Category: Industry

  • 10 get Life Lager’s grant

    Ten entrepreneurs in Nsukka, Enugu State, have received N300,000 each to boost their businesses at the ‘Life Progress Booster Show’, an initiative of Life Lager Beer, a brand committed to supporting small and medium-scale entrepreneurs in the Southeast.

    The cheques were presented to the beneficiaries during the week, bringing the number of entrepreneurs who have benefited from the grant this year to 60.

    Addressing the audience at the presentation, Portfolio Manager, Mainstream Lager and Stout Brands, Nigerian Breweries Plc, Mr. Emmanuel Agu, said the brand had increased the grant from N250,000 in 2016 to N300,000.

    He said the company would support 200 entrepreneurs through the Progress Booster platform in 2017.

    “Progress Booster is a programme with the sole aim of supporting the people of the Southeast who have innovative business ideas to encourage the entrepreneurial spirit of the people.

    “This is the third set of entrepreneurs we are supporting this year, and we look forward to empowering other innovative business men and women,” Agu said.

    He also noted that Life Progress Booster Show was a platform for budding businessmen and women to present their proposals and transform their ideas to reality.

    According to him, the Progress Booster Show was initiated to raise more entrepreneurs and self-dependent individuals in Southeast Nigeria.

    He said through the years, Life Continental Beer has focused on empowering its consumers, and was committed to contributing to their successes and achievements.

    Other guests at the event went home with consolation prizes such as bags of rice, gallons of oil, and many more exciting prizes from raffle draws.

  • LCCI: Review rice tariff to curb smuggling

    LCCI: Review rice tariff to curb smuggling

    The Federal Government should consider a downward review of the tariff on rice to curb its smuggling, the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) has said.

    Its Director-General, Mr. Muda Yusuf, said rice smuggling has continued to thrive, in spite of the ban on the commodity, due to high import tariff.

    “Rice is not contraband, you can import rice. What has created the smuggling problem with rice is the tariff and that is what is driving the smuggling. If you take it through the port irrespective of where you source your forex from, you have to pay 70 per cent levy.

    “If you have a product coming through the official channel at 70 per cent, there cannot be better incentive to smuggling than that. So, that is why rice is coming from all over the place,” Yusuf said, in Lagos, during the week.

    He dismissed the claim by the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, that the country would be self sufficient in rice production and would no longer import rice by 2018 as mere academic and not in tune with reality.

    His words: “The Minister said we will be self sufficient in rice production in 2018, but that is just academic. There is nothing on ground empirically. It is desirable, but in terms of empirical evidence, I don’t think it is something achievable.

    “If you do a proper and empirical assessment of the rice market today, the market share of smuggled rice is bigger than the share of rice that is produced locally. So, this is part of the trade policy challenges that we have.

    “It is a popular thing to say that we have to grow rice; the import duty should be high so that we can grow local rice. It is a very patriotic statement to make, but the reality is completely different and policy should align with reality so that we don’t just make policies in vain.”

    The LCCI boss said it was important that the government policy makers got their facts right. “I have heard some government officials say the bulk of the rice in the country is Nigerian rice but that is not correct. The moment we start thinking that way, then we will not do what we need to do,” he said.

    According to him, what is required is to deploy policies to improve productivity in rice production.

  • SMEs: Multiple taxation, dearth of infrastructure hurting our businesses

    Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), particularly those on the Ikorodu axis of Lagos State, have cried out that excessive taxation and dearth of supportive infrastructure, among other harsh operating environment-related challenges, are taking a huge toll on their businesses.

    Some of the small business owners in Ikorodu, who spoke with The Nation, lamented that constant and multiple demands for taxes by various agents of the government were hurting their profitability and threatening the sustainability of their businesses.

    For instance, Logistics &Facility Manager, Hallel Engineering Company, Mr. Adeolu Akinpelu, said his company was faced with the challenge of double taxation by the government under various names and categories.

    Akinpelu said there was a need for the government at all levels to harmonise the various taxes to be paid by different categories of businesses, to avoid the current situation where businesses, particularly SMEs, are forced to pay the same taxes but with different sub-heads.

    He argued that multiplicity of taxes was having debilitating effects on SMEs by cutting into their profit margin. Besides, those who could not cope with the excessive taxation have been forced to either close shop or relocate to other climes where tax regimes are SME-friendlier.

    To the CEO of Zaiphie Transformation, a firm of make-up artists, Miss Ifeoma  Ikechukwu, the challenges facing SMEs in Ikorodu area of Lagos go beyond tax. She said the perception of Ikorodu as being in the backwaters of civilisation due to lack of infrastructure was a pain in the neck of small business owners.

    The beauty artist said: “The price of makeup and hair products increases daily, and it is affecting my business. But, unfortunately, people see Ikorodu as an undeveloped area and insist that our products must be cheap without recourse to the fact that we all buy from the same market,”

    Miss Ikechukwu lamented that the location of her business in Ikorodu was a major disincentive as customer patronage was low because of the poor infrastructure in the area, such as regular supply of electricity, potable water and good roads, among others.

    She, therefore, called on the state government to improve the infrastructure in the area in order to boost SMEs and ultimately, create jobs.

    Similarly, Managing Director, Marthridge Stitches, Mrs. Martha Aimuemojie, complained that because of poor infrastructure in Ikorodu, many of her customers are unable to locate her business address.

    According to her, the difficulty by prospective customers in locating her business address affects the price of her goods and services. She expressed regrets that location determines the price of goods and services, whether one is good or not in the business.

    Another dealer in beauty products, who gave her name only as Mrs. Orakwe, however, said the hurdles before SMEs in Ikorodu cannot be divorced from the general economic downturn plaguing the nation following the collapse of oil prices at the international market.

    Orakwe said the economic recession that gripped the country since the crisis started has forced many people to re-order their priorities, as many Nigerians now prefer to feed their families first before thinking of buying beauty products and indeed, other products and services.

    Apart from the economic downturn, Orakwe also lamented that the seeming gradual disappearance of the apprenticeship culture from the SME landscape was not helping matters. She said nowadays most apprentices want to make money rather than learn from their masters.

    She added that apprentices learn the trades now are cajoled to do so. She decried the lazy and poor work culture among the youth, and called for a paradigm shift.

  • MAN Pharmaceutical Group urges strong partnerships

    For Nigeria to achieve 70 per cent self-sufficiency in domestic pharmaceuticals, there is the need to adopt strong and innovative partnerships with leading lights in the pharmaceutical manufacturing sub-sector.

    The Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Group of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (PMG-MAN) canvassed this position at the fourth Nigerian Pharma Manufacturers Expo (NPME) held in Lagos.

    The Group, through its Chairman, Chief Okechukwu Akpa, said the approach remained one of the most sustainable means the government could drive its bid to secure standardised production and access to quality patent medicines.

    He also said deepening relations with critical stakeholders would effectively drive the requisite investment needed to fix problems facing the sector’s growth.

    Akpa said the challenges of long-term financing, procurement preferences, knowledge and technology transfer and tax incentives, among others, should be addressed to stabilise the operating environment for manufacturers, as well as check counterfeiting.

    Akpa, who noted the group’s contributions to national development via enhancement of access to medicines, reiterated the need to protect the sub-sector through policies that prioritises its growth and efficiency.

    He hailed the Executive Order by Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo directing the mandatory patronage of locally-manufactured medicines by government Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs). He, however, said the directive should be backed with implementation.

    “This policy is expected to accelerate growth and development of the local pharmaceutical manufacturing sector. It will in turn assure national medicines’ security, boost self sufficiency in production, stimulate considerable employment in the sector, and increase inflow of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI),” Akpa said.

    He added that it would also facilitate the export of indigeneous medicines to neighbouring countries. “We therefore, look forward to more partnerships and support from critical stakeholders to ensure the industry continues to play its critical national role and reach its full potential”, Akpa said.

    Drug and Research Director, National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Dr. Monica Eimunjeze, who represented the Director-General, Mrs. Yetunde Oni, pledged to support the sector with enhanced regulatory functions.

    She praised efforts at positioning the country as the most concentrated pharmaceutical base in West African, noting that it portends immense opportunities for the sector.

    “We have a responsibility to work to sustain good health through access to quality medicines and vaccines for all. The executive order would be considered to consolidate the effort to expand the local base of pharmaceutical products,” Mrs Oni said.

    MAN President Dr. Frank Udemba Jacobs charged the government to address the security of manufacturing investment in the country.

    He said the country needed to ensure that investors were not discouraged by harsh operatimng environment.

    Jacobs, represented by the Chairman, Ikeja branch of MAN, Prince Oba Okojie, noted that the mandate to deliver a sustainable healthcare could be engineered by robust collaboration with government.

  • Manufacturers hail introduction of product authentication scheme

    Manufacturers hail introduction of product authentication scheme

    The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) has thrown its weight behind Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON)’s plan to introduce a product authentication scheme, saying it is in the interest of manufacturers and consumers.

    MAN President Dr. Franks Udemba Jacobs made manufacturers’ position known during a consultative meeting with SON Director-General Mr. Osita Aboloma, in Lagos.

    According to him, the introduction of such scheme to assure the quality of products on offer to consumers in  the country is long overdue, given the negative economic effect of faking, cloning and counterfeiting, particularly on certified local products.

    Jacobs decried the situation where a product is supposedly doing so well in the market without its manufacturer reaping the benefits of his investment due to faking, cloning and counterfeiting, while consumers also get short changed in the process.

    The MAN President acknowledged the huge responsibility that the mandate of SON confers on the organisation, particularly the need to assist local manufacturers excel on a continual basis in order to grow the nation’s economy and provide gainful employment to its youths.

    He alluded to the need for all relevant agencies of government to harmonise their activities at the country’s entry points in order to effectively fight the influx of substandard products into the country.

    The MAN chief stressed that the continuous influx of substandard products into the country was negatively affecting manufacturers in particular.

    This, according to him, underscored the need for SON’s active involvement in the execution of the  Presidential Executive Orders, to assure the quality of all imports.

    MAN Director-General, Mr. Segun Ajayi, said the association’s members across the nation look up to SON for the provision of relevant and up to date standards.

    According to him, availing the expertise of SON personnel to manufacturers will ensure continual improvement in the competitiveness of their products for local consumption and export.

    He commended the existing robust collaboration between the two organisations, which according to him, has always provided avenues for clarifying issues of mutual concern.

    Earlier, Aboloma described MAN members as strategic to standardisation and quality assurance in Nigeria. He said this necessitated the consultative meeting  by SON.

    The SON DG said a product authentication scheme would be introduced to assist consumers confirm the genuineness of products before purchase to have value for their money.

    Other advantages of the scheme, according to him, include assurance to genuine manufacturers and importers of their products on sale.

    Abaloma said the product authentication scheme would effectively fight the cloning, faking and counterfeiting of genuine products by providing necessary information to guide consumers’ purchase decisions in the market.

    “Without patronage, the purveyors of substandard, faked, cloned and counterfeited products would have no market for their products” he said.

    Aboloma said SON had engaged an international security printing outfit on the implementation of the scheme, leveraging its vast experience.

    The SON DG announced that the organisation will soon embark on stakeholders’ sensitisation on the product authentication scheme across the country to ensure that stakeholders were carried along in the implementation in line with World Trade Organisation (WTO) requirements.

    Aboloma enumerated several initiatives of SON to provide level playing field for local manufacturers and importers in line with WTO’s requirements of which Nigeria is a signatory.

    Some of them include the Mandatory Conformity Assessment Program (MANCAP) to assure the quality and competitiveness of all locally- manufactured products and the off-shore Conformity Assessment Program (SONCAP) for imported products.

    He also said the electronic product registration scheme was aimed at products traceability and confirmation of quality status.

  • Propak West Africa exhibition opens Sept 19

    Propak West Africa, organised by Afrocet Montgomery, will open September 19, at the Landmark Centre, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    In a statement, Emma Hooper, the firm’s Business Development Director, said this year’s exhibition is the fifth edition, and that no fewer than over 3,000 visitors were expected. He said there would be 22 conference sessions with over 30 experts who had confirmed their participation.

    He said the event is a global platform for packaging, plastics and print industry, where professionals and leading brands share market insights, cutting-edge technology developments and expertise.

    Hooper said: “We are extremely pleased to welcome a variety of respected industry speakers to the Propak podium this year who will be divulging observations, experience and topical case studies to attendees. Each session has been selected to reflect a broad range of themes within the industry such as business strategy, efficiency, sustainability as well as sessions focused on different vertical sectors like food processing, print, pharmaceuticals and many more.”

    Among the experts is Tetra Pak’s Managing Director, Phillipe De Louche who will discuss ‘Breakthrough packaging technology to boost efficiency for food producers’ and Ishida Europe’s Managing Director, Steve Jones.

    With the launch of the brand new ‘Print & Digital Expo’ pavilion, a key focus of the conference will be on the print industry with a day dedicated to it.

    “As a sector that holds a great deal of potential, print is something we are very interested in promoting at this year’s show. With the increased cross-over between print and packaging, many of the companies attending this year will be able to discover opportunities for growth and expansion at the dedicated print technical and Conference sessions, Hooper said. The conference is free.

     

  • NEPC: only non-oil export’s forex ’ll spur growth

    NEPC: only non-oil export’s forex ’ll spur growth

    Only Foreign Exchange (forex) earnings from export of non-oil products will spur Nigeria’s sustainable economic growth, the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC) has said.

    Its Chief Executive Officer Mr. Segun Awolowo made this known at the Quarterly Lecture organised by the former Director General of National Poverty Alleviation Programme (NAPEP), Dr Magnus Kpakol, in Abuja.

    The lecture was titled: “Exporting, exchange rate and economic growth.”

     Awolowo, who was represented by a director at NEPC, George Enyiekpon, a lawyer, said forex generated from remittance from Nigerian relatives abroad could not provide sustainable economic development for the country.

    The NEPC chief also said it was obvious that crude oil was no longer profitable as it was before. He added that the non-oil export should, therefore, be focused on by the country.

    While noting that Nigeria’s exchange rate violability started way back in the 1960s; not just in 2015, he urged the youths to focus on export as a business. According to him, this will not only enable them make ends meet, but also help the country garner much forex.

    However, a senior lecturer in the Department of Political Science and International Relations, University of Abuja, Dr Mutiullah Olasupo, blamed Nigeria’s economic growth problem and her forex violability to corrupt leadership and lack of sound economic policies.

    He said bad governance from corrupt leaders wreaked huge havoc on the country’s economy, adding that it would only take sincere and corrupt-free leaders to savage the economy.

    Olasupo cited Malaysia, Singapore and South Korea as countries that were below Nigeria in terms of economic development in 1960s and 1970s, but through sincere leadership and good governance catapulted themselves to be among the economic buoyant countries far above Nigeria.

    Kpakol said Nigeria could still get it right with economic decisions of the government. He said the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) policies on agriculture, which were being implemented across the country, were excellent decisions.

    He said CBN’s agriculture policies would not only ensure food security, but are also capable of giving the country a sustainable and stable foreign exchange.

  • Hope alive as Edo fertiliser plant roars back to life

    Hope alive as Edo fertiliser plant roars back to life

    The revamp of Edo Fertiliser Plant and Chemical Company Limited in Edo State promises to unlock the state’s  agricultural potential and boost Nigeria’s economy. The revitalisation of the plant, which can produce 60,000 metric tonnes of fertiliser yearly, is expected to cut the importation of fertiliser and save huge foreign exchange. The project will also create 200,000 jobs and fast-track economic diversification. Assistant Editor OKWY IROEGBU-CHIKEZIE reports.

    The success of the project is, no doubt, an endorsement of the new and strategic thinking in favour of Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model of building and managing a business.

    Under a PPP arrangement between the Edo State Government and WACOT Limited, an agricultural processing and distribution firm, and the Federal Government, the Edo Fertiliser Plant and Chemical Company Limited, in Auchi, Edo State, roared into life after 14 years of inactivity.

    The fertiliser plant, which has the capacity to produce 60,000 metric tonnes of fertiliser yearly, was envisioned as a tool for unlocking the agricultural potential in Edo  by providing the people with low-cost inputs to grow sustainable agribusinesses and attain food sufficiency. It was also envisaged that the project would diversify the local economy and increase the state’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    The Nation also learnt that at its inception 14 years ago, under the then the government headed by Chief Lucky Igbinedion, Edo people had thought that the ambitious project would ameliorate the sufferings of millions of rural farmers in the state, who desperately needed the input to increase yields on their farmlands and improve their livelihood.

    But it was hope dashed. Much as the idea was laudable and promised huge relief in those days, the facility never produced a single grain of fertiliser. Even after a lavish  inauguration anchored by then President Olusegun Obasanjo, the project failed to live up to its billings.

    However, it took the intervention of the   Governor Godwin Obasekiled administration to change the narrative. The governor, who has never hidden his belief that agriculture holds immense promise in spurring socio-economic development in the state, and the nation at large, was eager to consolidate his job creation drive.

    Specifically, Obaseki promised to create 200,000 jobs, with the revamp of the fertiliser plant. Besides, the plant, he said, will serve not just farmers in Edo State, but also those in neighbouring states, making it a hub for the supply of agricultural inputs.

    He also said the facility would go a long way in providing fertiliser for farmers in neighbouring states, such as Kogi, Delta, Ondo, and Anambra, as it is the only blending plant in the region.

    These must have been why excitement greeted the recent inauguration of the 60, 000 metric tonnes fertiliser plant by Vice President Yemi Osibanjo, in the company of Ministers of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh; and Industry, Trade and Investment, Okechukwu Enelamah. Other dignitaries at the event were the State Deputy Governor, Rt. Hon. Comrade Philip Shaibu and the Otaru of Auchi, His Royal Highness, Alhaji Aliru Momoh.

    In his speech, Osinbajo said: “The President Muhammadu Buhari administration is committed to making it easy for investors to do business in the country. We want to achieve this through the promotion of transparency and efficiency. We want every state to be involved in this drive and create the enabling environment for business to thrive in their domain.”

    He commended Obaseki for creating the enabling business environment for the revitalisation of the fertiliser plant. He added that the revived facility was proof that the Edo State Government was in sync with the Federal Government’s initiative to diversify the economy away from oil to the agricultural sector.

    The Vice President stressed that fertiliser blending plants were being revitalised across the country as a result of the presidential initiative to diversify the economy from crude oil, boost farming activities as well as develop the agriculture value chain.

     

    Obaseki: Its reversal of missed opportunity

    In his inauguration speech, Obaseki said  the project had died pre-maturely because the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) administration squandered the opportunity for pecuniary gains.

    As he noted, “The facility was never operated for a day after it was fraudulently launched by the opposition party about 14 years ago. What the opposition could not do for nearly a decade, this government, with the support of the Edo people, has done, in only about nine months.”

    The governor said the government has lofty plans for the plant. According to him, the revitalisation of the facility was an effort to make the state self-sufficient in food production, noting that the ceremony was a milestone, as the facility was moribund for a long time, depriving the people of the benefits of having a fertiliser blending facility in the state.

    According to him, “The aim of revitalising this plant is to make the state self-sufficient in food production and enable farmers to get fertilizer at affordable prices. We in Edo State are determined to make food available in the country.”

    Obaseki commended the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative as well as the management of WACOT for partnering the government in revamping the plant. “This achievement is an open call to other investors to bring in new technology, create more jobs and expand our economic opportunities,” he added.

    The Presidential Fertiliser Initiative was designed to halt the importation of blended NPK fertiliser into Nigeria, by directly negotiating discounted contracts for procuring core raw materials, blending same locally and selling NPK fertiliser to farmers at a significantly lower price. For the Edo Fertiliser Plant, NPK fertiliser would be sold for half the market price.

    The governor, however, called on the Otaru of Auchi, the community where the plant is located, to ensure the protection of the facility against vandalism as it would provide several economic opportunities for the community and the state.

     

    Strengthening diversification drive

    The Edo Fertiliser plant is a bold step in the campaign to diversify the state’s earnings, and provide essential inputs for farmers in the state, many of whom have had to go through the drudgery of farming with little or no stimulus for improved yield or income.

    It is expected that inputs sourced from the facility would serve as a stimulus to revitalising the business of smallholders and medium scale farmers in the state.

    Some experts told The Nation that a key highpoint of the revamp was that it justified the argument for PPP. According to them, the private partners in the project, WACOT Limited, has shown that much can be achieved if dedicated public servants mount the saddle of state.

    Instructively, the turn-around of the facility happened nine months after a 14-year gap.

    Acknowledging this, the Group Managing Director of WACOT, Rahul Savara, praised Osinbajo for inaurating the plant and  Obaseki for fostering the partnership between the state and his company.

    He said the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative has made local production feasible and sustainable in the country, adding that the company’s employees would be made up of 95 per cent indigenous workers.

     

    One project, many jobs

    Already, about 500 persons have been engaged on the project, an indication that the ripple effects of the plant on farming communities would spell a turnaround for agriculture in the state.

    Osinbajo, during the inauguration, expressed delight at the 500 direct jobs created by the investment, stressing that much more employment opportunities would result from ancillary economic activities to be generated by the plant.

    The promise of increased agricultural activity and increased yield for farmers in the state and its neighbours would mean not only farmers have inputs at reduced costs, but also that the increased yield from the farms would attract younger people to consider agriculture as a viable form of self-employment.

  • ‘Off-grid solar ’ll transform businesses’

    Mobile solar revolution will transform Nigeria’s small-business economy, Lumos Nigeria Chief Executive Officer Mr. Yuri Tsitrinbaum has said.

    He said access to power is a major constraint to the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), and many are using the Lumos Mobile Electricity service, which provides customers with reliable, clean, affordable solar electricity.

    Speaking with The Nation, Tsitrinbaum said he believed that the availability of solar solutions would play essential role in efforts to bridge the electricity supply gap. According to him, businesses without access to the grid find alternative electricity sources expensive, unreliable and dirty. “Many are now discovering that the clean energy wave sweeping across Africa can transform their fortunes,” he said.

    According to Tsitrinbaum, a recent survey revealed that 61 per cent of SMEs in Nigeria spend between N500 to N1,000 per day on fuel, while as many as 85 per cent of micro and small businesses rely on generators for supply of electricity. He, however, said with the Mobile Electricity service, costs are as low as N150 per day, or just N4,500 per month.

    Tsitrinbaum pointed out: “We are witnessing a power revolution in Nigeria. Our everyday lives demand more access to electricity, and we need to meet that demand in order for businesses to grow. If we are to meet the true potential of the thriving business community here, access to power must follow the path of the mobile revolution.

    ”Lumos Mobile Electricity service, in partnership with MTN, is an alternative to noisy, polluting generators. Available at MTN stores nationwide, the Y’ello Box is providing a solution to millions of Nigerians who don’t have access to reliable electricity.”

    He continued: “Lumos, which has attracted major investors into the Nigerian economy, has witnessed a rapid rise in the number of SMEs thriving, thanks to safe, reliable and affordable power from the Y’ello Box.

    “SMEs have found the Mobile Electricity service attractive as they can benefit both from its affordability and reliability, doing away with fuel and maintenance costs. With the Y’ello box, SMEs can increase their trading hours, and their profits.”

    On a visit to SMEs and health clinics using the Y’ello Box earlier this year, the United States (US) Ambassador to Nigeria Stuart Symington praised the service, noting that it would help Nigeria “fulfill its full economic potential”.

    Lumos, Tsitrinbaum disclosed, is already providing clean and affordable solar power to more than 200,000 people, many of whom are business owners and households, noting that by the end of the year, Lumos aims to provide one million Nigerians with access to reliable, clean and affordable electricity.

    “Lumos Global brings affordable, modern and clean electricity to communities that have been living off-grid. It connects the dots between the mobile payment revolution and solar energy through its patented, self-deployable solar power system, with integrated cellular payment and advanced security mechanisms.

    “With Lumos, households in the off-grid world can replace generators, candles, and flashlights with modern electricity that can power lights, cellphones, fans, laptops, TVs and other small electronic devices, and all for less the cost spent today on generators – on a lease to own basis, subscription via the mobile phone.”

  • Minister: Nigeria’ll be self-sufficient in rice by end of 2017

    Minister: Nigeria’ll be self-sufficient in rice by end of 2017

    Nigeria will be self-sufficient in rice production by the end of this year, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Chief Audu Ogbeh has said.

    Ogbeh, who gave the assurance at the First International Cocoa Summit, organised by the Federal Ministry of Trade and Investment, in collaboration with Cocoa Farmers Association of Nigeria (CAN), in Abuja, noted that rice production had improved tremendously across the country as a result of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)’s Anchor Borrowers’ Programme (ABP).

    According to him, the programme has supported farmers through inputs distribution and loans to boost rice production across the country. While pointing out that rice is one major staple food consuned by almost every Nigerian, Ogbeh said the move was in line with President Muhammadu Buhari’s agenda to diversify the economy through the agric sector. He, however, advised rice farmers to reduce the price of a tonne of paddy rice from N150,000 to N120,000 to make it affordable for millers and discourage smuggling. ”By the end of this year, we can tell you that we are self-sufficient in rice,” Ogbeh declared, expressing regrets on the increasing number of malnourished children across the country.

    He hinted that the Federal Government, through his ministry, would encourage land clearing, fertiliser application through extension workers to promote cocoa production. He said:“We are planning a re-launch of cocoa to draw national attention to its strategic importance, but the big thing is to help processors at home and increase consumption. Everything is not about export; nowadays, the export market is choked, forcing prices down while farmers are losing money.”

    He promised that the ministry will help with land clearing, fertiliser improvement, especially the inclusion of boron to revive old cocoa plantation and encourage new ones.