By Joy Odor Reportcircle News
In a dramatic show of force and unity, the Director-General of the National Orientation Agency (NOA), Lanre Issa-Onilu, and the Director-General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Mojisola Christianah Adeyeye on Tuesday fired the starting gun on a sweeping nationwide enforcement and awareness campaign banning sachet alcohol and small-volume alcoholic drinks.
At the Flagging-Off of the Joint Nationwide Campaign on the Ban of Sachet Alcoholic Drinks In Collaboration with NAFDAC launched at NOA headquarters in collaboration with the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) in Abuja, signals what officials describe as a decisive blow against underage drinking and the unchecked spread of cheap, high-strength alcohol in Nigeria.
From January 1, 2026, the Federal Government officially banned the production and sale of alcoholic drinks in sachets and in PET or glass bottles below 200 millilitres, a move authorities say is long overdue.
“This is not just a policy announcement. This is a line drawn in the sand,” Issa-Onilu declared.
“For too long, sachet alcohol has been dangerously accessible cheap, portable, and easy to conceal. When affordability meets vulnerability, the damage is devastating.”
He described the ban not as a restriction, but protection, a deliberate public health intervention designed to shield children and vulnerable populations from early exposure to alcohol.
With 818 offices nationwide and structures in all 774 local government areas, NOA has deployed its full grassroots machinery, town halls, motor parks, markets, schools, youth groups and faith-based institutions to drive behavioural change.
“We will take this message to every community, in every language Nigerians understand,” he vowed.
The Agency will also leverage television, radio, digital campaigns and its CLHEEAN App to enable citizens report violations and support enforcement.
But it was the hard statistics unveiled by Prof. Adeyeye sent the strongest warning.
Citing a 2021 national survey conducted in collaboration with the Distillers and Blenders Association of Nigeria, she revealed that 54.3% of minors and underaged children obtain alcohol by themselves.
Even more alarming, nearly half of them purchase drinks in sachets and small PET bottles, the very pack sizes now outlawed.
“In some states, procurement in sachets and small bottles was as high as 68%,” she disclosed.
The study, which surveyed 1,788 respondents across six geo-political zones, found that:
49.9% of minors access alcohol from friends and relatives
45.9% obtain it at social gatherings
21.7% source it directly from parents’ homes
While 63.2% of minors consume alcohol “occasionally,” a disturbing percentage drink daily and some engage in binge drinking, particularly in parts of Gombe, the FCT and Anambra.
Adeyeye warned that underage drinking is not harmless experimentation, it is a ticking public health time bomb.
Alcohol exposure during adolescence can damage the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex the brain centres responsible for memory, learning and impulse control.
Early drinking increases addiction risk by 41% for those who begin before age 15.
“It fuels depression, anxiety, risky sexual behaviour, road crashes, domestic instability and declining academic performance,” she stressed.
Peer pressure remains the biggest driver, accounting for over 50% of cases, followed by parental influence, social media and sheer accessibility of alcohol outlets.
“When products undermine health and safety, the government must act,” Adeyeye said firmly.
The crackdown also enjoys legislative backing.
Resolutions of the Senate in November 2025 urged NAFDAC not to grant further extensions to the moratorium on sachet alcohol, to enforce the ban strictly, and to collaborate with NOA on intensified nationwide sensitization.
Adeyeye made it clear: there will be no retreat.
“Access to alcohol by children can be drastically reduced when small, concealable pack sizes are eliminated,” she said.
Both agency Heads warned distributors and retailers that compliance is mandatory.
Consumer protection, they are stressed, is public protection.
Market responsibility is national responsibility.
Parents were urged to remain vigilant.
Community leaders were called upon to champion awareness.
Citizens were encouraged to refuse patronage of banned products and report violations.
“No nation prospers when its youth are trapped in preventable addiction,” Issa-Onilu declared.
The joint campaign underscores an unprecedented alignment of regulation, consumer protection and national orientation.
NAFDAC regulates. FCCPC enforces market responsibility.
NOA mobilises behavioural change.
Together, they informed that they are closing the loopholes that allowed sachet alcohol to infiltrate homes, streets and school environments.
The message from Abuja was clear and uncompromising: The era of cheap, pocket-sized alcohol targeting Nigeria’s youth is over.
And this time, enforcement will not blink.

















