Tag: agriculture

  • Crown Flour Mill set to boost agriculture

    The Managing Director, Crown Flour Mill, Anurag Shukla has expressed the readiness of the firm to partner with the Federal Government to develop agriculture in the country.

    Speaking during the firm’s customers forum in Abuja yesterday, he said the firm is ready to partner with the government to achieve food security for the country through boosting the agric sector.

    He said: “Crown Flour Mill is seriously diversifying into different agricultural branches, such as poultry feed, soyabeans, sale of day old chicks and so many others, all with the intent of partnering the government to move from oil to non-oil economy.

    “The year has been an eventful year for our operations; we made sure we grew our market by moving into our animal feed business; we have two large factories, one in Kaduna, one in Ilorin. Presently, we are the leading players in the day old chick market as well as the feed market.

    “We are proud to say our chicks have been accepted in the market very well; Olam has been the largest non-exporter of this country.”

  • Fashion out activities helpful for food – VC

    The Vice Chancellor, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Prof. Eyitope Ogunbodede, has called for activities that can be helpful to farmers and other stakeholders in the business of food and raw materials production.

    Ogunbodede made the call on Wednesday at the 2018 Annual In-house Review of the Institute of Agricultural Research and Training (IAR&T), Ibadan.

    Our reporter confirmed that the review had the theme: “Agricultural Research and Innovation for Sustainable Food and Industrial Raw Material Production’’.

    The vice chancellor said that research institutes should fashion out relevant activities for food and raw materials distribution, preservation, product development and food security.

    Ogunbodede said that the institutes should focus researches on renewable energies such as solar and windmill to mitigate climate change effects.

    He said that researches should also focus on crop and animal production with flood, heat, drought and pest resistance.

    The vice chancellor said that research should be farmer demand-driven, market-oriented, problem-solving, industrial-demanded and generally acceptable for high adoption.

    Ogunbodede also said that education on the effects of climate change should form an integral part of school curriculum and be taught at all levels in agricultural science.

    He said that subsidy on agriculture by governments should target farming activities that could stern the effects of global warming.

    “The subsidy should focus on farming activities that can address water, energy and chemical changes of production environment.

    “Nigeria will be food and nutritionally secure if government will promote a guaranteed market to farmers, and the activities of middlemen be removed from marketing of agro-materials and food crops.

    “The Federal Government should legislate against free range of domestic animals that often willfully destroy farms, causing clashes between crop and livestock farmers (cattle herdsmen),” he said.

    Earlier, the IAR&T Executive Director, Prof. James Adediran, said that the institute conducted a number of researches which were demand-driven and market-oriented in 2017.

    “These are mainly in area of development of land information system and integrated soil management, varietal development in maize, kenaf, integrated pest/disease management in cowpea and maize.

    “There was also genetic improvement of pigs, local chicken through artificial insemination, multi-locational trials to develop new technologies, improving diet to reduce incidence of diabetics in human, improving quality of soya products, among others,” he said.

    Adediran said that IAR&T also participated in various externally-funded projects with good outcomes, adding that some improved varieties of maize, cowpea and soya bean seeds had been provided for farmers and other stakeholders.

    He gave the assurance that the institute would continue with ongoing projects and propose new ones, as well as make more impacts on dissemination of research findings to the end users.

    “Finally, we are also focusing on income generation activities that are sustainable, including transfer of improved technologies to promote entrepreneurship in agriculture,” he said.

    In a lecture on “Post-harvest Handling of Food Crops in a Changing Climate: An Outlook on Food Research in IAR&T’’, a food scientist, Prof. Adetayo Ashaye, called for emphasis food fortification.

    Ashaye said that food control systems should be developed and operated in accordance with fundamental principles including a food chain approach, risk analysis, transparency and involvement of concerned stakeholders.

    The food scientist said that marketing companies and cooperatives were essential for handling produce and reducing post-harvest losses.

    “Proper coordination of their activities is very important.

    “In reducing post-harvest losses for vegetables, proper packing is required to ensure that they don’t lose freshness in the process of transportation; for roots and tubers, their processing/harvesting must be done timely and carefully,” he said.

    Representatives of research institutes and other major stakeholders in agriculture attended the event during which awards were presented to some outstanding workers of the institute.

    NAN

     

  • Irrigated agriculture, key to nation’s food security – Official

    Dr Elijah Aderibigbe, Director, Irrigation and Drainage, Federal Ministry of Water Resources, has called on all Nigerians to embrace irrigation farming to fast track nation’s food security.

    Aderibigbe told our reporter that there was no substitute to irrigation if Nigeria would meet its agricultural policy agenda.

    “The Federal Government has commenced the implementation of the National Roadmap towards increasing the country’s irrigated agriculture landmass, which stood between 150,000 and 170,000 hectares,” he said.

    According to him, the National Irrigation and Drainage Policy, approved in 2015 also called the roadmap and action plan, is in three phases to achieve no fewer than 500, 000 irrigated landmass by 2030.

    He said the roadmap was being implemented through the river basins and implementing agencies such as the World Bank in its Transforming Irrigation Management in Nigeria (TRIMING) project.

    He noted that the ongoing irrigation projects in Bakolori, Kano River, Hadeija Valley, Dadin Kowa and Guyuk were being made as models for other schemes to look up to.

    The director gave assurance that the models would be replicated in all the nation’s 12 river basins.

    He said all stakeholders on irrigation would be sensitised to understand the importance of irrigation in increasing agricultural production in the country.

    Aderibigbe added that institutional reforms were key to successful development in irrigation practices.

    While acknowledging the efforts of the state governments and private sectors, the director said irrigation hectare was between 150,000 and 170,000 in the country.

    He said there was an ongoing inventory of current irrigation facilities in the country, stressing that once completed Nigerians would be able to know their actual irrigated hectares.

    Aderibigbe said challenges on irrigation included funding, saying delay in timely release of funds had affected the performances of contractors to work in dry seasons.

    “By the time rain comes, if funding is there, they can’t work,” he said.

    He stressed the need for private sector to be involved in irrigated agriculture, saying that the Federal Government alone cannot fund these projects, because they are ‘capital-intensive’.

    “We also have some programmes under the public private partnership arrangement, so that some investors could come in to develop some lands and the beneficiaries will have reasons to smile.”

    He added that operation and maintenance of projects had been critical over the years.

    He emphasised that the ministry was focusing on participatory irrigation management concept whereby beneficiaries are included in the day-to-day running of the schemes.

    He, however, urged all water user associations to take ownership of irrigation schemes, stressing that Federal Government alone cannot provide and protect these schemes.

    Aderibigbe commended the Federal Government on its commitment to complete all abandoned water projects, noting that most of them were left at 60 per cent completion stage.

    “Some of our projects that were abandoned had been taken up.

    ‘‘We have done the Revised Estimated Total Cost, so that the contractors can go back to site, and finish up, some of them were abandoned at 65, 70 per cent.

    ‘‘If we don’t complete them (projects), it’s like wasting and dumping these resources,” he said.

    NAN

  • Ganduje in Dubai: Seeks investment on agriculture, power, mining to boost economy

    Kano state is seeking foreign investment in critical sectors such as power, agriculture, infrastructure mining, to boost its economy and enhance its competitiveness, the state governor, Abdullahi Umar Ganduje has announced.

    “My government is reaching out to foreign investors on a regular basis and providing them with necessary incentives such as land for the setting up of industrial ventures, adequate tax relief, adequate infrastructure and assurance of stable and secure environment”, he stressed.

    Ganduje also said his government would provide support for local employment of staff, facilitate transfer of dividend or profit, even has he pointed out that his administration was zero tolerant to corruption.

    The governor stated this in a speech during the Kano presentation at the 8th Annual Investment Meeting (AIM) taking place at Dubai World Trade Center, UAE, according to a statement by Ameen Yassar, Director-General, Media and Communications, Kano Government House.

    The Annual Investment Meeting is the world’s leading platform for Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), aimed at facilitating strategic networking and promoting investments and this year, it is focusing on the theme ‘Linking Developed and Emerging Markets through FDI: Partnerships for Inclusive Growth and Sustainable Development’.

    Ganduje stated that “Kano state that was ranked 23rd (2017) in the Ease of Doing Business by the World Bank has stepped up efforts to ensure that it remains investor friendly. This has made us the most successful PPP state in Nigeria”.

    “A Chinese multinational company, Shandong Ruyi Technology, has already embraced the benefits of our liberal investment policy and is investing over $600 million in the textile and garments industry (in Kano)”, he noted.

    He, therefore, urged international investors to take advantage of Kano’s vast agricultural potentials, alternative energy resources, huge solid mineral deposits, commercial prospects and productive population, among others for mutual profit.

    On the sidelines of the Annual Investment Meeting, AIM, Ganduje met with the Under Secretary, UAE Ministry of Economy, Abdullah al- Saleh, where they discussed possible collaboration in the agricultural value chain and renewable energy, for mutual development.

    The governor, alongside his Niger state counterpart, Abubakar Bello also held discussion with a leading member of the ruling family in Dubai and owner of AMERI Group, Shiekh Ahmad bin Dalmook Al-Maktoum on prospective investment.

    He told the governors that the AMERI Group has signed an MOU with the government of Lagos state in some sectors, and constructed a power project in Ghana, which could be replicated in their states.

    The 3-day Summit, which is a conference of policy makers, heads of multinational corporations, academicians, financial experts and investors, is expected to witness the signing of Memoranda of Understanding that will help countries enhance FDI flow.

  • Ganduje in Dubai: Seeks investment in Agriculture to boost economy

    Kano state is seeking foreign investment in critical sectors such as power, agriculture, infrastructure mining, to boost its economy and enhance its competitiveness, the state governor, Abdullahi Umar Ganduje has announced.

    “My government is reaching out to foreign investors on a regular basis and providing them with necessary incentives such as land for the setting up of industrial ventures, adequate tax relief, adequate infrastructure and assurance of stable and secure environment”, he stressed.

    Ganduje also said his government would provide support for local employment of staff, facilitate transfer of dividend or profit, even has he pointed out that his administration was zero tolerant to corruption.

    The governor stated this in a speech during the Kano presentation at the 8th Annual Investment Meeting (AIM) taking place at Dubai World Trade Center, UAE, according to a statement by Ameen Yassar, Director-General, Media and Communications, Kano Government House.

    The Annual Investment Meeting is the world’s leading platform for Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), aimed at facilitating strategic networking and promoting investments and this year, it is focusing on the theme ‘Linking Developed and Emerging Markets through FDI: Partnerships for Inclusive Growth and Sustainable Development’.

    Ganduje stated that “Kano state that was ranked 23rd (2017) in the Ease of Doing Business by the World Bank has stepped up efforts to ensure that it remains investor friendly. This has made us the most successful PPP state in Nigeria”.

    “A Chinese multinational company, Shandong Ruyi Technology, has already embraced the benefits of our liberal investment policy and is investing over $600 million in the textile and garments industry (in Kano)”, he noted.

    He, therefore, urged international investors to take advantage of Kano’s vast agricultural potentials, alternative energy resources, huge solid mineral deposits, commercial prospects and productive population, among others for mutual profit.

    On the sidelines of the Annual Investment Meeting, AIM, Ganduje met with the Under Secretary, UAE Ministry of Economy, Abdullah al- Saleh, where they discussed possible collaboration in the agricultural value chain and renewable energy, for mutual development.

    The governor, alongside his Niger state counterpart, Abubakar Bello also held discussion with a leading member of the ruling family in Dubai and owner of AMERI Group, Shiekh Ahmad bin Dalmook Al-Maktoum on prospective investment.

    He told the governors that the AMERI Group has signed an MOU with the government of Lagos state in some sectors, and constructed a power project in Ghana, which could be replicated in their states.

    The 3-day Summit, which is a conference of policy makers, heads of multinational corporations, academicians, financial experts and investors, is expected to witness the signing of Memoranda of Understanding that will help countries enhance FDI flow.G

  • ‘Agriculture saved me from committing suicide’

    An unemployed graduate of University of Abuja, Ms Felicia Ezekiel, said her involvement in agriculture once saved her from committing suicide.

    Ezekiel, who holds a B.Sc. Accounting degree, said this in an interview with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja yesterday.

    She recalled that her involvement in agriculture made her to jettison the evil idea of committing suicide because of frustration induced by her staying at home for three years without a job.

    She said: “After graduating and staying at home for three years, while seeking a white-collar job as a graduate of Accounting which wasn’t forthcoming, I became anxious and disenchanted.

    “I was almost going mad; I even went to the extreme by attempting suicide until a Good Samaritan, who was into Ugwu (pumpkin) vegetable farming, encouraged me to go into farming.

    “I reluctantly went into Ugwu vegetable farming as a last resort because I have exhausted all the available options, as advised by my mother.

    “I was motivated to go into agriculture because of President Muhammadu Buhari’s agriculture-driven policies which many citizens embraced and became rich after crop growing and harvests.

    “Today, I can tell you that I am a proud Ugwu vegetable farmer; through farming, I have started making money and paying my bills.

    “I started by renting a parcel of land for N20,000 annually in Kugbaru, Karu Local Government Area of Nasarawa State, and today, I employ over seven persons and have over 40 off-takers,’’ she said.

    Ezekiel said Ugwu vegetable farming had given her more that she had bargained for, as she could now count her achievements with joy.

    “We have two graduates in the house who are not working, a mother and other siblings, but through Ugwu vegetable farming, I cater for the needs of my entire household.

    “It is through Ugwu vegetable cultivation that I pay my house rent and let me shock you; I am currently building a house, which is already at the roofing stage. I am paying the school fees of my younger ones and taking care of my aged mother; through Ugwu vegetable farming, I am able to take care of my family.

    “I am planning to engage in the cultivation of other crops like beans, maize and yam during this rainy season but Ugwu vegetable farming will remain my main business.

    “My advice for those youths waiting for white-collar jobs is for them to embrace farming because the Buhari-administration is promoting the interests of farmers, including the youth,’’ she said.

  • Agriculture pulled Nigeria out of recession – Envoys

    African and European diplomats on Wednesday lauded Nigeria’s agriculture sector for its role in pulling the country out of recession.

    The envoys gave their commendations at the ongoing 4th International Agro Food Fair taking place in Lagos.

    The representative of the European Union trade delegation, Mr. Ibi Ikpoki, said the agricultural sector played a huge role in Nigeria’s exit from recession.

    “The Nigerian agricultural sector has also played a crucial role in job creation, women and youth empowerment and contributed immensely to poverty alleviation.

    “Therefore, I am delighted today that agriculture in Nigeria is gradually evolving from being seen as a mere activity to a business, moving primary production to value addition.

    “This is why this annual exhibition continues to be relevant for the development of the agro-business and packaging sectors among others,” he said.

    Ikpoki also congratulated the Federal Government for the improvement in the ease of doing business in the country.

    Citing figures from the EU Trade Desk, he said total EU trade in Nigeria increased by 27 per cent from 19.9 billion euros in 2016 to 25.3 billion euros in 2017.

    “This trade increase mirrors the improvements in Nigeria’s external trade as a country that exited recession in 2017.

    “Permit me to use this opportunity to congratulate the Nigerian authorities for some notable feats experienced in 2017, including the improvement in ease of doing business.

    “On ranking, we saw Nigeria jump 24 places from 169 to 145 and also emerged one of the top most improved 10 countries,” the EU trade representative said.

    Ikpoki also spoke on the EU’s increasing investments in Nigeria despite the bureaucratic bottlenecks in doing business in the West African country.

    The Netherlands Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Robert Petri, said the innovation Dutch companies were exhibiting at the fair would help boost agriculture processes in Nigeria.

    “The Netherlands has innovative solutions for agriculture and for tackling high population growth and climate change such as in Nigeria,” Petri said.

    Also speaking, the French Consul, Mr. Laurent Polonceaux, said his country’s partnership with Nigeria on agriculture had resulted in the participation of 50 French companies at the fair.

     

  • Costly gridlock

    Realising the imperative of urgent diversification of the country’s economy to substantially reduce its dependence on crude oil exports for foreign exchange earnings, drastically limit imports, especially of non-essential commodities, and enhance economic self-reliance, the President Muhammadu Buhari administration has commendably  adopted policies designed to boost non-oil exports, with particular emphasis on agriculture. Consequently, there has been an improvement in the domestic production of products like rice, yams, soya beans, sesame seeds, as well as cashew nuts in shell and flour.

    Yet, the continued parlous state of critical infrastructure across the country constitutes a serious threat to the realisation of the government’s objectives in this regard.

    The virtual state of emergency that obtains in Apapa, Lagos, one of the country’s major economic nerve centres, as a result of protracted traffic gridlock offers the most vivid and disturbing mirror of this grave challenge. According to reports, the Tin Can Island Port II, Apapa, one of the largest dry port facilities in the country which handles close to 80 per cent of imports and exports, has practically been on lockdown as the bad roads and traffic gridlock have impeded smooth access to the port by importers and exporters. As a result, the country has not recorded any exports through this facility in the first two months of 2018.

    Mr. Sadiq Farouk, Public Relations Manager of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) Area Command in charge of the terminal confirmed to the media that no revenue from export of Nigerian products had been generated by the service between January and the first week of March this year. This certainly is bad news for an economy that needs all the revenue it can generate to consolidate its still fragile recovery from recession and stimulate further growth.

    It is thus not surprising that the sharp drop by 51% in Nigeria’s non-oil exports witnessed in the second half of 2017 has deteriorated further in the first quarter of this year. The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) has reported that the value of agricultural exports so far this quarter is 38.43 percent lower than the second quarter of 2017.

    One serious consequence of this situation is the steep rise in the cost of doing business at the ports. Since trucks have to queue for close to two months before being able to reach the port terminals to drop cargoes or offload containers due to the bad and clogged roads, truck owners are said to have hiked their charges by 230 percent; thus charging N200, 000 per container compared to the former cost of N60,000. Matters are worsened by the absence of storage facilities for perishable agricultural products like yams, which decay rapidly under sustained heat.

    Business mogul, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, had last month drawn attention to the huge drain that the Apapa-Wharf Road gridlock constitutes to the economy when he noted that it is causing a loss of about N86 billion daily to businesses and residents. Apart from the traffic gridlock, Dangote also deplored the heavy presence of diverse task forces, including the Customs, on the highway checking and certifying goods. We agree with his suggestion that such checkpoints should not be mounted beyond the toll gates so that they do not continue to further compound an already intolerable scenario.

    A state of emergency, even if informal, clearly exists in the Apapa axis, which requires drastic remediation. Given its crippling economic effect, everything should be done to ensure that work is accelerated on the ongoing reconstruction of the major road leading to the Apapa and Tin Can Ports being undertaken by Dangote Group, Flour Mills of Nigeria Plc and Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA) at a cost of N4.34 billion. The same goes for the ongoing palliative work on Apapa-Oshodi Expressway as well as the trailer park, which government is constructing off the expressway to decongest access roads to the ports.

  • IFC invests $2m in agriculture

    International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group, has signed a $2 million agreement with the Federal Government to strengthen agribusiness and create jobs.

    According to a  statement, Nigeria is one of three countries to benefit from the World Bank Group’s Livestock and Micro Reforms in Agribusiness (L-MIRA) programme, which objective is to improve competitiveness in the dairy and poultry subsectors. The others are Ethiopia and Tanzania.

    The Practice Manager for the World Bank Group’s Finance, Competitiveness, and Innovative Global Practice, Alejandro Alvarez de la Campa, said: “Dairy and poultry are important livestock sectors that contribute significantly to agribusiness, a key growth sector in Nigeria. By introducing harmonised and simplified regulations related to animal feed, drugs and vaccines, this initiative will help spur socio-economic development in the country.”

    The project will streamline the regulation of animal feed to remove overlapping or redundant regulatory requirements related to the standards and quality control mechanism, as well as the registration and renewal process for drugs and vaccines.

    It will also support reforms to better and more efficiently regulate animal feed in markets, and coordinate government agencies involved in regulating animal feed.

    The four-year deal, endorsed by key national partners, is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The partners include the  Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, the National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC), the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) and the Nigerian Institute of Animal Science (NIAS).

    IFC, a sister organisation of the World Bank and a member of the World Bank Group, is the largest global development institution focused on the private sector in emerging markets. Working with more than 2,000 businesses worldwide, we use our capital, expertise, and influence to create markets and opportunities in the toughest areas of the world.

     

  • How new farmers approach agriculture as business

    How new farmers approach agriculture as business

    The number of new entrants into farming is rising, despite the grim picture being painted by practitioners. However, young farmers are unperturbed because they see agriculture as business, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    A growing number of young Nigerians  are joining a movement of highly educated, ex-urban, first-time farmers, who are capitalising on the booming consumer demand for local foods.

    In some states, such as Ogun, Oyo and Osun, their number has grown by 20 per cent since 2015, with a few of them operating farm sizes of between 100 and 500 acres. The farms are critical to the rural economies, as they generate jobs and supply mainstream markets.

    One of them, the Managing Director of Niji Foods, Mr Kolawole Adeniji, has become a successful farmer. He is the founder of Niji Group engaged in agricultural machinery fabrication, crops and livestock production, and food processing. He started by producing food processing machines for corporates and supplying farmers. Today.

    Passionate about agriculture, food and sustainability, he has not only changed his life, but brought hope to about 100 persons, employed on his farms, spread over 3,000 acres of land in Oyo State. His cassava  farm is also a learning centre for young and old farmers and students as it teaches them how to process food.

    Once everything on the farm is ready, Adeniji goes ahead and farm. He plans his farm meticulously and build fences, watering points and stock handling facilities sufficient for harvest.

    He monitors his progress throughout and assists in terms of budget and purchases for the farm. He is among the successful private sector operators, who are cultivating and processing cassava on a large scale. His firm processes cassava into gari, fufu and high quality cassava flour. He receives requests for cassava-based products from Europe, the United States (US) and the United Kingdom (UK).

    He believes knowledge is key to success and guides other farmers. Having been in cassava farming for many years, he understands why farmers fail to have a good produce and what can be done to minimise the risk.

    He has started Niji Institute of Sustainable Agriculture (NISA)  where aspiring farmers are  exposed to intensive agricultural practices.  According to Adeniji, an  optimistic attitude is his greatest asset.

    Another of such is Atinuke Lebile. She  is a  noted  agri-entrepreneur, mostly engaged in farming, processing and marketing of innovative bio-fortified food products. Her story is a success. She grows cassava and her impact has positively encouraged other young farmers to scale up and become a larger part of the commercial food system.

    Her passion for feeding the nation and ensuring food security made her the Chief Strategic Officer for Ogunmod Farms and Farmers’ Academy.

    She co-founded,Cato Foods and Agro-allied Global Concepts, an agro-processing company dedicated to developing innovative food products from bio-fortified crops, which now partner HarvestPlus, an international food support organisation..

    Atinuke works with rural communities to mentor young, out-of-school girls on various entrepreneurial and leadership skills through her initiative called Mentor A Girl Child (MAGIC) and SheAgric Initiative, where she encourages potential female farmers, empowers and motivates women and youths in agriculture value chain to ensure food security, poverty reduction and curb unemployment in Africa.

    There is no shortage of success stories when it comes to young farmers making the difficult transition from small to commercial farmers.

    Another exciting story is that of Pelumi Aribisala, a young emerging farmer, who owns more than 500 acres of farm land in Osun  and Oyo states for mixed farming. He is an innovative farmer engaged in  vegetable farming. He also plants maize and cassava. He has created a platform for farmers with the aim of empowering them to make agriculture a profitable business.

    According to him, one of the toughest challenges for emerging farmers is they are not recognised as genuine farmers, or taken seriously enough by the larger agricultural community.

    Lead Agribusiness and Digital Marketing Consultant, Agritechnovate Solutions Enterprises, Kalu Samuel, is a successful watermelon farmer and business owner. He is the head of an organisation which empowers youth through agriculture.

    He plants watermelon and the  whole process takes about three months, depending on the climate and the variety of watermelons, as some mature early.

    To him, capital is a major barrier for  young farmers, who want to start or expand their businesses. He also has to deal with dishonest middlemen, find genuine seeds and pay for expensive inputs.

    He is now mentoring youths interested in the agricultural sector. His goal is to change the perception among the youth that farming is for the poor.

    Brote Urban Farm Chief Executive, Innocent Mokidi, an accounting graduate from Edo State, comes up as another success story. He started out in 2013 as a poultry keeper with 1,000 birds. Today, he is a proud owner of an integrated farm in Abuja with greenhouses to grow vegetables. The instant success, which accompanied his business has made him a reference point in commercial farming, particularly to youths.

    GoGreen Africa Initiative Executive Director,  Adeniyi Sola Bunmi  is  a successful  plantain farmer from Ogun State, who produces more than 1000 tonnes of plantains and moringa annually.

    He is also the Chief Executive Officer of Natural Nutrients Limited and promoter of the Youth in Agribusiness Development and Innovation (YABDI), an agricultural entrepreneur training arm raising a new crop of agropreneurs.

    However, one of the biggest challenges faced by these farmers is lack of access to production credit, mostly because they have no collateral.