Tag: Agric

  • NICOWA celebrates win at agric exhibition

    The Nigeria Cooperative Women Alliance (NICOWA) has won first position in the 2014 Public/Private Driven Agriculture Exhibition.

    Its National President, Mrs Esther Eka, said   the victory was a proof of the machinery it put in place to empower women in maximising the benefits of agro allied businesses.

    Eka said: “This is a proof of our commitments to the reduction of poverty among women and empowerment of families.

    “It is not easy to build any human network; NICOWA for us is a child of necessity, a platform that gives leverage to Nigerian women.

    “It gladdens my heart that both local and international institutions are concerned about the modest progress we have made so far. These awards are indications that we are on the right track.’’

    The NICAWA national president said members would continue to savour the two awards, given by the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development in conjunction with the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).

    She urged women to continue to see themselves as agents of peace, stability and progress in their respective communities, stressing that “women are uniquely created by God to be agents of peace and positive change.’’

    She appealed to them to use their acquired skills to contribute to national development, saying that the role of women was greatly appreciated in all facets.

    “I urge Nigerian women to intensify prayers for our families and for peace and development in our country,’’ the women alliance boss appealed.

    According to her, women must engage in selfless service, tolerance and good neighbourliness beyond becoming self-reliant.

    She said: “The unfolding violence and agitation across the country have the potential to rob us of our peace and tarnishing our timeless traditional and religious values.

    “NICOWA is pleading with the more than five million of its members across the country to eschew bitterness and preach peace at all times.’’

    She also urged members to continually widen the scope of their business ideas and to take steps to actualise them, pledging that; “the Alliance is committed to providing expertise and direction for financing of viable investments within the scope of our mandate.’’

    NICOWA, which is the umbrella body of all women cooperative societies in the country, was also rated the Best Coordinating Agricultural Group in Agriculture Exhibition at the 2014 Public/Private Driven Agriculture Exhibition held on October .

     

  • IFAD boss, others speak on agric investments in Ebola-affected countries

    IFAD boss, others speak on agric investments in Ebola-affected countries

    Ebola ravaged countries are not only contending with the debilitating ailment but also at a brink of a food crisis.

    Appalled by this development, Dr Kanayo F. Nwanze, President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), along with Florence Chenoweth, Minister of Agriculture, Liberia and Joseph Sam Sesay, ?Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Food Security, Sierra Leone addressed a press conference on the concerns.

    IFAD is an international financial institution and a specialised United Nations agency based in Rome – the UN’s food and agriculture hub.

    Nwanze in his keynote address at the World Food Prize international symposium stressed the importance of investing in rural agriculture around the world, especially in the face of issues such as the current Ebola crisis, climate change, and other challenges.

    Worried that the food crisis could assume an epic proportion, the IFAD boss impressed on the governments at all levels to close ranks in order to stem the tide of food crisis and forestall other dire consequences.

    IFAD invests in rural people, empowering them to reduce poverty, increase food security, improve nutrition and strengthen resilience. Since 1978, IFAD has provided over US$16 billion in grants and low-interest loans to projects that have reached more than 430 million people.

     

  • Niger Delta youths seek agric devt, power shift to new generation

    Niger Delta youths seek agric devt, power shift to new generation

    For two days last week, thousands of youths from across the nine Niger Delta states converged on the PTI Conference Centre, Effurun, Delta State for the ‘IYC World Summit’, organised by the Ijaw Youth Council, led by Comrade Udengs Eradiri.

    The spokesperson of the IYC Worldwide, Mr Eric Omare, said the summit that has “Partnering for Prosperity and Sustainable Development” as theme, was convened to tackle some of the challenges facing, not just the Ijaw, but all ethnic nationalities.

    He said the initiative of the IYC was informed by the group’s desire to play a leading role in bringing together other ethnic bodies to fight a common cause for the development of the region.

    He said: “In the post-amnesty era, one of the biggest challenges now facing the Niger-Delta Region just like other parts of the Country is lack of engagement for both skilled and unskilled youths despite the acquisition of various skills through the Presidential Amnesty programme and other medium of training.

    “This summit seeks to set a new agenda by redirecting the focus of the youths of the Niger Delta on agriculture, job creation, promoting small and medium scale enterprises (SME), empowering, educating and enlightening the young minds to take advantage of the opportunities available in the agro and allied sector to create better livelihood for themselves and the society,” he added.

    In spite of a no-show by President Goodluck Jonathan and his wife, Dame Patience, who were expected to declare the summit open, as well as the absence of Chief Edwin Clark, Ijaw national leader and leader of the South/south, and some governors of the region, the summit gradually gathered steam and lived up to its billing. Only the host, Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan and his Bayelsa state counterparts sent representatives.

    Uduaghan, who was represented by Mr Frank Omare, Commissioner for Environment, tasked attendees to adopt peaceful means in conflict resolution, revealing that the government had through its 3-Point agenda, bettered the lives of its people.

    Speaking with newsmen at the summit, IYC President, Udengs Eradiri emphasized the need for Niger Delta youths to unite and shun the antics of those who seek to divide them for political gain. He particularly lamented the ten

    He said: “Today we have an EPZ (Export Processing Zone) that is coming to Delta State. There has been so much argument between the Ijaw and Itsekiri that are neighbours. They have a project that will add so much value to this region and the land that has been lying fallow for donkey years without producing any kobo on the table is the cause of strife.”

    He advised the bickering Ijaw and Itsekiri groups to bury their hatchets, remarking that if the projects kicks off there would be jobs for everybody in the region. “Yet, politicians have started deceiving our young people by fighting themselves.”

    He said the summit would set machinery in motion to unite the various interests so that they project could kick off. He advised that a sharing formula should be agreed by both sides to build trust and unity, stressing that the project could hold the key to the region and Nigeria’s industrialization.

    “There is an auto policy and if this project kicks off most of the auto companies like Toyota, Mercedes and MBW will come and set up plants here in Delta state because it is close to the ocean. If they are producing with a cheaper price they can export from Nigeria to other parts of the world. This will create jobs and by that process open our environment. Businesses will spring up, there would be hotels etc. People must see the idea of bringing an EPZ to this environment and forget all our difference,” he added.

    Eradiri also canvassed for a generational change, stressing that young people must rethink their relationship with ‘elders’ whose times have passed.

    He said: “They must step aside and allow us decide our future. All the conflicts are about sustaining political interest of other people.”

    To this end, he urged the president revealed his plans for the youths of the region as it affects their future.  “Much as he has done some things in the Niger Delta, we are not satisfied; we have no jobs, our roads are not completed and things are not happening as they should in the Niger Delta.

    “In as much as we are happy about what the amnesty is doing, there are just about 30,000 captured. We have over 10 million young people in the Niger Delta. Look at the ratio of 10m Niger Delta youths and 30,000 amnesty beneficiaries. The amnesty is just one area, what are they going to do for education, economy, and job creation? Those are the things we expected the president to come here today and highlight,” he said.

    Nevertheless, the IYC president appealed to the opposition All Progressive Congress and other political parties to follow the example of the Peoples Democratic Party and adopt President Goodluck Jonathan for the 2015 election. He said such move would help build unity, peace and avert crisis resulting from protracted electioneering campaign.

    In his goodwill message, the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta, Hon Kingsley Kuku, thumbed-up the amnesty programme, describing it as a huge success. “This programme has succeeded in ushering unprecedented peace in the Niger Delta as well as astronomical increase in oil production and revenue for our country.

    “With the Amnesty Programme now in its reintegration phase, the challenge that stares us in the face is how to positively and profoundly engaged the thousands of youths that have been trained.”

    Kuku expressed the expectation that the summit would provide opportunity for stakeholders to proffer practical steps towards engaging majority of the youths, especially those who have acquired vocational skills.”

    The summit attracted youth leaders from the Ikwerre, Itsekiri, Urhobo, Ogoni, Isoko and Yorubas, among others.  The highpoint was the release of a communiqye on Friday, October 10, by IYC spokesperson, Mr Eric Omare, a lawyer.

    The document expressed concern about the growing unemployment in the region. It noted that the development was more worrisome considering that substantial number of the unemployed youths had acquired various skills.

    Therefore, he disclosed that “It was resolved that there should be massive development  of the agriculture and allied industries sector in the Niger Delta to provide jobs for the teeming unemployed youths and make them self-reliant.  Henceforth, government efforts towards the economic empowerment of the youths of the Niger Delta should be geared towards making them self-reliant,” the document added.

    The communique lamented that although the President Good luck Jonathan administration has recorded remarkable strides in agricultural sector, the benefits are not felt in the Niger Delta because such monies were spent in the northern parts of the country.It urged the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and the National Assembly to take conscious steps to address the perceived imbalance in the nation’s agricultural policy.

    Similarly, the youths expressed concern over the perceived nonchalant attitude of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and the Independent Corrupt Practice Commission towards discharge of their duties.

     

  • Agric’s contribution to GDP low, says BOA MD

    Agric’s contribution to GDP low, says BOA MD

    Despite Nigeria’s highly diversified agro-ecological condition with a production possibility of a wide range of agricultural products, the agric sector’s contribution to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and export revenue earnings remains low, the Managing Director, Bank of Agriculture, Mr. Mohammed San Turaki, has said.

    San Turaki expressed regrets that despite the nation’s resource endowment, the agricultural sector has been growing at a very low rate with the smallholder farmers constrained by many problems including poor access to modern inputs and credit, poor infrastructure, inadequate access to markets, land and environmental degradation, and inadequate research and extension services.

    He spoke at a one-day conference with the  theme: “National Dialogue on Agricultural Value Chain: Enhancing Agricultural Export Through Adequate Financing, organised by the Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines & Agriculture (NACCIMA).

    He said the economy can only grow if agriculture is treated as a business where farmers produce what the market needs and can process for export.

    He said: “Unfortunately, no significant success has been achieved due to the several persistent constraints inhibiting the performance of the sector. From the perspective of sustainable agricultural growth and development in Nigeria, the most fundamental constraint is the peasant nature of the production system, with its low productivity, poor access to funding which ultimately leads to poor response to technology adoption strategies, and poor returns on investment.”

    The Bank of Agriculture boss stressed that agricultural commercialisation and investment are the key strategies for promoting accelerated modernisation, sustainable growth and development and, hence, poverty reduction in the sector. He said to attract investment into the agric sector, it is imperative that those constraints inhibiting the performance of the sector are first identified with a view to unlocking them and creating a conducive investment climate.

    He argued that it is only when Nigeria focuses on the whole agricultural value chain that the country can start exporting. He insisted that government needs to regulate the environment, land tenure system, research and development, marketing and consumers needs. The BoA boss regretted that banks will rather pay penalty than fund agriculture because of its high risk, noting that except this is addressed its contribution to the GDP will remain abysmal.

    He further stated that economic growth achieved through agriculture is three times more effective than other sectors of the economy.

    Director General, Federal Institute of Industrial Research, Dr. Gloria Elemo frowned at the weak infrastructure and budgetary provision to agric, insisting that such cannot encourage competitiveness of the sector. She also criticised the exportation of primary products at a cheap rate and importing it at a very high cost due to a little value added.

    Earlier, in his welcome address, President, Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), Alhaji Mohammed Badaru Abubakar said agricultural value chain is an important option for agricultural development, as higher financial returns can be realised through value enhancing inputs.

    Abubakar further said the value chain concept creates opportunities for farmers, agribusiness and entrepreneurs along the agricultural value chain to transform commodities into higher value products- a process that can play an important role in poverty reduction; creation of employment, provision of raw materials for industrial growth and generate income.

  • BoI inaugurates N5b fund for agric processing

    BoI inaugurates N5b fund for agric processing

    The Bank of Industry (BoI) has set up a N5 billion Cottage Agro Processing (CAP) fund to assist farmers procure processing equipment for their operations.

    BoI’s  Managing Director,  Rasheed  Olaoluwa who spoke in Lagos,    said loans from the    fund  will be given at a single digit interest rate of nine  per cent and five year-tenor. He projected that the fund will help to create a total of 20,000 direct and indirect jobs. He also said the projects that support food processing, will be given priority in giving out the loans.

    Olaoluwa  said the  bank  will support as many projects  as it  can, including  cocoa, cashew, shea, rice and aquaculture,   among  others.

    He said applications from farmers and food processors, with bankable proposals   will be particularly encouraged . He  explained  that  bankable applications  will be  approved  between  two and  four  weeks.

    According to him, the N5 billion is only a starting point, adding that the bank intends to move to the second phase after full utlilisation of the initial fund.

    Olaoluwa  said the  Federal  Government  through the Agriculture Transformation Agenda  is working  to make the nation a food  hub and that  the fund would  support farmers with resources  that  will enable  acquire  agriculture related agro processing  equipment . According  to him, a  lot of  positive support is  coming to agriculture that  will get  impetus  the  value chain activities ,which in a way ,would help the entire  industry.

    Olaoluwa said the industry is seeing investments from local and foreign companies. He said  the bank  has successfully implemented the N3.4  billion Cassava Bread Fund established by the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.

    The fund, he explained was designed to finance the establishment of 41 processing plants for high quality cassava flour (HQCF). He added that the bank is working with the ministry   on a N13 billion Rice Intervention fund to establish 10 integrated rice mills and six cassava mills across the country.

    BOI said the  bank  is interested in venture fund  for  small and  medium  entrepreneurs ,adding that  this  would help  agro entrepreneurs  in  a big way.

  • ‘Agric can bail out Nigeria’

    For Nigeria to attain a virile economy, the President, Jonathan Trust Foundation (JTF), Mr. Abiodun Dada, in this interview with JOHN OFIKHENUA, advocates that the primary assignment of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) be farming for the country to create more jobs.

    From your point of view the president seems to have done all. Is there any need for his re-election ?

    The main strength of every economy in modern time lays on the accessibility to uninterrupted power supply. We acknowledge the huge step that has been taken in this area. After the 2015 elections you will see improvement in all the areas of the economy. We will start to see the positive impact of the privatisation of the Power sector. More and more companies, local and foreign will invest in power generation, transmission and distribution. The foundation has already been laid. Nigerians should expect to see major improvement in the Agricultural and Mining Sectors of the economy. Our past was Agriculture and Mining and so is the future of this country. These two sectors are capable of employing millions of Nigerians and also generating foreign earnings for the government through export. Imaginging if we stop posting our NYSC members to government and private establishments where they are underutilised and put them into farming. If we create NYSC Agricultural Scheme and   the state government allocates hundreds of hectares of land to scheme in their various local government council for farming where every corps member will carry out their national primary assignment, what impact do you think it would have on food production? Some corps members will even take to farming after completing their service thereby creating jobs. This will reduce the dependence on what more? the government for job creation. This administration from 2015 will create entrepreneurs that would employ Nigerians and drastically reduce the unemployment rate in the country. It worries me to see how an important ministry like the Ministry of Mines has been underfunded. This is a ministry through which millions of our youths can be employed. One out of every ten jobs in Canada is directly or indirectly associated with mining. The same situation is obtained in Australia and South Africa. Ghana, Botswana and Brasil are some of the countries whose economy relies heavily on mining. With proper funding of the sector, the government will not only create jobs but also ease the agitation for resources control. This is a country where solid minerals are everywhere. Look out our steel industry, what is happening to Ajaokuta steel complex, neglect and controversies. The administration of President Jonathan is working to get the Ajaokuta Steel back on track. Tens of thousands of Nigerians would be employed by the time the Ajaokuta Steel is up and running.

  • 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

  • Anambra,UNN to partner on agric

    Anambra State Governor Willie Obiano has expressed his administration’s willingness to partner with faculties of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) to drive the agricultural programme of the state.

    The governor made the comment when he received the UNN Vice-Chancellor, Prof Benjamin Ozumba, and other principal officers, who paid him a courtesy visit at the Governor’s Lodge, Awka.

    Dr Obiano said his administration would need the support of researchers in the university to generate improved rice seeds, cassava stems and other crops needed to fulfil the dream of his administration in making the state sufficient in food production.

    He also stated that the state would need the support of the Department of Film and Theatre Arts to revive Anambra culture and make the state a destination for tourism.

    He said: “We understand that nothing can be achieved without securing the state from armed robbery and kidnapping. The criminals are currently on the run; I am still pursuing them. Right now, people can walk around freely without harassment of security sirens.”

    Ozumba praised the governor on his determination to take the state to a greater height, citing the security summit organised by the government and deployment of drones for surveillance and agricultural mapping. The governor’s quick response to threat of Ebola virus in the state, he said, should be hailed.

    The VC informed the governor of the 54th Founder’s Day Lecture that will be organised by the university in October. The event, he said, will host the Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu as speaker and requested Obiano’s consent as Chairman.

    On the entourage of the VC were the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academics), Prof Polycap Chigbu, his counterparts on Administration and Enugu Campus, Prof Edwin Igbokwe and Prof. Ifeoma Enemo, Registrar, Mr Anthony Okonta, Bursar, Mrs Chinenye Eze-Obi and her deputy, Dr Mercy Odukwe.

     

  • Taraba boosts agric with farm inputs

    Taraba boosts agric with farm inputs

    The acting Governor of Taraba State, Garba Umar has distributed farm inputs to farmers in the state to enable them to enhance food production during this year’s farming season.

    The farm inputs distributed were maize and rice seeds, herbicides, 12 rice-milling machines/housing and installation, 600 irrigation water pumps and two hilux pick-up vans to enhance logistics.

    The distribution took place at the premises of the Ministry of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Jalingo, the Taraba State capital.

    The farm inputs were in addition to 30 new tractors, ploughs and harrows which Umar had provided for the farmers at subsidised rate.

    Umar said the distribution of the MDG inputs aimed at increased agricultural productivity.

    “This is part of our well considered responses to the desire of our farmers to maintain the leading position of Taraba State in agricultural products in the country,” he said.

    The acting governor noted that based on past experience that failed to yield the desired result, the state government would not go into direct production, saying the state would continue to provide the enabling environment for all productive activities to thrive.

    “We will also continue to support farmers’ efforts by assisting them when necessary. The procurement of these farming inputs for onward sale and distribution to our farmers at subsidised rate is part of the strategies to achieve this goal,” he said.

    Umar urged farmers to take advantage of the “favourable factors” provided by nature and the government to step up agricultural production this year.

    Umar directed that the distribution be decentralised so that the inputs would get to every local farmer wherever he lives.

    “The mechanism for the distribution has been done in such a way that we can easily track and detect cases of diversion or illegality in the exercise,” he said.

    Commissioner for Agriculture and Natural Resources, Isa Musa, said the farm inputs distributed would ensure food security in line with the transformation agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Musa added that the state government was making another arrangement to procure fertilisers and more tractors and other implements for distribution to farmers in all the wards and units of the local government areas of the state.

  • ‘Why Aregbesola’s agric programme is a success’

    ‘Why Aregbesola’s agric programme is a success’

    Bureau of Communications and Strategy, Office of the Osun State Governor has emphasised that the StateRural Enterprise and Agricultural Programme (OREAP) remains “one of the successful, laudable development and wealth creation programmes of the Rauf Aregbesola administration.”

    The Bureau spoke yesterday while reacting to what it called “another in the litany of the Iyiola Omisore lies.”

    Omisore had claimed in some media reports that the state’s agricultural programme tagged OREAP was a fraud, alleging there is nothing to show for it in almost four years.

    Describing Omisore’s position as ill-informed and an indication of the crass ignorance of the working of development programmes in government, the Bureau said Aregbesola had not come to power before recognising the need for massive food production to grow an economy such as that of Osun; ignite industrialisation and create jobs.

    The statement by its Director, Semiu Okanlawon, said the allegation gave away PDP and its candidate as a lazy bunch of people who lack the capacity for simple facts-finding before going to the press.

    “Farmers are among the happiest beneficiaries of the current administration in Osun. This is because of the prime place Aregbesola accords food production. The agricultural sector has been very strategic to the overall development of Osun. At least, the state’s massive food production programme is central to the realization of three of the six integral action plans of the administration. Only the nit-witted would conclude that agriculture has not played a lead role in banishing poverty, banishing hunger and creation of jobs and wealth,” the Bureau stated

    Against the lies being bandied by the PDP that farm estates and settlements were supposed to be upgraded, he said land validation exercise and perimeter survey were done with latest technology in nine farm settlements which he noted is the first in the history of farm settlements in South-West of the country.

    He added that over 3,070.3 hectares of land was cleared and 6,209 hectares tractorised across the state.

    Okanlawon also noted that 20,000 Hectares of farmland were validated in the nine farm settlements, more 4,211 Hectares was discovered and reallocated to small holders.

    According to him, “This is a programme that was well thought out to empower farmers. The Government procured 5000 metric tons of fertilizers sold to farmers at 50% subsidy over the last 2 years; 1,830 rural farmers in 61 local communities received farm inputs from the State in collaboration with UNICEF.”