The border dispute between Niger and Benin has escalated into a full-blown trade paralysis, dealing a severe blow to both economies and raising alarm among regional business stakeholders.
What began as a political fallout following Niger’s July 2023 military coup has now frozen critical export routes, stranded thousands of trucks, and disrupted West Africa’s emerging oil corridor.
At the heart of the crisis is the 2,000-kilometre Chinese-backed pipeline linking Niger’s oilfields to the Beninese port of Sèmè-Kpodji. The facility, operated by the West African Oil Pipeline Company (WAPCO), was intended to launch Niger as a key crude exporter to global markets, particularly China.
However, oil shipments have been suspended since May 2024, after Beninese authorities arrested five Nigerien workers attempting to access the export terminal without proper documentation.
In retaliation, Niger has shut off the pipeline valves, halting oil flow. This marks a significant setback not only for Niamey’s ambitions to transform its economy through petroleum exports but also for Benin, which stands to lose an estimated $31 million annually in transit fees.
Beyond oil, the standoff has choked broader trade across the border. Over 3,000 trucks are reportedly stranded, loaded with goods ranging from foodstuffs to construction materials.
Importers and logistics firms are grappling with spiraling storage fees, spoilage, and rerouting costs. Benin’s Port of Cotonou has seen a decline in customs revenues, while informal trade and smuggling have surged along unregulated river crossings.
For Niger, the blockade has severed a critical economic artery. More than 80% of its imports, rice, electronics, spare parts, typically come through Benin.
Businesses in Niamey and other regions are now facing shortages, price hikes, and delayed shipments, as supply chains reroute through costlier and longer passages via Togo and Nigeria.
“The current border standoff is more than a diplomatic squabble; it’s a commercial emergency,” said Ibrahim Maïna, a Niamey-based economist. “Both countries are bleeding revenue, and the longer it drags on, the more investors will rethink their regional exposure.”
Chinese stakeholders, who financed the $4 billion pipeline infrastructure, are now caught in the geopolitical crossfire. With oil exports halted and the pipeline idle, questions loom over the security of their investment and the project’s long-term viability.
Diplomatic efforts are underway but remain fragile. A delegation of former Beninese leaders visited Niamey in June to ease tensions, and a tripartite commission involving Benin, Niger, and China is reportedly being considered.
ECOWAS has scheduled a summit for early July to address the deadlock and prevent further regional economic fragmentation.
Business leaders across West Africa are watching closely. Many see the standoff as a test of the region’s ability to separate politics from trade, especially at a time when the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) seeks to deepen intra-African commerce.
“Logistics disruptions of this scale echo beyond borders,” noted Florence Oyeniyi, a trade consultant based in Accra. “For investors and partners, the lesson is clear: political stability is not just about governance, it’s also the backbone of reliable business infrastructure.”
As negotiations falter and economic losses mount, the need for a swift and neutral resolution has never been more urgent. For now, trade remains stalled, oil exports are at a standstill, and the economic cost continues to rise with each passing day.