EU Envoy to Nigeria: Your Leadership Will Shape the World

***Says Europe’s Stability Tied to Africa’s Giant

The European Union (EU) has declared Nigeria’s destiny inseparable from Africa’s rise and Europe’s stability, warning that the choices of today’s leaders and youth will echo far beyond the continent.

Ambassador Gautier Mignot, Head of the EU Delegation to Nigeria and ECOWAS, told a leadership conference in Abuja that “Nigeria is too big to fail, too strategic to ignore. If Nigeria rises, Africa rises. If Nigeria falters, the world feels it.”

Describing Nigeria as Europe’s most trusted partner in Africa, Mignot revealed that the EU accounts for 26 percent of Nigeria’s foreign trade and one-third of its foreign direct investment—making it a bigger economic ally than China or the United States. But, he said, the partnership is now shifting from aid to mutual growth under the EU’s Global Gateway strategy.

Flagship projects already underway include renewable energy for five million homes by 2027, 90,000km of fibre optic rollout to power the digital economy, vaccine production hubs to strengthen health security, and waterway transport in Lagos to ease urban gridlock. “These are not promises,” he stressed. “They are investments in sustainability, jobs and dignity—designed with Nigerians, not just for Nigerians.”

But the envoy’s strongest message was to young Nigerians. He challenged them to confront disinformation, embrace innovation, demand inclusive governance, and see themselves as leaders of change rather than passive observers. “The world does not only need Nigeria as a challenger—it needs Nigeria as a leader,” he declared.

Mignot reminded his audience that Europe’s security is tied to West Africa’s stability: “If things go wrong here, they go wrong for Europe too. That is why the EU will not walk away. We are here for the long haul.”

The remarks, analysts say, signal a bold reset of EU-Nigeria relations at a time when Russia and China are deepening their footprint in the region. For the youth in attendance, however, the message was more personal: Nigeria’s future is theirs to shape.