BUA Foods Plc, a subsidiary of BUA Group owned by billionaire industrialist, Abdul Samad Rabiu is expanding his food manufacturing operations with the commercial reintroduction of BUA-branded rice into the Nigerian market.
The move comes as Rabiu’s son, Isyaku Khalifa Rabiu assumes responsibility for the group’s global procurement and supply chain operations.
Return of BUA Rice
The commercial reintroduction of BUA Rice follows years of dormancy in the brand’s rice presence in Nigeria.
During that period, the group focused primarily on sugar, flour, pasta, and edible oils under the BUA Foods umbrella.
The return of BUA Rice to retail shelves has drawn reactions from Nigerian consumers and social media users who welcomed the development as evidence that Rabiu’s group is extending its food price stabilisation efforts beyond wheat and sugar into the staple grain that sits at the centre of most Nigerian household diets.
Leadership transition
The relaunch has been driven partly by the appointment of Khalifa, a Georgetown University McDonough School of Business graduate, as Chief Officer of Global Procurement and Strategic Operations at BUA Foods with effect from January 29, 2026.
According to BUA Foods’ disclosure, Khalifa was centrally involved in the commercial re-entry of BUA Rice Mills, overseeing efforts that culminated in the successful reintroduction of BUA-branded rice products into the Nigerian market.
He also established a 40-metric-tonne-per-hour animal feed mill and deployed proprietary digital platforms to improve visibility into consumer behaviour, sales performance, and distribution across BUA Foods’ operations.
Market context and food prices
The timing aligns with Nigeria’s consumption patterns.
Rice is the single most consumed staple in Nigeria, with annual demand running into tens of millions of metric tonnes.
Billionaire Rabiu has spoken about the role BUA has played in domestic food prices through tariff waivers and importation of key staples.
In May 2025, Rabiu told journalists after a meeting with President Bola Tinubu at the Presidential Villa that BUA had imported significant quantities of rice, wheat, and maize under the government’s duty-free food import policy and used those imports to impact prices.
He reported that rice, which had been trading at approximately N110,000 per 50-kilogram bag, had fallen to approximately N60,000 as a result of BUA’s import volumes hitting the market, and added that food prices would continue to come down.
BUA Foods performance
BUA Foods reported full-year 2025 revenue of N1.77 trillion, a 16 percent increase, with profit after tax rising 14 percent and dividend per share climbing 115 percent to N28, its biggest payout since listing on the Nigerian Exchange in December 2021.
In the first quarter of 2026, profit after tax rose a further 14 percent to N142.32 billion with operating profit up 11 percent to N154.6 billion.
The results contributed to a rise in Rabiu’s net worth from approximately $10.7 billion at the start of the year to a current estimate of approximately $19.7 billion on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, placing him as Africa’s second-richest individual behind Aliko Dangote and ahead of South Africa’s Johann Rupert during the year.
Shareholder and management remarks
Nigerian shareholders have commented on the group’s governance record.
At BUA Foods’ 2026 annual general meeting, the Association for the Advancement of Rights of Nigerian Shareholders highlighted Rabiu’s decision to gift approximately N30 billion to 510 long-serving BUA employees as evidence of a business translating private enterprise into measurable public benefit.
BUA Foods Managing Director Ayodele Abioye said demand signals across the group’s core segments, including sugar, flour, pasta, and rice, remain strong and that the company is well positioned to sustain momentum through 2026.
Generational transition and supply chain focus
Khalifa’s appointment signals a deliberate generational transition within the BUA Foods leadership structure, embedding family ownership into operational management at a senior level as the group enters what Abioye has described as a phase of scaled and disciplined growth following a period of business consolidation.
The combination of the BUA Rice relaunch and Khalifa’s procurement mandate positions the group to compete on brand recognition, supply chain efficiency, and cost optimisation at a time when food security remains one of Nigeria’s key economic priorities.


