mershak, said digitalisation goes beyond innovation for its own sake, describing it as a tool for efficiency, integrity, inclusion, and sustainable growth.
She explained that the initiative would reinforce cooperative institutions, build greater trust, enhance service delivery, curb fraud, and unlock new opportunities across the entire cooperative ecosystem.
