Tuesday, March 10, 2026
FB X LI YT
YT
The Yoruba Times
Unfolding the Stories of Yoruba, Nigeria and the world in general: Your Trusted Source at The Yoruba Times
Breaking
🇳🇬⚖️ BREAKING: Shariah Council Fires Back at US Lawmakers — “No Power Can Stop Muslims From Practicing Shariah in Nigeria!” BREAKING: Fulani Chiefs Allegedly Funded Yelwata Massacre That Killed Over 200 — Witness Testifies in Court BREAKING: Northern Christian Leaders Drop ‘CAN’ Title, Revive Original ‘NCA’ Name from 1964 to Strengthen Regional Identity 🇺🇸 US Confirms: ISWAP, Boko Haram & Fulani Militants Coordinating to Establish Islamic Caliphate in Nigeria BREAKING: U.S. Congress Issues 11-Point Ultimatum to Nigeria Over Alleged Christian Genocide – Demands Repeal of Sharia, Beef Export Ban, Sanctions BREAKING: US Moves to Block Nigeria’s Beef Exports Over Herdsmen Terrorism — Ghana, SA, Ivory Coast, Senegal Affected BREAKING: Afenifere USA Honours Yoruba Scholar Barakat Fasasi with N1 Million Prize for Groundbreaking Research on Ibadan’s Plank Sellers History BREAKING: “They Can Kill Tinubu Anytime!” — El-Rufai’s Phone Tapping Confession Exposes Presidential Security Nightmare
NEWS

FG Inaugurates Freight Services on Apapa-Ibadan Cargo Rail

Adedoja Adesoji
September 12, 2023 1 min read

Shippers moved 92.28 percent of Nigeria’s total exports and 60.77 percent of imports through the Apapa Port in the first quarter of 2022 (Q1’22).

The Minister of Transportation, Saidu Alkali, inaugurated the first cargo movement from the Lagos-Ibadan rail corridor during his first official tour of the rail corridor on Tuesday.

The minister kicked off the tour at the Ebute Meta station before proceeding to Apapa for the launch, then travelled to Ibadan using the 157 km rail corridor.

Three coaches of 30 wagons were loaded as the inaugural freight movement was kicked off.

The Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) said it would start with three coaches per day with its managing director (MD) noting that the corporation had the capacity to scale up the numbers.

This effort is expected to decongest the Apapa Port as shippers moved 92.28 percent of Nigeria’s total exports and 60.77 percent of imports through the facility in the first quarter of 2022 (Q1’22).