Nigeria and Brazil Forge Direct Air Links to Slash Travel Time, Boost Trade
- Aviation
- August 17, 2025
- No Comment
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The Federal Government will sign a landmark Bilateral Air Service Agreement (BASA) with Brazil during President Bola Tinubu’s state visit to Brasília on August 24, 2024. This agreement will establish direct flights between Africa’s and South America’s largest economies, fundamentally reshaping transatlantic connectivity. Aviation Minister Festus Keyamo will join President Tinubu who is visiting at the invitation of Brazilian President Luiz Lula da Silva to formalize the agreement following earlier discussions in Japan.
According to Obafemi Bajomo, Special Adviser on Foreign Direct Investments to Minister Keyamo, the finalized documents are ready for exchange after completing all statutory processes. This includes legal clearance by the Federal Ministry of Justice and Federal Executive Council approval. The agreement will authorize Nigerian carriers like Air Peace and Caverton to operate four to five weekly direct flights, significantly reducing travel time and logistics costs while establishing new trade corridors for agricultural products and manufactured goods.
Negotiations began in May 2025 when Minister Keyamo led a Nigerian delegation to Brasília for substantive talks with Brazil’s Minister of Ports and Airports, Silvio Costa Filho. Their discussions established a technical working group that expedited the agreement by bypassing bureaucratic hurdles. Beyond aviation links, the partnership includes plans for technical cooperation on pilot training and airport infrastructure upgrades to strengthen Nigeria’s global aviation position.
The agreement carries profound cultural significance, reconnecting centuries-old ties rooted in Yoruba heritage that will facilitate tourism, festivals, and people-to-people exchanges. Bajomo emphasized that “this agreement reactivates cultural bonds and creates a bridge of opportunity for commerce and shared aspirations,” while Minister Keyamo described Nigeria-Brazil relations as “twins separated at birth, now reunited.” The BASA represents not merely an air transport deal but a generational partnership poised to unlock new economic, cultural, and diplomatic synergies between the two continents.
(NAN)