Tag: agriculture

  • Agriculture ministry mulls framework to ease business

    Agriculture ministry mulls framework to ease business

    The Minister of Agriculture and Food Security has said it is planning immediate and short term plans for developing a standard framework  for Ease of doing agribusiness.

    The Minister of Agriculture and Food security, Senator Abubakar Kyari stated this yesterday in Nasarawa State at the Opening of the Annual Agricultural Show organised by National Agricultural Foundation of Nigeria (NAFN) with the theme ‘towards the realization of the Presidential Declaration of Emergency on Food Security.

    Kyari noted that the Agricultural Show has become a veritable tool for showcasing latest developments within the agricultural sector. It brings people together, to network, to do business and to give the public a glimpse into farming life.

    He stated that the activities in the Agriculture Show present spin-off benefits to the gathering of all stakeholders in the sector by serving as high-level platforms for business-business linkage, technology transfer, knowledge exchange, public-private collaboration and policy discourse among participants drawn from all walks of life. He added that it also provides a hub for the farming and rural community to meet, exchange ideas.

    In his address National President of All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN) and the Chairman BoT of NAFN, Arch. Kabiru Ibrahim,  appealed to the government for direct subsidy on fertilizers to farmers.

    Ibrahim lamented that a number of smallholder farmers are in debt because they cannot afford to buy fertilizers at present day prices.

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    He reiterated the need to incentivize smallholder farmers through the stemming of insecurity that impedes seamless access to farms.

     He also called for the need to provide direct subsidy on seeds and all inputs by all tiers of government (Federal, States and LGAs), and the continuous provision of mechanization through the provision of light agricultural farm machinery before making heavy duty tractors, combine harvesters.

    He however appealed for the resuscitation of the National Food Reserve Agency (NFRA) and to make good seeds easily accessible and affordable to all Small Holder Farmers.

     Also, the Nasarawa State Deputy Governor, Dr Emmanuel Akabe, said agriculture remains the cornerstone for the sustainable socio-economic development of the country and It is the hub through which Nigeria can achieve a tripartite benefit of creating employment, generating wealth, as well as establishing industries that will process agricultural produce for consumption and exportation.

    He called on stakeholders, captains of industries and development partners to invest massively in agriculture to transform Nigeria into a virile country for food security and value chain addition.

  • More perspectives on the agriculture sector (2)

    More perspectives on the agriculture sector (2)

    Due to the importance of Agriculture in the turnaround, sustenance, diversification, and consequently the growth and development of Nigeria’s social justice and economy; this week’s episode of this Column is a continuation of last week’s episode in which I started sharing some of my insights and perspectives on Agriculture, particularly in areas of fundamental issues including Security, Climate Change, etc. 

     To refresh our memories, I mentioned that one of the key initial steps taken by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu at the beginning of his administration was to revamp Nigeria’s economy, Mr. President initiated a plan to resolve the country’s food crisis by declaring a state of emergency on food insecurity.

     To contextualise the topic of today, so that we can appreciate where we are coming from, where we are, and my perspectives on the way forward, I hereby represent the following statistics:

    •According to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in 2016; In the 1960s, the Agriculture sector contributed 85% of foreign exchange earnings to Nigeria, 80% to employment, and 90% to the GDP.

    •According to the Oxford Business Group (OBG), a global publishing, research, and consultancy firm; the Agriculture sector in Nigeria is currently contributing 25% to GDP and 70% to employment.

    •Recently, the President of the Africa Development Bank (ADB), Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, stated that Africa currently imports about $ 70 billion worth of food that we can produce. 

    •In the case of food insecurity: According to Dr. Adesina, currently over 280 million Africans go to bed hungry. 

    •According to 2022 UN-funded statistics on food and nutrition projection; by August this year, over 25 million Nigerians will be food insecure. These projections were made before the policy missteps of 1st quarter this year by the erstwhile Mr. Godwin Emefiele-led CCBN with regards to the brutal monetary policy and the cashless policy, the Agric anchor-borrowers scheme missteps, the increase in climate change, etc. Therefore, the current number of Nigerians who are suffering from food insecurity is certainly more than 25 million.

    Youth empowerment in agriculture

    The youths of any society or nation are key to the development and substance of that nation.  A very worrisome situation in Nigeria is the lack of deepening commitments and impacts with regard to the support for Nigerian youths to seriously take Agriculture as a profession or business. Part of the issue is that Agriculture has been nationally unattractive and more of a campaign tool than a national and state economic development tool. Over time, successive administrations have not sustained agriculture initiatives and interventions that would have made agriculture the “go-to” industry, for people to be encouraged to join farming.

     The youths should be encouraged to go into Agriculture as a value-addition to the existing Agricultural value chain. They will bring in innovation and technology, most of which require key investment support, and enablement which is either lacking or not properly directed to the right people. Therefore, I advocate for moving from majorly dispensing cash only as we have seen with the anchor borrower scheme of the immediate past administration. Cash backing should not only be the key incentive, but enablement should be the key incentive in terms of training, skills acquisition, awareness and sensitisation, operational, and entrepreneur capacity building, etc.

     The financial institutions, especially the Banks have not really been supporting the Agric sector with tangible impacts, rather they have been operating like shylocks. I do not see creativity from the Finance sector in the case of support for Agriculture in Nigeria. The Banks basically apply interest rates as they follow inflationary trends, focusing on developing their Agric loan offerings, rather than building entrepreneur support partnerships with the farmers. 

    Read Also: Agriculture sector from security and climate change perspectives

     Apart from a few, most of the Agric desks in the Banks have been underperforming because of a lack of broad Agric business strategy and investment-friendly policies. The Banks need to be creative from a business continuity and growth perspective because Banks are not insulated from the global and national socio-economic challenges we are facing in Nigeria. So, if they craft their strategy for the Agric sector from a value innovation to support perspective; they will support our teeming youths who have very innovative mindsets, capacities, and potentials. They could support them with the right investment offerings in the entire Agric value-chain; production, quality control,  storage, value-addition, packaging, logistics and supply-chain, inland trading and export, i.e. id and downstream subsets of the sector; the Agric sector has the potential capacity to provide more opportunities for the youth than even the digital technologies sector in terms of deep and wide multidimensional socioeconomic impacts in Nigeria down to our hinterlands; based on which he Banks can make more income and profits.

     In the case of sensitization; I look forward to the current administration, particularly the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development in collaboration with key industry stakeholders to open up conversations and vistas of attractive value offerings for the youths, to know that apart from the huge opportunities in production – plants and animals (aquatic and non-aquatic); Agriculture also has other huge golden opportunities in its mid and downstream sub-sectors to create wealth, make wealth and make impact on the socio-economic well-being of Nigeria and its populace. 

     Agriculture provides critical inputs and support in areas of food security, pharmaceutical, and biotechnology, and provides raw materials for the productive sectors, e.g. Textile, Plastic, Construction, etc. Therefore, from both the Government and the financial institutions; there is a need for a lot of education, sensitization, capacity building, and other support in areas of; trade facilitation, policy coherence and consistency, etc. Of course, the Government will have to trigger the support of the Financial sector through the correct policies (formulation, implementation, and regulation) to catalyze the financial institutions to provide the requisite support. These can be achieved by making policies that will ensure that as part of our national development policy, the financial sector must support our youths or any other Nigerian that is/or will be interested in operating in the Agriculture sector. Let us encourage Nigerians to go into Agriculture not by marginal transactional events whereby most times politicians hijack the events and in the end people that should benefit are left out and the objectives not met.

     Why interventions failed in the past 8 years

    The current investigation that was initiated by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu with regard to the goings-on at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in the past 8 years under the leadership of Mr. Godwin Emefiele the former Governor of the CBN has started yielding some worrisome information which have vindicated Mr. President with regards to his decision to suspend the erstwhile Governor of the CBN, the investigation of his administration and his subsequent resignation; and the appointment of Dr. Yemi Cordoso as the New Governor.

     Over 1 Trillion was disbursed as interventions, with no clear accountability. we have not seen critical tangible impacts commensurate with the huge amount of money disbursed. 

     In the case of the recovery of the money given as loans, we hear that only about 40% of the N1 Trillion is what has been recovered by the erstwhile CBN leadership. However, the outcome of the investigation of CBN is what will tell us how much of the N1 Trillion was truly recovered. We hear information about the former MD/ CEO of The Nigerian Incentive-based Risk Sharing System for Agricultural Lending (NIRSAL) is also under investigation, etc. 

    Those developments are all pointers to the fact that the Agriculture intervention scheme of the immediate past administration, even though well-thought-out and noble, was not properly structured and executed. That is why the key objectives of the intervention were not achieved, because the small and medium-scale farmers, that were supposed to be impacted were largely left out 

     By allowing the CBN to meddle in the Agric intervention programs, the CBN lost focus on its core mandate, and became less professional and more political, resulting in the CBN becoming the “jack of all trades and master of none” of President Buhari’s administration. Consequently, the erstwhile headship of the CBN totally went off the rails and went into policy and political misadventures that further brought Nigeria to its knees. May we not experience such an avoidable terrible debacle again in Nigeria. Ameen,

     Moving forward, in my opinion, I advocate that the Agric intervention programs should be immediately removed from the focal point of the CBN. This is so that the CBN will fulfill its core mandate of dealing with the hitherto monetary policy and fiscal policy experiments that resulted in the current brutal consequences on Nigerians. I urge Mr. President to domicile the invention initiatives to the relevant MDAs for proper structuring, alignment, performance, and impacts.

     Role of states and Local Governments

    The importance of the roles of the States and Local Governments to improve our Agricultural value chain and its socio-economic contributions cannot be over-emphasized. Apart from the national agriculture sectoral reform strategy, which I suggested in last week’s episode of this Column, that we should have at the Federal level, the State Governors, the National Assembly, and state assemblies need to do more in crafting their various Agriculture reform strategies that will key into the overarching national development plan while taking into cognizance their peculiarities with a view to harnessing all their agricultural resources in the states for better socio-economic impacts -short to long term.

  • Agriculture sector from security and climate change perspectives

    Agriculture sector from security and climate change perspectives

    As part of his critical initial steps to revamp Nigeria’s economy, President Bola Tinubu has initiated a plan to resolve the country’s food crisis by declaring a state of emergency on food insecurity.

    How did we get here?

    •To contextualize the topic of today, so that we can appreciate where we are coming from, where we are, and my perspectives on the way forward, I share some statistics:

    •According to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in 2016; In the 1960s, the Agriculture sector contributed 85% of foreign exchange earnings to Nigeria, 80% to employment, and 90% to the GDP.

    •According to the Oxford Business Group (OBG), a global publishing, research, and consultancy firm; the Agriculture sector in Nigeria is currently contributing 25% to GDP and 70% to employment.

    •Recently, the President of the Africa Development Bank (ADB), Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, stated that Africa currently imports about $ 70 billion worth of food that we can produce. 

    •In the case of food insecurity: According to Dr. Adesina, currently over 280 million Africans go to bed hungry. 

    •According to 2022 UN-funded statistics on food and nutrition projection; by August this year, over 25 million Nigerians will be food insecure. These projections were made before the policy missteps of 1st quarter this year by the erstwhile Mr. Godwin Emefiele-led CCBN with regards to the brutal monetary policy and the cashless policy, the Agric anchor-borrowers scheme missteps, the increase in climate change, etc. Therefore, the current number of Nigerians who are suffering from food insecurity is certainly more than 25 million.

    FUNDAMENTAL ISSUES

    Critical initial steps have been taken by President Tinubu for the short term. Now that he has a functional Federal Executive Council which includes the Honorable Minister and Minister of State for Agriculture and Rural Development, in persons of Senator Abubakar Abba Kyari and Senator Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi respectively: There should be a formulation of an Agriculture sectoral reform strategy that will cover insecurity, climate change, critical infrastructure, improving production, value-addition, storage, logistics and supply chain, etc. Unless there is a strategy that covers the short, mid to long terms, the short-term interventions will not be sustainable. 

     I appreciate the initial steps taken by Mr. President, albeit they are taken on the spur of the moment to address the pressing challenges. Therefore, the President needs to have a robust national agriculture strategy so that we can have sure-footed and sustainable progression with regard to food security and support for the production economy. It is worthy of note that Agriculture provides food, medicine, and pharmaceutical support, and over 50% of the critical raw materials for the production sector across the entire economic value chain. Therefore, it is a critical sector. Agriculture, if well harnessed and managed, has the capacity to enable the turnaround and drive the economy of this Country as it happened in the 1960s and make Nigeria far less dependent on hydrocarbons. I hope that in the next few months moving into 2024, we will be more clear-eyed with regards to how, where, or what Agriculture should be doing to our socio-economic development as a nation.

     The way and manner the industry was administered in the past 8 years is a classic example of “HOW NOT TO RUN AN AGRICULTURE SECTOR”. Looking back eight years, and considering the huge sums of money budgeted, appropriated, allocated, and disbursed is mind-boggling. I hope and pray that during the administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the sector will undergo genuine and proper reforms in the Agriculture sector. I also look forward to strategic and critical thinking, professionalism, creativity and value innovation, achievement of operational excellence, integrity, attention to the welfare and wellbeing of staff, and importantly significant contribution to the national economy; over and above the transactional attitude to leadership and work which has become a corporate cultural malaise in the sector.

    Read Also: Mohbad: Police never invited me, says Primeboy

    THE IMPACT OF SECURITY ON FOOD SECURITY 

    Despite the huge financial investment in Agriculture in the past 8 years, the performance of the sector has been overall marginal insecurity and poor policy implementation. Therefore, the administration of President Tinubu needs to formulate an Agriculture sectoral reform strategy that should inculcate security as fundamental, with an all-encompassing approach to the things that need to be done to turn around this sad insecurity situation. 

     The critical success factor to turn around the socio-economic malaise in Nigeria is first and foremost tackling insecurity. Otherwise, any other initiative will be a “flash in the pan”. This is because the recent escalation of insecurity around the northwest, north-central, and even southeast is hampering food production, otherwise, we are taking two steps forward and three steps backward. This has significantly impacted food security. The northern part of Nigeria is the food basket of the nation and is arguably some part of the West African sub region. Farmers have gone to the farm late this year. Climate change is impacting, and the danger of food insecurity is looming. There is a need for quick actions

    An example of the impact of insecurity on our Agric value chain:

    GB Foods is an investor from Spain that came to Nigeria and set up in Kebbi State Nigeria; the second largest Tomatoes processing plant in Nigeria, and the only fully backward integrated tomatoes processing plant in the West African sub-region valued at over 20 Billion; employing over 1,000 Nigerians, including 500 farming jobs, 150 factory jobs, and 150 construction jobs. The plant started production in March last year when over 500 Bandits attacked the plant, kidnapped some expatriates, killed some Nigerians, and desecrated the processing plant. This caused the parent company in Spain to close the plant and lay off staff with negative socio-economic impacts on the country. There are also a lot of farmers who could not go to farm last year and this year unless they succumb to the blackmails of the bandits and terrorists before they can go to their farms in some cases the bandits and terrorists either seize the entire food produced of tale almost of the production and take ransom for the food that they leave behind for the farmers.

    Accordingly, insecurity needs to be tackled head-on before significant progress can be achieved. Mr. President has a critical role to play in providing leadership, especially with regard to inter-institutional strategy and synergies.

    CLIMATE CHANGE

    Climate change has been having a devastating impact on our Agriculture. Climate change management should be. A key element of the Agriculture sectoral reform strategy will be risk assessment and mitigation as well as the sustainability modules. Climate change management from the point of view of early warning systems, disaster/crisis mitigation management, and proactive countermeasures and processes that should cover dependencies and counter-dependencies are critical to the existence and sustainability of our entire agriculture value chain.

     In specific terms, we must be proactive. We saw what happened last year when the Cameroun Dam crisis impacted River Benue with devastating consequences on all the farmlands along the entire farming corridor of the middle belt, the flood also wreaked havoc on the farming, fishing, and food logistics and supply chain throughout north to the southern part of Nigeria was brutal. 

     Therefore, the institutions that are managing our early warning systems should be proactive and consistently pragmatic so that the impacts of climate change can be mitigated and ensuing crises and disasters like floods, desertification, animal and plant diseases, etc. can be better anticipated and managed. Climate change is a phenomenon, a global issue, and a threat to national development.  As part of the Agriculture intervention rolled out in July this year, Mr. President is targeting the cultivation of 500,000 hectares of land for the production of Rice, Corn, Cassava, and Wheat. This noble objective and the protection of the small, medium, and large Agricultural value change cannot be achieved we do not have a safety plan to contain insecurity and climate change.

    SOME CRITICAL SUCCESS FACTORS

    ·               The contribution of State Governments with regards to the development of Agriculture is a key. To that extent, the full involvement of the National Executive Council is a critical success factor.

    •A well-articulated strategy that is all-encompassing and has the buy-in of critical •High execution quotient, with a transparent dashboard that will drive our Agricultural interventions in areas of finance, critical infrastructure

    •Policy: What is glaringly an issue is not the lack of policies. In my opinion, the issues are the policy gaps and lack of policy coherence – there is a lot of it. Agriculture bestrides other sectors. We are talking about production, quality control, storage, logistics and supply chain, storage, value-addition, export, etc. Therefore, there are a lot of inter-agency synergy and policy cross-pollination requirements for the sector to thrive and make sustainable critical impacts. 

    •Policy implementation and Regulation enforcements are also critical success factors

    •War against Corruption.

    •Risk Assessment and Mitigations

    CONCLUSION

    All Nigerians, especially the critical stakeholders in the Agriculture sector should support the building of an institutionalized, professional, purposeful, resilient, and impactful Agriculture sector with strong pillars to support socio economy growth and development sustainability. 

  • ‘Agriculture needs amenable finance, incentives to drive non-oil sector’

    ‘Agriculture needs amenable finance, incentives to drive non-oil sector’

    Managing Director, Multi-Trex Integrated Foods Plc, Mr. Yusuf Isiaka, operates in the interface of policy formulation and implementation in the nation’s agricultural sector. Headlining a major turnaround for a publicly quoted company, Isiaka, in this interview with Deputy Group Business Editor, Taofik Salako, speaks on the challenges and solutions to optimise the country’s vast agricultural potential.

    What’s your immediate assessment of the policy directions of the new government?

    We can itemise the major cross-cutting actions already taken by the President Bola Tinubu administration, which serve as pointers for the administration’s policy direction, to include removal of subsidy on premium motor spirit (PMS) or petrol to abort drain on government resources and end related corruption; priority attention given to the revival of the state-owned refineries to facilitate supply of petroleum products at reduced cost; stoppage of multiple exchange rate to make the process more transparent and distribution of palliatives to cushion the effect of fuel subsidy removal on the most vulnerable citizens.

    Equally remarkable are some of the president’s pronouncements such as the resolve of the administration to diversify the economy from oil dependence to enhance foreign earnings, repay the nation’s debts more conveniently and build net foreign reserve; the determination to reduce the high unemployment rate, drive for foreign investments and the alignment of national economic interest with foreign diplomacy, among others.

    Just as well, the new Attorney-General of the Federation and  Minister of Justice has signalled the government’s readiness to confront the inefficient justice system, tackle massive corruption, put a stop to executive recklessness and disobedience to court orders. The Minister of Power, on his own part, assured that the government would provide stable and accessible power through private-public partnerships, ensure universal metering of households, tackle challenges around the national power grid, explore renewable and alternative energy sources, and leverage the power of technology and energies of youths.

    The Finance Minister and Coordinating Minister of the Economy has generically pledged to drive set goals on macro, fiscal and monetary policies, for the country to advance. Like other new ministers, the ministers of Agriculture and Food Security, Industry, Trade and Investment, Defence and Works have equally made policy pronouncements such as those stated above.

    For our company’s sub-sector, cocoa value chain, the Ministries of Agriculture and Industry, Trade and Investment are the supervising ministries. Other ministries whose policy directions next most closely impact on the health of the sub-sector are Defence, Finance, Justice, Power and Works.

    Read Also: Home and abroad, Tinubu’s Nigeria is taking its rightful place

    Going by the actions taken and pronouncements made so far, the administration has shown that it has a good team that has good knowledge of the real issues requiring urgent attention, the courage and the willingness to take difficult decisions in trying times and that it is open to alternative views as it is determined to improve the lot of a greater number of the citizens.

    However, one action that the government has taken that I believe needs a rethink is the distribution of palliatives-whether food items or cash to the selected citizens. Well intended as the scheme seems to be, conceptually, the implementation, handled by or through anyone or group, will be deemed to be open to monumental abuse. Besides, the basis for selecting qualified citizens will perpetually be controversial. As such, the laudable goal may, after all, not be achieved, unappreciated or even misunderstood. The palliatives should not be individualised. For it to serve the intended purpose, it could be provided in the form of an investment in a bespoke project that offers domestic appeal and benefits to the vulnerable citizens in targeted communities. Such projects need not be the same across board. Beneficiaries could be grouped into clusters. Each cluster group could be given the privilege to choose the project that best serve their interest.

    Why is access to agricultural funding so challenging given your experience in access to finance, across the public and private sectors?

    Basically, commerce entails the production of raw materials and other input as well as the manufacturing and distribution of finished goods and services to satisfy the needs and wants of consumers.

    In the agricultural business sector – cocoa sub-sector inclusive, farmers produce primary food and cash crops, and processors convert farm produce to semi-finished products, to be used as manufacturing inputs. On their part, manufacturers undertake further processing of the primary crops and intermediate products to produce finished goods that satisfy the needs of consumers while merchants and exporters undertake the distribution of farm produce, semi-finished products and finished goods to applicable consumers, wherever they may be.

    Broadly, the agricultural value chain exemplifies commerce which can hardly be conducted without finance. Hence, operators throughout the agricultural business value chain require finance. Unfortunately, most players operating in the sector in our country face financing challenges, which hinder growth. There are root causes to the obstacle.

    The first of them is that most borrowers in the sector, who fall into the category of micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), are inadequately capitalised, relative to the funding demand of their businesses. For a good number of them, discharging credit obligations is a matter of convenience. This explains the high rate of loan default in the sector.The most recent sad experience about the Anchor Borrowers’ Scheme is a case in point.

    Secondly, poor record-keeping and weak corporate governance structure of most borrowers in the sector represent another source of discouragement for lenders. These twin weaknesses, in the eyes of lenders, elevate the level of risks associated with lending depositors’ funds to the sector. The consequential low trust earned from lenders accounts for the limited funding options available to the players and the low volume of loanable funds attributable to the sector, not to mention the hindrance they cause to sectoral growth. Also, these weaknesses increase the vulnerability of agric businesses and cause lenders to impose stringent collateral requirements that most businesses in the sector can hardly afford.

    Thirdly, whereas agricultural operations often require medium-to-long-term capital, most lenders are only able to offer short-term funding options because they have limited long-term funding themselves.

    Moreover, owing mainly to their high operating costs due to infrastructural limitations in the country and, the necessity for continuing investment in technology, among others, lenders are compelled to pass on these growing costs to borrowers in the form of high interest rates and fees, which are mostly unbearable for agricultural businesses.

    Another obstacle is the scarcity of lending professionals with specialised knowledge and skills in agricultural financing and agric. credit administration. I dare say that there are not enough lenders who extensively understand the agricultural sector’s unique aspects, including seasonality, crop cycles, and revenue streams. Lenders tend to cover up by adopting conservative lending approaches in risk assessment of the specialised sector.

    Corruption among officials within lending institutions also partly accounts for the failure of several creative lending models and development initiatives that have been introduced to the agriculture sector, especially in the last decade. The destructive force of corruption, which takes the form of unethical practices such as bribery has not only been hindering growth in the sector but also discouraging legitimate agricultural businesses from gaining access to appropriate funding.

    Another critical factor that is adversely affecting access of agricultural businesses to suitable finance is the rising interest rate which together with poor infrastructure, and unstable government policies of the past years negatively affect the profitability of the businesses, threaten the ability to meet loan obligations and cause low sectoral credit ratings.

    Furthermore, the risks associated with farming, including exposure to uncertain weather conditions, destructive effects of pests, fire, farmer-herder clashes and farmer kidnapping, have created their challenges and put fears in the minds of lenders.

    At the international market end, the lenders’ concerns are usually about volatile and fluctuating prices, especially for the internationally quoted goods, and intense competition from international players who have access to more affordable borrowing costs and efficient infrastructure. While intense competition exposes local borrowers to market risks, rising international market prices warrant a continuing need for an increment in working capital in local currency, thereby worsening borrowers’ capital gearing.

    Given the cyclical nature of these interconnected factors, it is not surprising that players in the agricultural sector continue to encounter challenges in securing appropriate funding for their operations and realising real benefits from several agricultural development initiatives put in place.

    How do we ensure intervention funds and other agric-development initiatives reach intended beneficiaries?

    I have watched the lenders and the government introduce several lending and agricultural development initiatives at close range, for the last four decades. Unfortunately, the laudable initiatives have all been more successful in design than in action. No thanks to the aforementioned challenges.

    To ensure that players in the agriculture sector have easier access to finance and benefit more from the various agricultural development initiatives, I do not really believe that the answer lies in the design of new lending products by commercial and development banks or new development initiatives by government agencies such as Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) because there is no gain to be realised from trying to reinvent the wheel.

    Rather, I am of the opinion that we can gain a lot more from the schemes that are in place, provided that the major hindrances identified above can be addressed by the implementation of targeted actions to mitigate these challenges.

    Enhanced financial literacy programmes need to be continually organised to educate agricultural players on financial management, record-keeping, and corporate governance. This will enhance their understanding of financial requirements and promote better access to finance. Collaboration with agricultural associations and organisations can facilitate the delivery of these programmes.

    To address stringent collateral requirements, alternative collateral options such as crop insurance, warehouse receipts, and agricultural land certificates can be introduced or deliberately promoted. These alternatives can provide lenders with greater confidence in the sector and reduce the need for traditional collateral.

    Efforts should be made to provide long-term funding options to agricultural players. This can be achieved by attracting long-term investments from foreign development finance institutions, creating specialised agricultural finance facilities, and establishing public-private partnerships to pool resources for long-term agricultural development. In particular, the local specialised banks such as Bank of Agriculture, Bank of Industry and Nigeria Export-Import Bank should be de-politicised, recapitalised and supported with the right staffing levels – in number and skills.

    To reduce the high operating costs for lenders due to infrastructural limitations, governments need to priortise investments in rural infrastructure, including roads, power, irrigation systems and storage facilities among others. Such improvements will increase productivity, lower transaction costs, and make the sector more attractive to lenders.

    Also, lending professionals should be exposed to quality training programs to enhance their knowledge and specialised skills in agricultural finance.This will help them understand the unique risks and opportunities within the sector, leading to better decision-making and improved financing options for farmers and other players in the sector.

    To combat corruption among lenders and officials responsible for distributing benefits of agricultural initiatives, anti-corruption measures should be more strictly enforced. Transparent processes, monitoring systems, and severe penalties for malpractice can help build trust and ensure that the benefits reach the intended beneficiaries. A major reform of the justice system, including full autonomy for the judiciary is imperative.

    Efforts should be made to address the inconsistency and instability of government policies. Promoting dialogue between policymakers, agricultural players, and financial institutions can help foster stable and supportive policies that encourage investment and long-term planning in the agriculture sector.

    In the area of risk mitigation, collaboration with insurance providers can help mitigate risks associated with farming, such as unpredictable weather conditions, pest outbreaks, and other calamities. Encouraging the use of insurance products can provide sectoral players with financial security and increase their creditworthiness.

    Efforts should also be made to enhance market linkages for agricultural products and encourage diversification.This can be achieved through contract farming agreements and the promotion of value addition to raw farm produce. By creating stable market opportunities, lenders will find the sector more attractive.

    It is also important to promote collaboration with international players, which can be beneficial for knowledge sharing, technology transfer, and attracting investment. Engaging in joint ventures and partnerships with international investors or organizations can improve access to finance and increase the sector’s competitiveness in the global market.

    To sum up, I believe that improving access to appropriate finance and agricultural development initiatives in the agriculture sector requires a multi-faceted approach and collaborative efforts that address the sector’s unique challenges. By implementing strategies such as the aforementioned, the agriculture sector can overcome these challenges, attract investment, and successfully contribute to the sustainability of the agricultural sector, the nation’s food security and economic growth.

    Specifically, how can the country regain its preeminence and build its cocoa value-chain?

    The country’s cocoa value chain has both sector and country-specific challenges. The coming on board of a new Minister of Agriculture provides an opportunity to shift emphasis from crafting macro policies for agriculture to making policies for the sub-sectors. Although, not much has, for the time being, been heard about the new administration’s policy directions for the cocoa sub-sector. But, I think there are several policy suggestions that could help the growth of a sustainable cocoa value chain.

    There is an ongoing debate over which institutional  governance or arrangement system is suitable for managing cocoa value chain – strong national or sub-national government involvement under a public-private sector interaction or a system where the sub-sector’s operations are largely market driven. Learning from the experiences of several cocoa-producer nations, determining a suitable governance always pose a delicate balance because the decision needs to reflect the circumstances and economic structure of the particular cocoa-producer nation.

    For our country, the existing institutional governance system which involves the players and the national and sub-national governments, under a public-private sector arrangement, where that transactions are largely market-based should, in the main, be maintained. On the other hand, the governments, in its facilitating roles, only need to step up the process of instituting policy measures to control post-harvest quality, in order to stabilise prices in the domestic market and earn premium prices from high-end buyers of output at the international market. The governments should also provide land for cocoa farming, research and extension services to improve yield, while non-governmental organisations (NGOs) should continue to offer input supply and supply chain services and other similar services to producers. Private players are to continue to control transactions – contracts, prices, margin and proceeds of sale.

    Furthermore, the sector-specific policy measure must, as well, address sectoral funding challenges -difficulties in accessing loans, high cost of fund and prolong delay in settlement of export Incentive claims. The policies should also aim at promoting increase in production, price volatility in the international marketing, value addition to mitigate the unfair distribution of margins along the cocoa value chain and foster local consumption of cocoa products.

    Other medium term policy recommendations include the development of local know-how on fabrication of machinery, spare parts and building plant control retrofit for cocoa processing, to save foreign exchange and reduce reliance on foreigners for repair works. Measures to ease the shipping of export goods and clearing of imported machinery and spares from the air or sea ports should also be included.

    What do you see in the medium to long term if we keep on this trajectory?

    As it is always the case, the success of any strategy or policy measure depends, to a large extent, on its implementation. Therefore, on the assumption that the above recommendations are adopted and same are diligently implemented, I see sustainable development in Nigeria’s cocoa sub-sector for the benefit of our nation and other stakeholders alike. On a final note, it is important to state that success of the recommended policies does not depend on the Federal Ministry of Agriculture, the private operators and the NGOs, it equally demand active participation of the Ministry of Agriculture in the cocoa- producing states.

  • Agriculture can generate $50b to GDP, says federation

    Agriculture can generate $50b to GDP, says federation

    Federation of Agricultural Commodity Associations of Nigeria (FACAN) has said  agricultural sector can generate over $50 billion to Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    Board of Trustee Chairman , Dr Victor Iyama, spoke at the Agro-Commodity Roundtable Dialogue, Dinner and Recognition Night organised by the association.

     Iyama urged Nigerians to return to agriculture to create wealth, grow food production strategy to make the country self-sufficient.

     He said agriculture, solid minerals, IT and entertainment industry, can make  the country double its foreign exchange to over $100 billion.

    Read Also: Nigeria needs to adopt industrialised agriculture, says AfDB boss

    “If Nigeria decides to develop those sectors and forget about oil, the country will improve its foreign earnings.

     “Agriculture can bring $50 billion. So, everyone should work towards that goal.

     “We should go back to agriculture.

     FACAN’s President, Sheriff Balogun, said with support of members and partners in the sector, a pathway would be forged to improve agriculture.

     While noting FACAN started with 10 commodity associations, he said it boasts of over 42 associations.

     Balogun said FACAN will collaborate with government to ensurem it realised objectives of its agricultural policies.

     “In FACAN, we have been promoting agriculture for the last 10 years, and we will continue to do that.

     “We will encourage good policies, find ways to develop farmers, build capacities in terms of efficiency, effectiveness of production, getting the best yield, doubling production to ensure we increase yield.”

  • Tinubu’s Agriculture Emergency: Recipes for 100b rabbits, 50b papayas in one year (2)

    Tinubu’s Agriculture Emergency: Recipes for 100b rabbits, 50b papayas in one year (2)

    Whenever I see the papaya or  eat the fruit, seed or the leaves, or swallow its sap made into papain tablets, I remember Mrs Florence Fusi. She was a single mother of three children who combined catering work with part time farming. She developed oesophagal cancer , couldn’t swallow even a drop of water, had to have a hole made in her upper abdomen through which a plastic tube was pushed into her stomach for her to be able to “eat” liquified food. Her weight crashed to about 40 kg. She had to quit regular work and work more on the farm, growing mainly plantain and banana.

       This column is dedicated to her as it is to the Agriculture  Emergency of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

       Fellow Camerounian Mr Simeon Ekor introduced Mrs Florence Fusi to me. She was losing weight because she could not eat, having rejected a medical advice to have her body surgically invaded with a feeding tube. My job was to advise her to accept the surgery, increase her weight for another surgery that would remove the cancerous throat which will then be replaced with a new throat formed from a portion of her intestine to almost normalise her natural feeding process. The doctors promised to form a portion of the intestine into a new throat if her weight could return to 75kg from about 40. She made 65kg and was persuaded to undergo chemotherapy preparatory to that surgery. She didn’t survive the chemo.

        I remember her as a loving mother, dutiful farmer and helpful acquaintance who would cook delicious meals from home for my household  to eat, although she could not join us at table. Often, she would step aside in one of the rooms to funnel her liquified food through an opening in the abdomen into the tube in her stomach.

    She subsisted largely on plantain farming, proceeds from which she augmented with gifts from her friends. I sensed her budget was fragile and could not comfortably sustain heavy medical bills. So, one day, I suggested to her she could add papaya to her farm lines because it could be more financially fruitful than plantain. The plantain fruits only once in its lifetime, dies after the harvest but propagates itself about five suckers or baby plantain plants which may take one year to fruit. The papaya is different. One tree may produce more than hundred  fruits in one year and offer about hundred seeds per fruit. Potentially, that is about 10,000 baby papaya trees compared to five baby plantain trees in the same period.

    Mrs Florence Fusi agreed, and, soon, she brought 30 seedlings to plant in my backyard garden. It was in the harmattan season, and only about four of them, three males and one female, survived from poor watering. Before she passed, Mrs Florence Fusi made sure I had about four or six  papayas every Sunday and plantain as well. The male papaya

           Food and health

    The purpose of an agriculture emergency should be to provide more food, jobs, wealth and boost health. The papaya can do that for Nigeria if President Tinubu makes a revolution out of it, enabling the country to produce 100 billion papayas every year,beating India which currently holds world production record of 5.23 million metric tonnes projection for this year.According to the food and agriculture organisation (FAO), Nigeria is the third largest world producer of papaya with an output of 951,000 tonnes, far behind India which engages in plantation farming of papayas. In the world market, about 80 percent of tropical papaya output is imported by developed countries . Papaya leaves are freeze dried to powder, encapsulated or packaged in other forms for international trade. The fruit is also freeze dried for a long shelf life and hydrated when needed for consumption as a drink. From the seeds and the leaves, chymopapain, an enzyme, is derived for use as tenderizers in factories or as papain tablets to treat indigestion, to kill unfriendly intestinal micro-organisms or to boost immunity, depending on how it is used.

    Health

    Everything about the papaya is good and healthy. I will only provide summary information here, since my focus is on how Nigeria can grow 100 billion papayas every year .

    Read Also: Full list of Tinubu’s Ministers’ portfolio

     The papaya is a rich source of lutein and Zeazanthin, two carotenoids which protect the eyes against cataract of the lens. Beta Carotene, another carotenoid, protects against age related macular degeneration (ARMD), a cause of blindness.  A rich source of fiber, the papaya may help to prevent TYPE 1 and TYPE 2 Diabetes and improve digestion. I enjoy the papaya principally for digestion. It has many antioxidants and enzymes. A major enzyme is papain, which, chemically, is a cousin of Pepsin, found in the stomach for the digestion of complex proteins such as meat to simpler substances. Papain kills any protein which is not body (endogenous) protein. Thus, parasites, worms, bacteria, fungi, mold and viruses do not easily survive in an intestine in which papain  regularly travels. Papain is abundant in the leaves,black seeds and the sap. Foreign companies make papain tablets from the sap for indigestion. Besides Papain, these parts of the papaya offer proteolytic enzymes which help to digest other classes of food (carbohydrates and fats) and, when taken on empty stomach, may empower the immune system to deal with retrograde tissue such as cancer. Pawpaw leaves stop bleeding through the eyes, ears, nose, mouth etc in Dengue Fever through a high amount of vitamin K 2 which supports the clotting factor of the blood. Vitamin K also helps calcium absorbtion, thereby promoting bone health. Papaya also gives us Lycopene, found also in tomatoes, for prostate gland health. I cannot forget vitamin C which, in the average papaya provides about 220 per cent of the daily requirement. The same goes for Vitamin A, Choline, potassium etc. Not many people are aware that the black seeds of papaya are probably more nutritious and medicinal than the fruit and the leaves. The black seeds bear testimonies of the leaves and fruit and more. To them have been ascribed the potential to prevent prostate cancer growth. They are also believed to be protective of the liver and therefore the kidneys, and to protect the heart against ravages by low density lipoprotein (LDL), the dangerous cholesterol fraction. The black seeds posses alkaloids, flavonoids and polyphenols which give them powerful antioxidant potential to especially reduce inflammation and challenge cancer. In these seeds are mono unsaturated fatty acids, including oleic acid, which are beneficial in the control of estrogen levels, induce menstruation and check  menstrual cramps etc. They are reputed to also provide zinc, calcium, phosphorus,magnesium etc. For these and other reasons, I do not throw away the black pawpaw seeds but eat them with the fruit or with a meal. There are more health benefits from the papaya which space does not permit mention today. Over, then, to the potential grains from an agriculture revolution.

    The Papaya

     I love this fruit. I eat the fruit, peel, seeds and leaves. Even the roots are useful, but some studies say they may cause male infertility through sperm damage. This finding was in an animal study. In Eastern Nigeria, the root is used in the treatment of liver cirrhosis and jaundice.I once cultivated a small farm of papaya, harvested the small plants from the roots, crushed them under a hammer mill and dried them in an oven I purchased  from the Federal Institute for Industrial Research, Oshodi (FIIRO) , handiwork of Engr Komolafe and his men. I called the powder Caripals (carica papaya roots, leaves, and stem) . This is a dense papain herbal product. What it is good for deserves another article.The campaign on papaya I have been itching to ignite is aimed at giving the average Nigerian affordable breakfast and dinner. Who wouldn’t fill up at either table time on two or three pawpaw fruits to himself or herself alone?

     The average papaya fruit may be blessed with about 100 seeds. We often throw them away as waste for lizards, chickens and birds to eat. Yet, we may plant them to expand our food crop stock. A papaya seedling becomes a full fledged plant in about one year, producing about 100 fruits in a good fruiting season. There must be about 120 million active persons in the projected 220 million Nigerian population. If only 50 million of them are enraptured in a pawpaw planting campaign, and they plant 50 pawpaw seeds each in one year, this should yield 2,500,000,000 million papaya plants, most of which may be fruiting (female) plants , if seeds from the same mother plant are not planted near one another.Even if they are, there is a new way of making male pawpaw trees to become female trees. Indians use this method. Mrs Sade Kusa, my sister-in-law, picked it up from them and taught me. All that has to be done is to cut down a male pawpaw tree and drive nails into the stump near the top from two opposite sides. The nails are left on. The tree will regrow as a dwarf tree and begin to fruit soon after. Mrs Kusa taught me this technique when she visited my garden and noticed that I had cut down a pawpaw tree to the level of the fence. I should have cut it even lower, she said. This tree was fruitful. The trouble with it was that it grew taller than the roof of the storey building, taking its fruits away to a height where only the birds could enjoy them. I do not know if, in any way, we antagonised it or disturbed it by picking its leaves almost every week to eat them raw over a meal. This may not be superstition. Plants and trees may have no souls, but they have nature beings who tend them and respond to our relationships with the plants, according to the findings of many psychic garden studies.

     We digressed from where we were looking at each of 50 million Nigerians planting 50 million pawpaw seeds for a harvest of 2,500,000000 pawpaw trees the next year, in a papaya revolution under president Tinubu’s agriculture emergency. Even if 1,000,000,000  female pawpaw trees, that is less than half of our harvest of pawpaw trees in the first year, give us 50 fruits each per tree and each of the 50 fruits gives us an average of hundred seeds, that means we are going to have for planting in the second year 1,000,000,000x 50x 100 seeds or 5,000,000,000,000 seeds. What we are going to do with five thrillion seeds will now be the business of managers of the agriculture emergency papaya revolution. If only half of the five thrillion seeds grow into female pawpaw trees, each bearing 50 fruits in one year, that will be 2,5000,000,000,000x 50 fruits or 125000,000,000,000. (Forgive my mathematics, I have no head for figures or words to express them).Wonderful! This by far surpasses the hundred billion papaya fruits suggested in the headline. It will be a lot of work for the country and managers of the agriculture emergency. Nigeria can do it. The giant of Africa would have woken up. The world will respect us. All of Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s farm settlements which are sleepy or literally dead have to be woken up. Every household has to be encouraged to grow pawpaw trees. What would it matter if single dwellings ring the setback of their perimeter fence with pawpaw trees. There will be enough pawpaw for every citizen to eat for breakfast and dinner and still leave a surplus to be kept in silos or freeze dried to powder for use another day or exported to nations which enjoy papaya but are not blessed with a climate such as ours where the papaya luxuriantly grows.The President must lead the revolution. He must grow pawpaw trees all over Aso Rock. The Senate and House of Representatives must fly the flag. So must the governor’s,State assemblies and local government offices. So must the universities, primary schools and high schools. A nation bound in a common value would be evolving. We need fear no wastages. If a freeze drying industry will arise to convert the surplus to powder. The seeds can be converted to papain tablets to solve indigestion problems and to kill parasites in the intestine. Nigerian herbalists who needed micronised pawpaw leaf powder used to import this medicinal product from Chinese, European or American papaya plantations which may stretch into several square kilometers. This revolution, like the rabbit revolution, will create several thousand jobs, provide stomach filling light and medicinal meals with a higher energy coefficient than cooked meals. Giving money handouts to poor people will not end their poverty. Creating jobs for poor persons, will also merely be spoonfeeding them. Poverty is spiritual blindness to positive possibilities in the environment . Spiritual poverty brings about material poverty even in the midst of oceans of milk and honey.

    Perennial farming

    Another interesting aspect of President Tinubu’s agriculture emergency is that farming will now be done year round and not seasonally. What a slow nation we are! Like many other citizens, I suggested perennial farming to the government of President Ebele Jonathan and President Mohammadu Buhari. During the Presidential election campaign of both gentlemen in 2015, I published about 13 articles in The Nation newspaper entitled JONATHAN VS BUHARI, THE RICH VS THE POOR. The summary was that whoever would become president should make food more abundant, cheaper and reduce unemployment and crime if he opened up the forests in each of the geo-political zones for specialised farming. This was to be a follow-up improvement on Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s FARM SETTLEMENTS in Western Region of Nigeria in the First Republic. Reference was made also to Israel, a country in the desert which elevated desert land into arable land and feeds itself and other countries. In the first Republic, Chief Awolowo partnered with Israel to the annoyance of the pro-Arab Muslim Northern Region.

    Reference was made as well to what a former First Lady of Senegal, French woman Viviane Wade, accomplished with forest farming in a country where unemployment was at an all time high. I was privileged to meet her and to interview her in 2006 during a conference in Dakar, Senegal, on agriculture in sustainable development. This was a follow up to the 2002 Accra, Ghana conference. In Senegal in 2006, women were freely prostituting in the streets of Senegal as they do today in many Nigerian cities, wearing only under pants and blouses which do not cover their navels. May this degeneration not be contributory to the alarming cases of the raping of minors by men older than their fathers or grandfathers had been who had been subliminally sexually irradiated in buses, in the markets, in the streets…practically everywhere? I published an article a few years ago in which I recognised that rapists may be fiendish and evil, but stated that it took two to tango. After I demanded arrest and punishment for women who expose their breasts, abdomens and upper thighs in public, some women’s groups gathered signatures to fight me. I remembered them this morning when I heard on radio the story of 47-year-old man who defiled two sisters aged two years and seven years!

    What did first lady Vivianne Wade do in Senegal? She had some forests cleared up and hostels built in them for unemployed young women. She took them to the forests and gave them land on which to plant cucumbers, papayas, yams, vegetable, tomatoes, cassava, beans, among other food crops and raise chickens, rabbits etc most of the surplus of which was exported to France. The women were paid in French currency and this terminated their poverty.

    In the suggestions made to President Jonathan and President Buhari, farm towns, not settlements, were to be created in each geo-political zone. Each forest town was to have residential areas, farming areas, business areas, recreational areas, police stations and forest police battlements to protect the town. The government was to provide uptakers for produce from the farms. Rent was to be cheap in the residential areas. Everyone in the settlement was to have meaningful vocation.

    In the settlements, water was to be ever present, like electricity. If Israel could turn desert to arable land through an irrigation system powered with boreholes, why can Nigeria not make a farming success of its arable but fallow forest land?

  • Nasarawa stakeholders demand increased funding for agriculture

    Nasarawa State stakeholders in agriculture have called on the State Government to increase its budget

    allocation to the sector to 10 per cent in line with the Maputo declaration.

    They made the appeal in a communiqué issued at the end of a 1-day workshop on “Agriculture Budget Priorities” for Nasarawa State, organised by Oxfam Nigeria, on Friday in Keffi.

    According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), the communiqué read by Mr Joshua Jonathan, President of the Association of Small Scale Agro Producers in Nigeria (ASSAPIN), on behalf of other stakeholders, noted that increased allocation and funding to the sector would enhance economic development and food security.

    They also demanded for the inclusion of small holder farmers in the agricultural budget process in order to capture their needs and address their priorities.

    The stakeholders also stressed the need for the recruitment, training and retraining of extension workers in the state to augment the 100 currently serving them.

    They also encouraged the Nasarawa Agricultural Development Programme to collaborate with professional organisations, research institutes and non-governmental organisations to build the capacity of extension workers to impact on the production of small holder farmers.

    Similarly, the stakeholders urged the state government to encourage farmers to engage in dry season farming by providing water pumps and and other infrastructure.

    They maintained that irrigation farming was more profitable than rain-fed farming in the quest for sustainable food security.

    Other areas of intervention sought by the stakeholders from the state government included improved technology farm inputs, proper guidance on how to access available credit facilities.

    Also of concern to them was the need for the state government to make concerted effort through  appropriate legislation to provide land for women and youth farmers in the state.

    The group also encouraged the state government to upgrade all the seven grazing reserves in the state to boost livestock production.

    ……………………………………………….

  • Before youths completely lose interest in agriculture

    Sir: The country is presently battling with food insecurity and massive rate of unemployment because youths no longer hold a stake in the economy. In fact, the degree of disconnection between Nigerian youths and economic policies, including agricultural policies, can be likened to a mobile device without an installed network provider. Imagine! Meanwhile, it is also very important to commend all agricultural stakeholders who have made submissions on this worrisome national challenge on different platforms, at one time or the other. As some opined that the discovery of oil led to the worrisome decline in the agricultural sector, others shared the perspective that lack of continuity of brilliant agricultural programs as well as the nation’s undemocratic leadership style impeded our growth within the agricultural space.

    Well, all of these views are very good part of the reasons we are trapped within the walls of national uncertainties. But it is imperative to say that the crucial reason for our national predicament is the lacuna between youths and contemporary agricultural innovations.

    How shall we escape?

    Truth be told, if we must avert the United Nations’ projection of famine in Nigeria by the year 2050 as a result of our increasing national population, then the youths – constituting about 60 percent of the country’s population and 30 percent of her workforce, must be productively encouraged to actively participate in agriculture through integration in contemporary agricultural innovations before they completely lose interest. Sincerely speaking, youths are already losing interest in agriculture; because the country’s agricultural landscape is not adopting the global developmental trend in the agricultural sphere. It is needful to say that the best way to entice young people back to farms is through introduction to agricultural technologies such as Soilless farming (hydroponics), cloud computing, block chain, among others, inclusive of digital and technical skills for strategic market penetration. If youths still do not realize agriculture as a noble profession with profitable opportunities for livelihood, it becomes very difficult to combat the challenge of food insecurity and high rate of unemployment ravaging our national corridors.

    For me, it is not too late to make it right as a nation. Before our youths completely lose interest in agriculture, we need to do the needful  collectively. First, we need to deliberately restore the nobility of agriculture right from primary level across board. Secondly, agricultural curriculum must be reviewed and contemporary agricultural innovations such as Block Chain, Artificial Intelligence (AI), Soilless farming (hydroponics), Precision agriculture, Use of Drones, among other globally-adopted innovations in the agricultural sphere should be introduced.

    Similarly, youths in tertiary institutions should also be taken through practical sessions by professionals in these innovative areas of agriculture, at close time intervals to strengthen their technical know-how.

    Finally, there should be more synergistic work relationship between agriculture stakeholders in the industrial sphere, business/finance sector and management of agriculture-inclined tertiary institutions to help educate the youths on how to convert their theoretical and practical experiences into profitable businesses (agribusiness) for self reliance. These will go a long way in promoting food security and reducing the alarming rate of unemployment plaguing the country.

     

    • Adebisi Matthew, forwardgatei@gmail.com.  
  • Before youths completely lose interest in agriculture

    Sir: The country is presently battling with food insecurity and massive rate of unemployment because youths no longer hold a stake in the economy. In fact, the degree of disconnection between Nigerian youths and economic policies, including agricultural policies, can be likened to a mobile device without an installed network provider. Imagine! Meanwhile, it is also very important to commend all agricultural stakeholders who have made submissions on this worrisome national challenge on different platforms, at one time or the other. As some opined that the discovery of oil led to the worrisome decline in the agricultural sector, others shared the perspective that lack of continuity of brilliant agricultural programs as well as the nation’s undemocratic leadership style impeded our growth within the agricultural space.

    Well, all of these views are very good part of the reasons we are trapped within the walls of national uncertainties. But it is imperative to say that the crucial reason for our national predicament is the lacuna between youths and contemporary agricultural innovations.

    How shall we escape?

    Truth be told, if we must avert the United Nations’ projection of famine in Nigeria by the year 2050 as a result of our increasing national population, then the youths – constituting about 60 percent of the country’s population and 30 percent of her workforce, must be productively encouraged to actively participate in agriculture through integration in contemporary agricultural innovations before they completely lose interest. Sincerely speaking, youths are already losing interest in agriculture; because the country’s agricultural landscape is not adopting the global developmental trend in the agricultural sphere. It is needful to say that the best way to entice young people back to farms is through introduction to agricultural technologies such as Soilless farming (hydroponics), cloud computing, block chain, among others, inclusive of digital and technical skills for strategic market penetration. If youths still do not realize agriculture as a noble profession with profitable opportunities for livelihood, it becomes very difficult to combat the challenge of food insecurity and high rate of unemployment ravaging our national corridors.

    For me, it is not too late to make it right as a nation. Before our youths completely lose interest in agriculture, we need to do the needful  collectively. First, we need to deliberately restore the nobility of agriculture right from primary level across board. Secondly, agricultural curriculum must be reviewed and contemporary agricultural innovations such as Block Chain, Artificial Intelligence (AI), Soilless farming (hydroponics), Precision agriculture, Use of Drones, among other globally-adopted innovations in the agricultural sphere should be introduced.

    Similarly, youths in tertiary institutions should also be taken through practical sessions by professionals in these innovative areas of agriculture, at close time intervals to strengthen their technical know-how.

    Finally, there should be more synergistic work relationship between agriculture stakeholders in the industrial sphere, business/finance sector and management of agriculture-inclined tertiary institutions to help educate the youths on how to convert their theoretical and practical experiences into profitable businesses (agribusiness) for self reliance. These will go a long way in promoting food security and reducing the alarming rate of unemployment plaguing the country.

     

    • Adebisi Matthew, forwardgatei@gmail.com.  
  • FG to disburse N180b to farmers in 4yrs – BOA MD

    Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of the Bank of Agriculture (BOA), Kabiru Adamu has said that, the bank under the President Muhammadu Buhari initiated Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP) has disbursed over N90 billion to farmers in the last for years.

    He, however, disclosed that about N180 billion will be spent in the next phase of the programme, which will cover new crops like; palm oil, cotton and sesame seeds among others.

    The BOA boss who disclosed these at the ongoing 40th Kaduna International trade fair, said the programme has also created employment and increased yield thereby addressing food security in the country.

    He further noted that additional crops that were not there have been introduced including palm oil, cotton, sesame seeds and the like which will be covered under the ABP.

    According to him, “Nigerians should expect a boast in the activities that we have undertaken under the ABP in collaboration with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Immediately after the declaration of Mr. President as duly elected, the CBN called a stakeholders meeting where new targets were set.

    “The new targets are ambitious and as a Public Financial Institution, we stand committed and ready to meet the target set by the CBN.

    “As you are aware, the ABP is one of the cardinal promises made by Mr. President during their electioneering campaigns, we have supported the programme to enable it to a large extent, by disbursing over N90 billion to farmers.

    “We have created employment through the programme and we have increased yield production and by extension food security in the country. With the election of R. President, Nigerians should expect more through the programme. ”

    He assured of government’s commitment to make things happen in the agric space and expressed commitment to support the desire of the government