Abdul Samad Rabiu, Chairman of BUA Group and one of Africa’s leading industrialists, has taken delivery of a Bombardier Global 8000 private jet valued at about $81 million (approximately N110 billion at prevailing exchange rates), further expanding his corporate aviation portfolio.
He disclosed the delivery via his Instagram stories, where he expressed gratitude over the latest addition to his fleet.
The aircraft becomes part of BUA Group’s executive aviation assets, which already include a Bombardier Challenger 350 and a Global 6500, reinforcing the conglomerate’s long-haul mobility capacity for international operations.
Rabiu had earlier signed the purchase agreement on December 4, 2025, at BUA’s Dubai office during discussions with senior executives of Bombardier, the Canadian aerospace manufacturer known for its premium business aircraft line.
According to Bombardier specifications, the Global 8000 is designed as a flagship ultra-long-range jet, featuring four cabin living zones, high-speed performance, and extended intercontinental reach. It is capable of approximately 8,000 nautical miles of non-stop flight, enabling direct routes between major global business hubs without refuelling stops.
Industry estimates place annual operating costs for aircraft in this category between $1.8 million and $2.9 million, depending on utilisation levels, crew structure, maintenance cycles, and route complexity.
The acquisition comes amid a period of strong financial performance for Rabiu and his companies, driven largely by listed subsidiaries on the Nigerian Exchange.
Recent rankings from Forbes 2026 place his net worth at about $11.2 billion, reflecting a significant year-on-year increase. Bloomberg’s Billionaires Index also estimates his wealth at roughly $17.5 billion as of June 10, 2026, driven by gains across BUA Cement and BUA Foods.
BUA Cement, Nigeria’s second-largest cement producer, recorded revenues of about N1.2 trillion in 2025, supported by expansion activity and strong investor demand. Its share price appreciation has played a major role in boosting Rabiu’s overall wealth position.
BUA Group, founded by Rabiu, operates across cement manufacturing, food processing, infrastructure, mining, and real estate, and has grown into one of Nigeria’s most diversified industrial conglomerates.
He retains dominant equity positions in key subsidiaries, including an estimated 98% stake in BUA Cement and about 93% in BUA Foods, according to company disclosures.
Three concrete dynamics of the delivery
First, consolidation of executive mobility into a single ultra-long-range platform, reducing dependency on stopover logistics for intercontinental business operations.
Second, signalling of liquidity strength at the level required to absorb not only acquisition cost but also annual operational overheads typical of large-cabin business jets (crew, maintenance, insurance, hangarage, and flight operations).
Third, alignment with a broader pattern among global industrial conglomerates where private aviation assets function as productivity infrastructure rather than lifestyle artefacts—particularly for firms with cross-regional supply chains and investment footprints.

