CreditCorp has formally announced that its crucial 10,000 Women in Mobility initiative will be officially launched on December 12, 2025, at Eagle Square in Abuja. The corporation stated that the comprehensive program has been meticulously designed to provide robust support to women whose entire livelihoods are centered around mobility-based work. A key objective is to significantly enhance their access to sustainable financing solutions that can be utilized to efficiently expand and stabilize their vital micro and small businesses within the transport and logistics ecosystem.
The organization further elaborated that this high-profile launch event is being executed through critical collaboration with a consortium of key partners in the mobility and financial service sectors. These partners are collectively dedicated to strengthening the resilience and efficiency of Nigeria’s overarching transport economy. CreditCorp views this initiative as a profound step toward cultivating a more equitable and inclusive mobility sector, particularly by supplying women with the necessary financial instruments, essential mobility assets, and supportive frameworks needed to substantially improve their earning capacity and secure their long-term economic prospects.
The program’s focus is strategically placed on women operating across the entire transport and mobility value chain. This highly important group includes those who rely on movement-based activities such as the operation of motorcycles, tricycles, and vehicles, as well as providing logistics services and other delivery-based enterprises to support their families and grow their ventures. By facilitating structured and affordable access to credit and mobility assets for these entrepreneurs, the initiative is expected to alleviate the substantial financial pressures many face in the informal sector. Simultaneously, this intervention is anticipated to enhance overall productivity, improve the stability of their businesses, and boost sector-wide competitiveness within the Nigerian economy. CreditCorp stressed that the launch perfectly aligns with broader national policy goals to effectively expand consumer credit access, strengthen micro and small enterprises, and actively support women-led businesses that form a crucial segment of Nigeria’s immense informal economy. The corporation projects that the program will powerfully catalyze broader economic participation by women, enabling them to scale their operations, contribute more substantially to community development, and ultimately assume a stronger, more influential role in Nigeria’s transport and logistics value chains.


