Nigeria is set to take center stage in the global ceramics industry with the launching of the maiden Nigeria’s Ceramic Investment Summit & Product Exhibition this year known as (NCISPE 2026) to boost sector’s growth and nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
Indeed, the NCISPE 2026 exhibition scheduled to hold on June 23 to 25 in Lagos, is a renewed hope landmark international platform dedicated to unlocking Africa’s fastest-growing ceramic market.
The event offers distributors a unique opportunity to connect with global exhibitors while gaining a definitive competitive edge in 2026 and beyond; gain direct access to the industry’s most influential manufacturers, experts, and trendsetters.
The Summit will convene global ceramic manufacturers, technology providers, investors, policymakers, developers, and supply-chain leaders from Africa, China, India, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Türkiye, and beyond to explore Nigeria’s vast opportunities across ceramic tiles, sanitary ware, tableware, technical ceramics, raw materials, and allied manufacturing.
The maiden edition themed:
“Where investment, industry, policy, and talent converge for measurable returns,” is targeted to deliver measurable commercial, institutional, and career returns through structured engagement across Nigeria’s ceramic and construction value chain.
In a press statement, Prof. Patrick Oaikhinan, a ceramic engineer, an academic, and the summit director, explained that as Africa’s largest economy and most populous nation, Nigeria offers exceptional fundamentals for ceramic manufacturing and trade.
Oaikhinan, who is also the convener of the
NCISPE 2026 exhibition said the Summit was designed as a deal-making and partnership-driven event, combining high-level policy dialogue with practical investment engagement.
He lamented that though the country has technical knowledge and the market, yet many manufacturers are struggling with high energy costs, limited access to finance, imported products competing aggressively, and supply chains that are not well connected.
The Summit’s Director, who has spent years working in manufacturing and studying how Nigeria can move from being a country that consumes to a country that produces, noted that the essence of the summit was to deliver measurable commercial, institutional, and career returns through structured engagement across Nigeria’s ceramic and construction value chain.
“Ceramics sit at the intersection of housing, infrastructure, manufacturing, and industrial energy demand. It affects construction costs, local manufacturing capacity, jobs, and foreign exchange usage. “By strengthening the ceramic value chain, you directly impact housing affordability,
industrialization, and employment.”
He said NCISPE was a business outcome platform, not a ceremonial conference.
“At a time when Nigeria must build faster, produce locally, and attract investment, platforms like NCISPE are essential.
“We cannot afford conversations without conversion. This summit is about execution – bringing the right people into one room to unlock real economic value. Execution
delivers scalable industries, sustainable employment, and export growth.”
The professor said as we look ahead to NCISPE 2026, it is important to be clear about what this renewed hope platform represents.
“NCISPE is not an industry gathering in the traditional sense. It is a deal-flow and cost-reduction platform deliberately designed to convert conversations into contracts, relationships into supply agreements, and policy alignment into bankable projects.
Key features of the summit include global investment and policy dialogues; Technology and machinery showcase; Product exhibitions and live demonstrations; Raw materials and beneficiation sessions; SME and local manufacturer integration; B2B, B2G, and investor matchmaking forums.
Oaikhinan said the summit will align with Nigeria’s renewed hope for a national industrialization agenda, export diversification drive, and regional trade ambitions, positioning the country as a competitive manufacturing and export hub for ceramics in Africa.
The summit will attract individuals from diverse backgrounds, industries, and specialties, all coming together with a shared passion for ceramic products. The summit Director is optimistic that the exhibition hall will be alive with opportunities, where every conversation has the potential to spark new ideas, collaborations, and partnerships.
“At NCISPE 2026, connections are more than chance encounters – they are the building blocks of future growth,” the exhibition convener disclosed.
Expected to participate are international and indigenous ceramic manufacturers; Machinery, kiln, and technology suppliers; Raw material processors and miners; Architects, real estate developers and infrastructure firms; Exporters, distributors, and trade financiers; Government ministries, agencies, and regulators; Development finance institutions and private equity investors; Universities and research institutions.
Speaking further, he pointed out that the summit is a unique opportunity to enter, expand, or deepen engagement in one of the world’s most promising emerging ceramic markets. “Bring clients along for personalized tours of the latest ceramic products to touch, feel, and compare the newest and most luxurious trends on display by global exhibitors.
“Source breathtaking products for your next project to deliver quality, durability, luxury, sustainability, and visual appeal to your customer’s demand.
“Discover one-of-a-kind pieces from around the globe. Nigeria is ready. Africa is rising. The ceramic opportunity is now.”
Registration for NCISPE is open, a chance to join industry professionals from around the globe to explore cutting-edge ceramic products, gain valuable insights, and build lasting connections.