A new report by Corporate Accountability and Public
Participation Africa (CAPPA) has exposed the tactics used by food corporations
to promote ultra-processed foods in Nigeria, contributing to the rise of
non-communicable diseases (NCDs).
The report, “Junk on Our Plates,” highlights how
corporations employ aggressive marketing strategies, cultural co-optation, and
celebrity endorsements to target children, youth, and low-income communities.
These tactics have entrenched unhealthy foods in
Nigeria’s food environment, undermining public health policies and straining
the healthcare system.
Key findings show that Corporations use extensive
advertising and pricing strategies to influence food culture and dietary
habits.
Children, youth, and low-income communities are
specifically targeted to drive sales of ultra-processed foods.
Corporations use misleading , deceptive labelling to
promote unhealthy products.
Also the consumption of ultra-processed foods
contributes to the rise of NCDs, posing a significant burden on Nigeria’s
healthcare system.
The report acknowledges the Nigerian government’s
efforts to address the issue, including the introduction of a Sugar-Sweetened
Beverage Tax.
CAPPA called for further action to protect public
health and promote healthy eating habits.
CAPPA acknowledged the Nigerian government’s “bold
steps” to confront the challenge by, for example, introducing the
Sugar-Sweetened Beverage (SSB) Tax of N10 per litre on SSBs aimed at
discouraging their excessive consumption and reducing the risk of diet-related
diseases.
It noted further that in 2023, the National Agency for
Food and Drug Administration Control (NAFDAC) followed up with regulations on
transfats and pre-packaged food labelling, while in March 2025, the government
launched the National Guideline for Sodium Reduction, a strategic policy meant
to tackle the excessive salt content in packaged foods, a major driver of high
blood pressure and heart disease in the country.
“All of these are good steps, Akinbode Oluwafemi,
CAPPA’s Executive Director said, but noted that “The food and beverage industry
continues to exploit loopholes. They use covert marketing, target children, and
take advantage of weak enforcement of existing regulations to flood the market
with unhealthy products — tactics reminiscent of the deadly strategies long
used by the tobacco industry. In some cases, they also take advantage of weak
border controls and ignore product standards altogether.”
CAPPA warned that the widespread promotion of these
foods, high in saturated fats, salt, and sugar (HFSS), is increasingly
redefining global dietary patterns and impacting public health.
It added that as HFSS foods become dominant in markets
worldwide, “non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as obesity, diabetes, and
cardiovascular conditions linked to their excessive consumption have also
risen, highlighting the need for stronger public health interventions to
balance the food industry’s influence with consumer well-being.”
Raising the alarm, Oluwafemi said: “These tactics
undermine existing public health policies,” adding that the industry takes
advantage of policy gaps to create an illusion of choice, “while denying people
the right to accurate information and healthier options.”
The report made several recommendations, including a
call for “stronger rules on marketing, particularly to children.”
Oluwafemi added: “We need clear and readable
front-of-pack warning labels on processed foods. We need limits on salt and
sugar content. And we need public awareness campaigns and food policymaking
that are state-led, free from corporate sponsorship or influence.”
Other recommendations include strengthening
regulations on the marketing of unhealthy foods, particularly to children;
increasing Nigeria’s SSB tax from N10 to N130 to make sugary beverages less
cost-attractive; and implementing national sodium reduction programs.
“Nigeria can take impactful steps toward promoting
healthier dietary habits, reducing the crippling burden of non-communicable
diseases and safeguarding the well-being of its population,” he added.
Corroborating him, CAPPA’s Assistant Executive
Director Zikora Ibeh added: “We have discovered that the food environment in
Nigeria these days is changing but for the worse. Increasingly, we are
consuming items that are unhealthy. We are taking too much salt, sugar, fat and
too much processed items that are harmful.
“Nobody is saying these corporations should be shut
down. We’re saying that government needs to step up enforcement and regulations
on these products so that people look at products and clearly understand
immediately what is bad for eating and how much they are not supposed to
consume.”
She urged Nigeria to “also invest in food systems that
prioritise the health of its people over the profit margins of multinationals.
This means direct public investment in local food production, expansion of
agroecological farming systems, and a reversal of trade policies that allow
unhealthy foreign products to flood the market.”
Humphrey Ukeaja, Industry Monitoring Officer CAPPA,
said the report established the “ongoing trend of false narratives and the
tactics of intentional misinformation deployed by the food and beverage
industry in Nigeria to promote unhealthy diets.
“These strategies, including extensive advertising,
exploitation of cultural trends, and strategic pricing, contribute to the
increased consumption of calorie-dense, nutrient-poor foods, driving a rise in
non-communicable diseases (NCDs).
“In Nigeria, the prevalence of NCDs has risen sharply
over the past decades with these diseases accounting for at least 30 per cent
of all deaths annually, and the urgency for effective policy interventions has
never been greater.”
Harping on the need to protect children from the
industry, CAPPA’s Programme Officer SSB Tax Campaign Opeyemi Ibitoye, added:
“If there’s a restriction to how these SSB products are marketed, especially to
kids around school, within their schools, this will curb how children request
for most of these drinks and products. It will also promote public health,
which is our target for this advocacy.”
The NGO thanked “the remarkable efforts of its young
advocates under the umbrella of the Healthy Food Policy Youth Vanguard (HFPYV)
and the CAPPA Digital Media Volunteers (CAPPA DMV), who devoted time and
resources to conducting this offline survey.”
It further acknowledged the technical support and
guidance provided by the Global Health Advocacy Incubator (GHAI) team, which
birthed the report.
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