By Yisa Usman
The Nigeria Procurement Certification Programme (NPCP), administered by the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) with support from the World Bank, represents a strategic policy intervention aimed at professionalising public procurement in Nigeria. Designed as a competency-based certification system, the NPCP establishes a structured pathway for developing procurement officers with the technical expertise, ethical grounding, and leadership capacity required to safeguard public resources and improve service delivery. At its core, the programme aligns academic qualifications, professional experience, structured training, and rigorous assessment into a unified national framework.
The conceptual foundation of the NPCP is closely linked to the Sustainable Procurement, Environmental and Social Standards Enhancement (SPESSE) Programme, a World Bank–supported initiative developed in response to growing national demand for procurement knowledge. A baseline survey conducted under the SPESSE framework revealed substantial demand for procurement education among students, job seekers, and practicing professionals across the public sector, private sector, and non-governmental organisations. The survey projected that demand for structured procurement training would remain significant over a five-year horizon, underscoring the need for a sustainable, institutionalised capacity-building model rather than ad hoc training interventions.
The procurement professionalisation programme was therefore conceived as a long-term investment in human capital, necessitated by the persistent shortage of competent procurement professionals across government establishments. Despite notable efforts by successive Nigerian administrations and international development partners to improve procurement practices, systemic challenges, ranging from skills gaps to weak institutional capacity, have continued to undermine efficiency and value for money. Addressing these challenges requires sustained professionalisation, robust regulatory oversight, and comprehensive capacity development capable of supporting Nigeria’s development aspirations.
The NPCP is organised into four progressive certification tiers, each corresponding to increasing levels of expertise, responsibility, and institutional leadership in public procurement. Tier One, designated as Procurement Associate, serves as the foundational entry point into the profession. It accommodates candidates with diverse educational backgrounds and focuses on introducing core legal, regulatory, and ethical principles, while building essential soft skills such as communication, teamwork, time management, and adherence to professional codes of conduct. This tier aligns with certificate-level international procurement standards.
Tier Two, Procurement Professional, represents the transition to independent practice. At this level, candidates are expected to demonstrate practical procurement experience and enhanced technical competence in areas such as procurement planning, risk management, stakeholder engagement, and contract execution. Emphasis is placed on decision-making, accountability, and results-oriented delivery, reflecting alignment with globally recognised advanced professional standards.
Tier Three, the Advanced Procurement Professional level, targets senior officers and experienced practitioners with strategic responsibilities. Certification at this stage prioritises strategic sourcing, management information systems, leadership, conflict resolution, and stakeholder relationship management. Professionals certified at this tier are expected to play a central role in institutional strengthening, policy implementation, and advisory functions within procurement entities, corresponding with diploma-level global standards.
The apex of the framework, Tier Four, Fellow Procurement Professional, is reserved for highly experienced practitioners with demonstrated leadership capacity. Fellows are expected to lead procurement institutions, oversee complex portfolios, and drive reforms aligned with national development objectives. Competencies at this level include advanced leadership, enforcement of accountability mechanisms, change management, innovation, and promotion of integrity across public institutions and vendor communities.
A defining feature of the NPCP is its rigorous, merit-based certification process. All candidates must first complete a compulsory five-module preliminary examination covering the evolution of procurement in Nigeria, ethics and integrity in strategic sourcing, the Public Procurement Act 2007, category management in contracting, and contemporary procurement challenges. This is immediately followed by a mock assessment designed to prepare candidates for the main tier-placement examination.
Candidates who successfully progress beyond this stage are required to undergo further professional training at World Bank–designated Centres of Excellence, namely Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University, Bauchi; Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria; the Federal University of Technology, Owerri; the University of Agriculture, Makurdi; the University of Benin; and the University of Lagos. These institutions deliver structured procurement training through approved SPESSE tracks, combining theory with intensive practical assignments and examinations. Their role ensures that certification outcomes reflect real-world competence rather than theoretical knowledge alone.
Following training and assessment at the Centres of Excellence, successful candidates are issued certificates, after which the Independent Procurement Certification Board applies an approved assessment matrix to determine final tier placement. Placement decisions integrate academic qualifications, years of experience, training performance, and demonstrated competencies, thereby ensuring transparency, fairness, and consistency in certification outcomes.
A critical policy strength of the NPCP lies in its cost-free design. Fully funded under the SPESSE and World Bank framework, the programme removes financial barriers to professional development and ensures that certification outcomes are driven solely by merit, competence, and performance. This approach reinforces inclusiveness and equity while strengthening public sector capacity at scale.
In governance terms, the NPCP functions as both a professional development mechanism and a regulatory accountability tool. By linking certification to ethical conduct, legal compliance, and personal responsibility, the programme reinforces the principles of economy, efficiency, and effectiveness in public procurement. Certified professionals are empowered to act, but also held personally accountable for their advice and conduct, strengthening institutional integrity and public trust.
The ongoing re-engineering of procurement professionalism under the NPCP is being driven by visionary leadership. Engr. Emeka Ezeh, Chairman of the Independent Procurement Certification Board, brings deep institutional memory and reform experience dating back to the Due Process era, while Dr. Adebowale A. Adedokun, Director-General of the Bureau of Public Procurement and Programme Coordinator of the NPCP, is steering the programme’s operationalisation and reform agenda. Under their stewardship, the NPCP is being repositioned as a cornerstone of procurement reform, transparency, and global best practice in Nigeria.
In conclusion, the Nigeria Procurement Certification Programme represents a landmark institutional reform anchored on global standards, statutory authority, and development-partner support. Through its structured tier framework, rigorous assessment process, deployment of Centres of Excellence, CIPS-aligned standards, and barrier-free access, the NPCP provides a sustainable policy model for building a competent procurement workforce capable of advancing national development and strengthening good governance in Nigeria.
Yisa Usman is a Fellow Procurement Professional (NPCP), Fellow Chartered Accountants (ICAN) and Fellow Chartered Institute of Taxation FCTI.
