Category: Agriculture

  • ‘Why we need animal registration law in Lagos’

    The Lagos State Government has been called upon to institute a compulsory pet registration programme, complete with animal identification tagging and enforcement of Leash laws.

    The Nigerian Veterinary Medical Association (NVMA), Lagos State chapter made this call following the death of two people in the Meiran area of the state, allegedly from  rabid dog bites. The deceased were Master James Makwa Musa, a 14 -year-old JSS 1 pupil and Miss Aishat Opakunle , a 21-year old fresh holder of an Ordinary National Diploma (OND).

    The association also warned quacks to desist from handling of veterinary biological, especially pet vaccines, such as anti-rabies vaccines and DHLPP vaccines.

    Chairman, Dr Alao Mobolaji, said his association condemned the development, describing it as quite unfortunate, “the loss of these two budding Nigerians is sad, unfortunate and needless because the disease, rabid is highly preventable by simple immunisation. Rabies is a preventable disease and has been completely eradicated from some parts of the world, such as in Austria, United Kingdom, Spain, Greece and Malta.”

    Giving an insight to how the death  occurred, Dr Alao said: “Both reside at No 114, Road 1A, Mologede Estate, Meiran. The victims were reported to have been bitten on  July 11, this year by a dog named, ‘Jerry’, a mongrel, allegedly belonging to one Mr Ogundiran of A115, Road 1A, Mologede Estate, Meiran, Lagos. Miss Opakunle died on Friday, August 8; while Master Musa died after a brief battle for his life.”

    He said both of them showed the vital signs of rabies in human, “Signs include fever, delirium, abnormal behaviour, numbness and loss of muscle function, drooling of saliva, hallucination, restlessness, swallowing difficulty and hydrophobia (fear of water). The suspect dog, ‘Jerry’, died five days after biting these two young people.”

    The association wants the state government to arrest and prosecute the owner of the rabid dog that led to the deaths of the two young Nigerians.

    Already, the NVMA State chapter is planning to dedicate this year’s World Rabies Day, by immunisation of unimmunised dogs in Meiran area of the state, to commemorate the memories of the two deceased, on 28th of next month; still the chapter wants further actions from the state government.

    The treasurer, Dr Omotayo Ajala said in the interim the government should, “remove all stray dogs in the Meiran area of Alimosho Local Government Area with immediate effect and screened for any possibility of rabies infection; all dogs owners the area should vaccinate their pets and present an up to and vaccination certificate of their pets from a qualified veterinary surgeon.”

  • ‘Road completion cardinal to Anambra agriculture revolution’

    The Anambra State Government has assured residents  of quick completion of the ongoing Atani-Ekwusigo road project.

    The Commissioner of Works, Mr Callistus Ilozumba, told  reporters in Atani, near Onitsha, that the road was vital to its Agricultural Transformation Scheme meant to generate employment and boost food production.

    Ilozumba said  the 12-km road would link many farming communities that would participate in the agriculture programme.

    Speaking after inspecting the ongoing project, the commissioner said  three bridges meant for the road had been completed while the work was going on at a good pace.

    “Atani-Ekwusigo road is a focal road for us, especially as it would support the Agricultural Transformation Scheme since in this axis of the state, we have very fertile arable land.

    “It would assist our farmers to get their produce to major markets in Onitsha in order to get good bargain for them as well as help those that would like to buy direct from the farms.

    “It would be a useless venture, if after producing these tonnes of food items there is no good means of transporting them out of here and getting them to the market. “Government would ensure speedy completion of the road which will provide a quicker passage in and out of Onitsha,’’  he said. The commissioner stressed that the road would act as a good alternative by-pass to ease traffic jam at the Upper Iweka axis of the Onitsha-Enugu road. “The road, when completed, would also bring considerable relief to commuters using the Onitsha-Owerri road, as they would easily connect the Niger Bridge to Delta State through the road, instead of contending with the usual traffic jam at Upper Iweka through the Onitsha-Enugu road,’’ he said.Ilozumba thanked the people of Ogbaru council for the support they had given to the state government as well as contractor handling the project.

     

  • ‘Nigerian wheat can compete in international market’

    An agricultural economist, Dr Baba Bashir, said  wheat could compete favourably in the international market with  others. Bashir, who is the Programme Leader, Agricultural Economics and Extension, Lake Chad Research Institute, in Maiduguri, made this known in an interview in Abuja.

    He  said that  states had the capacity to grow wheat covering 1.8 million hectares. “We have over 1.8 million hectares potential wheat production area in Nigeria. The baseline surveys we carried out showed that our farmers are really responsive.

    “What they lack is bulk market – meaning maybe a linkage to industries; the millers are actually importing rather than taking in-house and the import bill runs into billions.

    “Import of N2 billion daily, just wheat; if that one day import could be diverted inwards for farmers to actually boost their production, definitely in time, we will begin to export wheat; that means we are going to add to our foreign income.

    “But the problem is market; if the government can come in and organise the farmers, and make them to amass their products in one location for industries to pick up, then with time the industries can buy directly from the farmers; that will go a long way in boosting production,“ he  said.

    The agric economist urged wheat farmers in the country to take wheat production as a business venture to improve their source of income and make profit.

    “The government’s target now is to let the farmers know that agriculture is all about business; it’s not just for subsistence – to produce and eat whatever you produce.

     

     

  • Sheep, goats scheme inaugurated in FCT

    The Federal Government has inaugurated the sheep and goats value chain scheme to boost commercial animal farming in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    The Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Mrs Ibukun Odusote, said the scheme would ensure self-sufficiency in animal protein.

    She  said the programme was in line with government’s Growth Enhancement Support Scheme (GES) for increased quality animal production among farmers.

    “It is expected that improved ram and bucks will be given to farmer cooperatives for upgrading and improving the genetic base and productivity of the animals.

    “The Federal Government is determined and fully committed to ensuring self-sufficiency in food production and animal protein through sheep and goats value chain.

    “Government is also determined through this programme to introduce the farmers to the necessary animal health care for improved productivity and production of small ruminants,’’ she said.

    Mrs Odusote said  under the scheme, four bags of commercial ruminant finishing feeds would be given to each of the 180 farmers who benefitted from the scheme in the FCT.

    She was represented by Mrs Rabi Adamu, Director, Department of Planning and Partnership Coordination.

    Mr Ibrahim Hassan, one of the beneficiaries,praised the   government for reaching out to the farmers.

    He said he would make the best use of the gesture to produce quality animals.

  • How to boost agro exports

    Exporters of agricultural products need a helping hand from the government to overcome challenges they face in trying to reach  new markets abroad and diversify their offerings.

    The  Chief  Executive, The Thy  Consulting,  Ismail AbdulAzeez  told The Nation there was  urgent  need for  the  government to  support  efforts to accelerate  economic  development through trade, by strengthening the capacity of the  Nigeria Export  Promotion Council(NEPC)  to provide business development services that meet the needs of agribusiness exporters.

    He  urged  the government to demonstrate readiness to assist  exporters to boost agribusiness and increase non-traditional exports.

    The  sector,  he  explained, has  a potential for commercial agriculture,  urging   the government to partner with others to  bring real economic benefits  through  international  trade.

    One way  to achieve this,  he  said,  was through promoting   collaboration with   the   network of local export  development  centres as  well  as chambers of commerce, universities and educational institutions and other private service providers.

    The  result, he  maintained, ,would  be  an   efficient trade support network providing export development services to agribusiness exporters.

    AbdulAzeez said  exporters need to improve their capacities to   better understand and implement food safety systems based on Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP),required  for  agro exports.

    He emphasised that exporters need to be taught how to improve food safety since importers in Asia, Europe and North America all demand food safety standards compliance.

  • Making agro financing easy

    Making agro financing easy

    Financing is a  major challenge  for  farmers. They  cannot get loans  to improve yields, protect soil resources and expand their businesses.  To  stakeholders, the way out is for farmers’ organisations, financial institutions, government bodies and other institutions to explore new possibilities to promote a paradigm shift in agricultural finance.  DANIEL ESSIET writes.

    DO farmers have the capacity to produce food in abundance?Yes,they do,say experts,who argue that the agricultural sector has vast untapped potential which can satisfy the country’food requirement.

    There will also be sufficient to export.

    Though farming is considered a stable source of income that can be managed by small and large scale farmers, many  do not consider the practice as a business entity.

    Many of those involved  in small and large scale farming are not utilising the potential to achieve maximum profits that can transform their lives. The farmers face diverse challenges which hamper their ability to produce more from their land.

    Lack  of access to credit has been identified as the major constraint.  Worst hit by this challenge are  small owners and poor farmers who find it hard to buy fertiliser and input to improve their yields.

    To them, farming is a risky business.  In most states, small farmers do not have access to modern agricultural machinery that can help increase their productivity and improve food security and incomes. Many farmers cannot afford new tractors and there are few rental opportunities. This is linked to lack of access to credit. Because of this, they have no choice but to continue farming without the benefit of modern equipment.

    In cases where the loans are available, its cost is too expensive for rural small owners to take advantage of. They rarely can meet the rigid collateral requirements or pay back the loan within the typical short-term lending periods.

    A consultant to the World Bank, Prof Peter Bola Okuneye, said the agric sector has not received enough financial support from the banking sector.

    He, however, attributed this to the failure of the Federal Government to increase investments in agriculture to 10 per cent of its national budget.

    He explained that Nigeria and other African countries, in 2003, committed themselves to the African Union Maputo Declaration on Agriculture and Food Security to set aside 10 per cent of their national budgets for agricultural development. But, nine years on, just eight countries have fulfilled their promise. Nigeria is not among them.

    On the average, Okuneye noted that public agriculture expenditures have not risen to over 2.5 per cent per year, signalling less recognition of the sector as an engine of growth and poverty reduction.

    Added to this is high interest rate which is the biggest risk for farmers where they have little access to loans. This is because a simple change in interest rates can wipe out their profit margins.

    Where the small farmers have access to loans, they do not have the collateral required to take advantage of it without using land or other assets.

    Nationwide, Okuneye said farmers lack access to financial services, many of them live in rural areas. In other climes, such access help them   get better input, better farming, higher yields and better returns. But this has not been possible here. This leaves them in a poverty trap which they struggled to escape from.

    An expert said one way out is by participating in out growers schemes. It is  one of the most common ways farmers get access to credit. Under out grower programmes, firms provided seeds and input on loans, together with extension services to improve productivity. Generally, credit for input is tied to commodity sales at harvest. Prices paid for the harvest supposedly reflected international prices. However, it is only viable for a few selected cash crops. As a result, many farmers are left out.

    As a developing economy, Okuneye said government must spend increasingly more on agriculture if it is to take the sector out of the woods. Such investment, he said,  has the potential to create jobs and raise rural incomes, particularly by promoting uptake of improved production techniques and greater use of inputs.

    Chief Operating Officer, Centre for Cocoa Development Initiative, and spokesperson for the Cocoa Association of Nigeria, Mr Robo Adhuze,  said  not much  has been  done to better  the lot of  rural farmers. He sees how farmers suffer during harvest. In some rural areas, harvest times, are both days of plenitude and peril for poor farmers. The products are weighed and paid for in cash or cheque. In most of the rural areas, there are no banks. Farmers have to travel far on dusty, unpaved roads to cash checks or deposit cash in town. That makes them targets for robbers.

    Adhuze does not appreciate it. He therefore canvassed the need for  mobile finance providers  to  break into rural areas to expand market share and achieve nationwide presence.

    For him, the agricultural sector is entry point into these communities, given the keenness of commodity buyers to move away from inefficient and more expensive cash payments to producers. With cash transactions comes the increased risk of theft and violence, high transportation costs and greater possibility for corruption. Adhuze urged the government to embed mobile finance services into the agricultural supply chain.  The key to this is leveraging the corporate procurement policies of large buyers.

    To enable  rural  farmers benefit from  such  arrangements , he  urged the  government to  look at diverse ways of integrating mobile finance solutions into the agricultural supply chains.

    With more and more entrants into the mobile finance market, the choice for rural customers looks set to grow.

    According to him, emerging innovations in mobile finance are revolutionising the agricultural value chain, will give farmers greater access to a range of financial services.

    It encompasses not only mobile money and mobile banking but other alternative delivery channels such as e-vouchers, debit cards, smart cards, branchless banking, ATMs and point-of-sale devices.

    With mobile banking service, he said buyers are allowed to transfer payments to growers’ bank accounts via text messages on their mobile phones, while funds can be withdrawn using a bank card at electronic funds transfer machines, at automated teller machines (ATMs), bank branches, or at local shops that operate as agents for the bank.

    To make it work, there should be a network of agents offering the service in rural areas close to where the cocoa growers live and work.

    This saves farmers time and money, enabling them to focus on   tending their land, raising productivity, rather than worry about transporting money.

    Without the presence of a financial institution, Adhuze believes such  innovations may be the way forward for rural finance, at least for small farmers.

    The number  of  Nigerians  suggesting that  mobile financial tools be used to facilitate more agricultural credit, savings, insurance, transfers or payments increases daily.

    Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr Akinwunmi Adesina, agrees. According to him,  by deploying  mobile finance represents a paradigm shift for agricultural value chain finance. He said the government is  doing a lot to improve the lot of local farmers.

    Addressing the global forum on “Revolutionising finance for agricultural value chains in Africa’’  at the Kenya School of Monetary Studies in Nairobi, Kenya,  Adesina cited the use of the electronic wallets through which farmers pay subsidised amount of money to banks to get coupons to buy fertiliser and other inputs from accredited agro-dealers.

    Since the agro-dealers get their full pay from the subsidy from the government and what farmers pay, they have been committed to helping farmers grow their businesses, even offering extension services.

    Nigeria is the first in Africa, and in the world, to develop the electronic wallet system for reaching farmers with subsidised farm inputs on mobile phones, he said.

    He said: “The impact is reaching well beyond Nigeria. Several African countries, as well as others in emerging markets like India, Brazil and China have expressed interest in adopting the electronic wallet system in their own countries. Nigeria, which used to have a terribly corrupt fertiliser system, is now exporting transparency.”

    Adesina, however, explained that lending is skewed to larger agribusinesses, while smallholder farmers, commercial farmers and other small and medium size enterprises are unable to access affordable financing.

    He added that Nigeria’s bank lending to the sector was expected to hit 7.5 per cent by next year and 10 per cent by 2015. With banks’ yeraly total lending portfolio standing at over N8 trillion, he  said   the agric sector is expected to get N600 billion this year and N800 billion next year.

    He said financial institutions would not lend to businesses they do not find viable.

    “Therefore there is a greater need to ensure that, through strategic reforms, agribusinesses become wealth creator.

    “This is a good way to tackle some of the major impediments that create both real and perceived risks which deter greater financing to agriculture,” he said.

     

     

  • Cocoa records seven percent increase

    The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)  said  Nigeria has recorded  a seven per cent  increase in cocoa production forecasts to almost 300,000 tonnes for 2013/14, adding that the success of local  cocoa farmers in achieving UTZ certification was “shoring up demand and prices for Nigerian cocoa at the international market”.

    According to USDA, “over the last five years, Nigerian grower prices increased more than 50 per cent to the  average” of US$3,000/tonne. This is supporting efforts to rehabilitate abandoned farms and extend the area under cocoa.

    Under its Cocoa Transformation Action Plan, the government is looking to expand cocoa production by 40 per cent to 500,000 tonnes by 2015. The country has vast land resources suitable for cocoa production, but the broader innovations that government programmes have tried to promote have not yet taken off.

    In a report, USDA identified a range of factors limiting cocoa production in Nigeria to include:    the scarcity and high costs of farm labour, the non-availability and low utilisation of fertiliser, climate change, poor road access in major cocoa-producing area and  insufficient levels of input subsidies in support of farm-level investments, due to weaknesses in delivery mechanisms.

    The USDA believes the next year’s production target is unlikely to be attained.

    The  Department  also  observed  that  local processing of cocoa increased between 2010 and 2012, fuelled by an export incentive rebate programme, but that   the suspension of this programme in 2012 “following ‘sharp practices’ in cocoa export reporting by certain exporters” has subsequently discouraged local processing.

  • Council seeks more fertiliser allocation

    The Chairman,Kabo Local Government Area in Kano State, Alhaji Murtala Sulen-Garo, has appealed to the Federal Government to allocate more fertiliser to farmers in the area.

    Sulen-Garo made the appeal in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Kabo Town on Wednesday.

    He said the appeal became necessary because the 11,780 bags of fertiliser allocated to the area were inadequate due to the large number of farmers in the area.

    He said that only 5,890 out of over 11,000 registered farmers in the area benefitted from the Federal Government’s fertiliser policy this cropping season.

    “We received 11,780 bags of fertiliser but only 5,890 out of more than 11,000 registered farmers received the commodity this year.

    “Most of our people in this area are local farmers who rely solely on government’s subsidised fertiliser and other inputs,’’ he said.

    The chairman also called on the Federal Government to review the mode of distribution of the commodity as most of the local farmers had no cell phones with which to receive the text messages.

    “The whole aim is to assist local farmers to access the commodity, but not all the farmers have cell phones.

    “Any farmer who does not have cell phone should be able to collect the commodity at the redemption centres, provided he is a genuine farmer,’’ he said.

    He expressed optimism that if the programme was reviewed, it would help in alleviating the sufferings of local farmers.

    “The scheme is good but there is need for government to review it with a view to achieving total success,’’ he said

     

  • Anambra acquires 200,000 hectares for agric

    The Anambra Land Acquisition Committee said it had acquired more than 200,000 hectares of land for the state government’s agricultural transformation scheme.

    The Interim Chairman of the committee, Igwe Chukwuemeka Ilouno, said this in an interview in Onitsha.

    He said  the governor, Willie Obiano, was committed to investing massively in agriculture and had gone ahead to procure some of the needed input in furtherance of the scheme.

    “We have just too many lands and more; what is holding us back now is surveyors.

    “We need a lot of surveyors to come and survey the lands that had been given so that we can sign MoU (Memoranda of Understanding) with various communities that have donated land.

    “Because previously these lands were never surveyed. So this is exactly the situation we are in.

    “And by the time we finish surveying, the governor can have hundreds of thousands of hectares of land available for cultivation.

    “We already have more than 200,000 hectares.

    “The governor has just waved his hands and said any land that is donated would be cultivated.

    “He has already been able to secure 150 tractors, 15 million bundles of cassava cuttings and a lot of rice seedlings and fish fingerlings.

    “So, he is ready to invest in agriculture.That is what he had shown.

    “It is not only him investing, he is inviting international investors, local investors to come and he will give them land to bring in whatever they have to cultivate.“

    The chairman, who is also Chairman of Anambra Central Traditional Rulers Council, appealed to all communities in the state to key into the scheme  to wipe out hunger, unemployment, and crime in the state

  • IITA to train youths

    The International Institute of Tropical Agriculture Youth Agripreneurs (IITA Youth Agripreneurs) have con-cluded plans to train and empower youths from Borno State.

    The proposed three-week training, which comes up next month, will equip youths  with knowledge on modern agricultural practices and entrepreneurial skills that will make them self-dependent and create wealth.

    “What we intend to do is actually use agriculture to solve some of the social problems in most societies of Africa including poverty and hunger,” IITA’s Director-General,Dr Nteranya Sanginga, said.

    The programme will draw from the experiences and successes of the IITA Youth Agripreneur model, and will be conducted by youths that have been trained and empowered by IITA.

    “Over the last few years we have seen that it is more effective for youths to train youths. And we want to use this approach to bring more youths to agriculture, take them off the job market, and reinstate stability in our communities,” Dr Sanginga added.

    Established over two years ago, the IITA Youth Agripreneur program uses teaching, mentoring and practical demonstrations of modern agriculture to attract youths into agribusiness. The primary goals are to attract to the sector the necessary young and vibrant human capital by making farming profitable, thereby creating wealth and the most needed jobs in the society.

    “By engaging Borno youths in agriculture, we envision to solve the problem of youth restiveness in that state, and make the state one of the major food exporters in the country,” Dr Alfred Dixon, Project Leader for the IITA-managed project on Sustainable Weed Management Technologies for Cassava Systems in Nigeria said.

    Under the training, which has strong financial support from N2Africa–to-Borno project, 16 youths from Borno State will be trained for three weeks for a start. It will involve lectures, on-field practicals, and interactive sessions and group exercises.

    IITA Youth Agripreneur, Ms Evelyn Ohanwusi, said: “We are happy to meet our peers in Borno state. We will be sharing knowledge with them so that they can better their lives.”