Tag: Agro Processing

  • World Bank, Lagos to enhance food security

    The World Bank, in partnership with Lagos State, through its Agro Processing, Productivity Enhancement and Livelihood Improvement Support (APPEALS) project, is to help 10,000 farmers improve their livelihoods, writes DANIEL ESSIET.

    The agriculture sector plays a major role in boosting food security globally. But the sector in Nigeria still is yet to achieve  self sufficiency in food production. Despite attaining a level of self-sufficiency in some staple foods, food insecurity remains a concern across the country.

    However, there is hope as the World Bank has stepped in to help. through its  Agro-Processing, Productivity Enhancement and Livelihood Improvement Support (APPEALS) project aimed at enhancing the productivity of small and medium-scale farmers and improving value addition along priority value chains.

    The bank has earmarked $200 million for the project. Six states -Kano, Kaduna, Lagos, Cross River, Kogi and Enugu – will participate in the project.

    Speaking during a farmers’ sensitisation on APPEALS in Lagos, the state Ministry of Agriculture  Permanent Secretary, Dr. Olayiwola Onasanya, said Lagos and the World Bank would foster sustainable agriculture and rural development.

    Through APPEALS, he said, the World Bank aims to promote decent opportunities for women and  youths through exchanges of knowledge and best practices on agriculture, access to markets and management of financial resources.

    He said the value chains to be supported by APPEALS in Lagos were aquaculture, poultry and rice.

    The number of direct beneficiaries, Onasanya said, is about 10,000 with 50,000 farm households as indirect beneficiaries.

    To him, Lagos has the potential to be a powerhouse in agriculture and the government wants to help the sector attain full potential.

    Onasanya reiterated that the government was determined to establish Lagos  as a hub for agricultural and food innovation.

    On rice, he said Lagos was working on a rice mill, with a projected 32 metric tonnes per hour production capacity. The plant will create more than 200,000 jobs  and produce 130 million kilogrammes of rice yearly.

    He said the state was determined to promote rice as an agro enterprise venture.

    Onasanya reiterated that the state has integrated youth employment into its agriculture and rural development policies, strategies and programmes.

    The Permanent Secretary said the state has developed testing capacity  for agro exports and local foods, adding that the Ministry of Agriculture is strengthening the capacity of its product department to provide services in support of market access for exporters.

    Onasanya said every effort is being made to enable farmers comply with international food testing standards and good  agricultural practice techniques.

    The State Project CorodinatorAPPEALS, Mrs Oluranti Oviebo said the project relies on strategic alliances with  partners to provide better life opportunities for women and  youths.

    According to her, the project will tackle key constraints of the agriculture sector, such as low productivity, lack of seed funds for establishing agro-processing plants, lack of access to supportive infrastructure, and low level of technology adoption and limited access to markets.

    On poultry, she said the project recognises its importance for rural livelihoods and its role in improving food and nutritional security.

    She said APPEALS will work with farmers in some areas, including the development of training focused on profitable poultry production.

    To meet their needs, she said farmers would be provided extension support, and special efforts made to link poultry producers to distributors for input and offtake.

    She said the project is committed to helping inclusive businesses grow and continue to have a positive impact on people living at the base of the economic pyramid.

    Lagos State Agricultural Development Authority (LSADA) Programme Manager, Dr Olamilekan Sheteolu-Pereira said the government is committed to empowering small-scale women and youth farmers.

    He said the state has been able to crash the price of rice per bag  from N24,000 to N14,000, adding that there is a plan to reduce the price to N10,000.

    A member of the APPEALS Steering Committee, Mrs. Bosun Solarin  said the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry is  ready to support the state to promote sustainable livelihood for farmers.

  • BoI to fund  agro-processing sector in Edo

    BoI to fund agro-processing sector in Edo

    The Bank of Industry (BoI) has pledged more funding support to industrialists in Edo State to enable them  create value for their agricultural produce.

    Managing Director of the bank, Olukayode Pitan gave the assurance on Wednesday at a meeting with the Edo State governor, Godwin Obaseki at the Government House, Benin City.

    The visit was part of the familiarisation tours of the newly appointed BoI boss to states where the bank is having subsisting partnership on small medium enterprises development.

    He expressed the readiness of the bank to provide funding support to industrialists in the state who are operating in the key areas of production activities already mapped out by the state government.

    Pitan noted that plans were underway to raise about N1trillion from both local and foreign  development partners, stressing that the strong balance sheet would help boost its loan reach in the state.

    He said: “Edo State is one of the states where we have existing relationship on SMEs development. The bank has supported a number of projects in the state and still committed to granting loans to genuine entrepreneurs.

    “To enable the bank to extend its loan reach to the  teeming customers across the nation, plans are underway to raise between N500billion to N1trillion from both local and foreign development partners.”

    Speaking earlier, the governor, Godwin Obaseki acknowledged the various impacts of the bank on business activities in the state but challenged it to extend loans to large business operators.

    He said if large businesses had access to finance, it would positively impact the production activities of small business owners.

  • Agro-processing to drive Nigeria’s new economy

    Agro-processing to drive Nigeria’s new economy

    On the back of strong support for domestic food production and processing, Nigeria can launch an era of food diplomacy with her trading partners.

    Nigeria is in a transition from supreme oil-dependency to a more diversified economy. Susceptibility of the domestic economy to external revenue shocks, when oil prices fall, well informs this transition. But if oil prices were to stabilise at the $147 per barrel peak, there would still be very strong reasons why Nigeria must broaden the base of formal economic activities.

    One of the reasons why economic diversification is an imperative for Nigeria is because the country is too richly endowed with natural assets for us to concentrate on tapping just one. The one we have concentrated on – oil – is a depleting asset. And then, the production of hydrocarbon resources employs too few labour for Nigeria’s fast-growing population and huge workforce. Therefore, the economic diversification model that the country needs is one that can help absorb fiscal shocks, fend off monetary instability, provide employment for the teeming work-age population as well as generate more revenue for the government to meet its commitments to the people.

    Prospects of global agriculture

    Agriculture represents the low hanging fruit in the quest to structurally transform the Nigerian economy. The outlook of global agriculture support this assertion. Since the global spike in food prices in 2008, food security has remained at the front burners of the international policy agenda. Even the downward trending of food commodities in the past few months only further raises concerns about global food security. If lower food prices stifle new investments in agricultural production, the downward pressure on prices can only continue for so long before it stirs a sharp reversal as a consequence of ensuing supply shortfall.

    Beyond this, global agriculture itself is undergoing multiple layers of transition. Population growth and changing consumption habits have started to drive up demand for food in multiple varieties. By year 2050, the world population will reach nine billion. That means additional two billion people would require food in 35 years’ time, compared with now. But the upward projection of demand for food is met with constraints to expansion of supply by the traditional international producers. Climate change and other constraints have continued to shrink the hectarage of the world’s arable land. Latin America and sub Saharan Africa are now the last bastion of sizeable arable land. The MENA region (Middle East and North Africa), Europe, Central America and the swath of Asia now have little room to upwardly adjust food production because of limits to available arable land.

    This means that sub Saharan Africa and Latin America will be the food baskets of the world in the future. According to World Bank data, Nigeria’s arable land continued to expand between 2000 and 2014. In this period, the available arable land as a percentage of Nigeria’s total land mass increased from 36.2% to 38.4%. It is a trend that is unique to only a few countries. However, low level utilisation, in which Nigeria became dependent on a number of imported food items – including mostly those that can be grown in the country –  might have exerted the greatest influence on supply of arable land in Nigeria.

    The interplay of current domestic demand and supply scenarios also supports a buoyant outlook for agriculture and the agro-industry in Nigeria. On the demand side, Nigeria is a growing market. Although we currently profile the over $10 billion we spend yearly on food importation as negative, it actually also paints the picture of an aspect of effective demand which can be served locally, and which can help conserve our foreign exchange and make the local currency less volatile in value. This therefore provides a strong-financial-returns impetus for additional local investments in agro-food processing. More success with poverty reduction and strengthening of the middle class will further boost food demand growth.

    On the supply side, the country is blessed with a wide range of agricultural resources including a favourable climate. We also have the benefit of the knowledge of once being a predominantly agric-economy, before commercial production of crude oil began in the country in the early 1970s. Even now, annualised Nigerian agricultural output tops $122 billion. Therefore, some of the key factors for a successful transition to an industrialized economy in which agriculture and agro-industrialization play important roles including providing domestic food security, contributing to export revenues and supporting strong employment numbers, are present with us. In the last four years, we actually saw a strong momentum to the transition, under the Agriculture Transformation Agenda of former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Agro-processing virtuous cycle

    In line with the statutory mandate of Nigerian Export-Import Bank as the Trade Policy Bank of the Federal Government, we see Nigerian agriculture from the prism of agro-processing. This is because agro-processing inspires the virtuous cycle of increased agricultural productivity, industrialisation in the value chain, sustainable growth in the export of secondary agricultural products, creation of domestic employment, and poverty reduction. For this reason, NEXIM Bank in the past five years has put forward agro-processing, with other three sectors, as the major frontiers of economic transformation in Nigeria. The other three sectors are manufacturing (which I recently devoted an op-ed to), solid minerals and services. The sum of these sectoral focus constitute the MASS Agenda of NEXIM Bank.

    Policy intervention to increase agro-processing will, no doubt, prove revolutionary for the country. Africa-level statistics, which sit well with the Nigerian reality, put post-harvest losses for fruits and vegetables at 35-50% of total production. The level of loss for grains is at 15-25%. These high levels of losses weigh down production; and ultimately deny farmers the needed revenue to facilitate expansion of their farms. Little wonder then that, for a region that produces much less food than it needs, the share of agro-industry to total manufacturing declined over the period of 1995 to 2006, according to a UNIDO 2013 report.

    To unlock potential for agricultural production, expansion of agro-industries is an essential pre-condition. The factors that constrict the agro-processing sector, which include poor integration of agriculture with markets, lack of know-how by SME agro-industrialists, inadequate investment in equipment and poor storage system, are solvable. With the fertiliser subsidy conundrum already solved, government can deploy fiscal tools to provide massive support for farmers in the acquisition of equipment. NEXIM Bank’s credit guarantee instrument could be strengthened to provide much stronger support for industrialists in the post-harvest value chain to acquire equipment and tools.

    The business savvy that is required to attract funding interests from commercial banks into agriculture can best be initially provided in the post-harvest production segment. Food processors, agro-traders and packaging businesses can then, either through backward integration or by providing more liquidity to farmers, bring financial buoyancy into farming. Ahead of the provision of the needed elaborate infrastructure by the government, food manufacturers can bring technology and improved haulage hardware that will ameliorate post-harvest losses. Similar solution has propelled Nigeria to being one of the world’s top cement producing countries.

     Policy considerations

    As I had mentioned, much of what is in the solutions suite for continued turnaround for the agric sector is not new. For instance, food processing industries have been dominant in Africa’s manufacturing for a few decades. Depending on the individual country, the share of food and beverage ranges from 15-40% of total manufacturing capacity in Africa. Local and multinational conglomerates in food and beverage are some of the most valued stocks on the Nigerian Stock Exchange. With the stimuli of positive demand projection for food locally, combined with opportunities to tap food export markets, the economy can get a strong nudge with increased support for food processing.

    On the back of strong support for domestic food production and processing, Nigeria can launch an era of food diplomacy with her trading partners. In a number of situations, lack of access to export markets by existing Nigerian agro-manufacturers are down to competition from other exporting countries. Although Nigerian exports of food and semi-processed produce are often denied access in some foreign markets based on issues of standards and safety concerns, without diplomatic efforts, it is unlikely that the putative technical requirements can be met. As such, and without seeking to circumvent the technical standards, the country can start to look at using bilateral agreements as a trade tool for providing Nigerian food products access to foreign markets.

    In addition to financing solutions, broad fiscal tools are required to raise the scale of production and processing of agricultural commodities in Nigeria. As a matter of principle, fiscal tools including tax breaks and waivers on tariffs should be directed at production. They should be completely biased against importation of consumer food products. Not least because, such incentives, like subsidy on imported petroleum products, are subject to abuses by clever private sector operators who can therefore thwart the good intentions of the government.

    The food security objective of the government cannot be altogether served by foreign multinational companies. As such, it is important that foreign capital is not allowed to crowd out indigenous agric-food companies. Again, this suggests stronger financing role for government; although not altogether through direct public funding. Existing PPP frameworks to bring financing to agriculture should be strengthened. Public institutions involved must be subjected to stern performance metrics.

    Special consideration

    With the weakening of the Boko Haram insurgency in the Northeast by the Nigerian military, a grand programme to close the productivity gap in northern agriculture is an imperative. Over the last few months, food prices had inched up marginally on the Consumer Price Index of the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics, of which agricultural produce are a significant component. Under the scenario of the displacement of the local population including agric communities in the northeast, it is beyond question that supply growth would have become much weaker, whereas demand projections have remained very positive in the country. Determined efforts should therefore be made to close the existing productivity gap by expanding capacity through strong intervention in the North generally, since the region occupies a vital position in the nation’s food production.

    New economic structure

    Following the GDP rebasing in 2014, a new (but changing) structure of the economy emerged. We saw the decline of oil as a percentage of the GDP and the rise of services as the largest sector of the Nigerian economy. In 2013, agriculture constituted 26% of the GDP – a percentage only exceeded by Ghana’s 29%, amongst Africa’s main frontier markets. Over the coming decades, the transition in the Nigerian economy will gain more traction. But transitions within industries should also be under watch. Agro-processing will define the changes in the agriculture sector, even as it will drive wider industrialisation and therefore catalyse further adjustment in the structure of the Nigerian economy.

    For Nigeria, the size advantage is a huge one. Egypt’s $284.9 GDP of 2014, of which agriculture constituted 14.6%, grew her food exports revenue by $1.9 billion in just one year (2013). From our current low base of agricultural exports, with vast arable land and favourable climate, we are more than able to drive more momentous change through value-added agriculture, considering Nigeria’s $594.3 billion GDP.

    The most important recommendation for promoting Nigeria’s agro-industrial sector is the potential for job creation across the agric value chain. The value chain of the agric sector is well capable of generating additional ten million jobs over the next decade, and it can serve as one of the centrepieces of capital formation in Nigeria’s new economy. Indeed, agro-processing promises exciting prospects for inclusive growth and social stability.

    – Orya is Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Export-Import Bank

  • Agro-processing to Drive Nigeria’s New Economy

    On the back of strong support for domestic food production and processing, Nigeria can launch an era of food diplomacy with her trading partners.

    Nigeria is in a transition from supreme oil-dependency to a more diversified economy. Susceptibility of the domestic economy to external revenue shocks, when oil prices fall, well informs this transition. But if oil prices were to stabilise at the $147 per barrel peak, there would still be very strong reasons why Nigeria must broaden the base of formal economic activities.

    One of the reasons why economic diversification is an imperative for Nigeria is because the country is too richly endowed with natural assets for us to concentrate on tapping just one. The one we have concentrated on – oil – is a depleting asset. And then, the production of hydrocarbon resources employs too few labour for Nigeria’s fast-growing population and huge workforce. Therefore, the economic diversification model that the country needs is one that can help absorb fiscal shocks, fend off monetary instability, provide employment for the teeming work-age population as well as generate more revenue for the government to meet its commitments to the people.

     

    Prospects of global agriculture

    Agriculture represents the low hanging fruit in the quest to structurally transform the Nigerian economy. The outlook of global agriculture support this assertion. Since the global spike in food prices in 2008, food security has remained at the front burners of the international policy agenda. Even the downward trending of food commodities in the past few months only further raises concerns about global food security. If lower food prices stifle new investments in agricultural production, the downward pressure on prices can only continue for so long before it stirs a sharp reversal as a consequence of ensuing supply shortfall.

    Beyond this, global agriculture itself is undergoing multiple layers of transition. Population growth and changing consumption habits have started to drive up demand for food in multiple varieties. By year 2050, the world population will reach nine billion. That means additional two billion people would require food in 35 years’ time, compared with now. But the upward projection of demand for food is met with constraints to expansion of supply by the traditional international producers. Climate change and other constraints have continued to shrink the hectarage of the world’s arable land. Latin America and sub Saharan Africa are now the last bastion of sizeable arable land. The MENA region (Middle East and North Africa), Europe, Central America and the swath of Asia now have little room to upwardly adjust food production because of limits to available arable land.

    This means that sub Saharan Africa and Latin America will be the food baskets of the world in the future. According to World Bank data, Nigeria’s arable land continued to expand between 2000 and 2014. In this period, the available arable land as a percentage of Nigeria’s total land mass increased from 36.2 per cent to 38.4 per cent. It is a trend that is unique to only a few countries. However, low level utilisation, in which Nigeria became dependent on a number of imported food items – including mostly those that can be grown in the country –  might have exerted the greatest influence on supply of arable land in Nigeria.

    The interplay of current domestic demand and supply scenarios also supports a buoyant outlook for agriculture and the agro-industry in Nigeria. On the demand side, Nigeria is a growing market. Although we currently profile the over $10 billion we spend yearly on food importation as negative, it actually also paints the picture of an aspect of effective demand which can be served locally, and which can help conserve our foreign exchange and make the local currency less volatile in value. This therefore provides a strong-financial-returns impetus for additional local investments in agro-food processing. More success with poverty reduction and strengthening of the middle class will further boost food demand growth.

    On the supply side, the country is blessed with a wide range of agricultural resources including a favourable climate. We also have the benefit of the knowledge of once being a predominantly agric-economy, before commercial production of crude oil began in the country in the early 1970s. Even now, annualised Nigerian agricultural output tops $122 billion. Therefore, some of the key factors for a successful transition to an industrialised economy in which agriculture and agro-industrialisation play important roles including providing domestic food security, contributing to export revenues and supporting strong employment numbers, are present with us. In the last four years, we actually saw a strong momentum to the transition, under the Agriculture Transformation Agenda of former President Goodluck Jonathan.

     

    Agro-processing virtuous cycle

    In line with the statutory mandate of Nigerian Export-Import Bank as the Trade Policy Bank of the Federal Government, we see Nigerian agriculture from the prism of agro-processing. This is because agro-processing inspires the virtuous cycle of increased agricultural productivity, industrialisation in the value chain, sustainable growth in the export of secondary agricultural products, creation of domestic employment, and poverty reduction. For this reason, NEXIM Bank in the past five years has put forward agro-processing, with other three sectors, as the major frontiers of economic transformation in Nigeria. The other three sectors are manufacturing (which I recently devoted an op-ed to), solid minerals and services. The sum of these sectoral focuses constitutes the MASS Agenda of NEXIM Bank.

    Policy intervention to increase agro-processing will, no doubt, prove revolutionary for the country. Africa-level statistics, which sit well with the Nigerian reality, put post-harvest losses for fruits and vegetables at 35-50 per cent of total production. The level of loss for grains is at 15-25 per cent. These high levels of losses weigh down production; and ultimately deny farmers the needed revenue to facilitate expansion of their farms. Little wonders then that, for a region that produces much less food than it needs, the share of agro-industry to total manufacturing declined over the period of 1995 to 2006, according to a UNIDO 2013 report.

    To unlock potential for agricultural production, expansion of agro-industries is an essential pre-condition. The factors that constrict the agro-processing sector, which include poor integration of agriculture with markets, lack of know-how by SME agro-industrialists, inadequate investment in equipment and poor storage system, are solvable. With the fertiliser subsidy conundrum already solved, government can deploy fiscal tools to provide massive support for farmers in the acquisition of equipment. NEXIM Bank’s credit guarantee instrument could be strengthened to provide much stronger support for industrialists in the post-harvest value chain to acquire equipment and tools.

    The business savvy that is required to attract funding interests from commercial banks into agriculture can best be initially provided in the post-harvest production segment. Food processors, agro-traders and packaging businesses can then, either through backward integration or by providing more liquidity to farmers, bring financial buoyancy into farming. Ahead of the provision of the needed elaborate infrastructure by the government, food manufacturers can bring technology and improved haulage hardware that will ameliorate post-harvest losses. Similar solution has propelled Nigeria to being one of the world’s top cement producing countries.

     

    Policy considerations

    As I had mentioned, much of what is in the solutions suite for continued turnaround for the agric sector is not new. For instance, food processing industries have been dominant in Africa’s manufacturing for a few decades. Depending on the individual country, the share of food and beverage ranges from 15-40 per cent of total manufacturing capacity in Africa. Local and multinational conglomerates in food and beverage are some of the most valued stocks on the Nigerian Stock Exchange. With the stimuli of positive demand projection for food locally, combined with opportunities to tap food export markets, the economy can get a strong nudge with increased support for food processing.

    On the back of strong support for domestic food production and processing, Nigeria can launch an era of food diplomacy with her trading partners. In a number of situations, lack of access to export markets by existing Nigerian agro-manufacturers are down to competition from other exporting countries. Although Nigerian exports of food and semi-processed produce are often denied access in some foreign markets based on issues of standards and safety concerns, without diplomatic efforts, it is unlikely that the putative technical requirements can be met. As such, and without seeking to circumvent the technical standards, the country can start to look at using bilateral agreements as a trade tool for providing Nigerian food products access to foreign markets.

    In addition to financing solutions, broad fiscal tools are required to raise the scale of production and processing of agricultural commodities in Nigeria. As a matter of principle, fiscal tools including tax breaks and waivers on tariffs should be directed at production. They should be completely biased against importation of consumer food products. Not least because, such incentives, like subsidy on imported petroleum products, are subject to abuses by clever private sector operators who can therefore thwart the good intentions of the government.

    The food security objective of the government cannot be altogether served by foreign multinational companies. As such, it is important that foreign capital is not allowed to crowd out indigenous agric-food companies. Again, this suggests stronger financing role for government; although not altogether through direct public funding. Existing PPP frameworks to bring financing to agriculture should be strengthened. Public institutions involved must be subjected to stern performance metrics.

     

    Special consideration

    With the weakening of the Boko Haram insurgency in the Northeast by the Nigerian military, a grand programme to close the productivity gap in northern agriculture is an imperative. Over the last few months, food prices had inched up marginally on the Consumer Price Index of the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics, of which agricultural produce are a significant component. Under the scenario of the displacement of the local population including agric communities in the northeast, it is beyond question that supply growth would have become much weaker, whereas demand projections have remained very positive in the country. Determined efforts should therefore be made to close the existing productivity gap by expanding capacity through strong intervention in the North generally, since the region occupies a vital position in the nation’s food production.

     

    New economic structure

    Following the GDP rebasing in 2014, a new (but changing) structure of the economy emerged. We saw the decline of oil as a percentage of the GDP and the rise of services as the largest sector of the Nigerian economy. In 2013, agriculture constituted 26 per cent of the GDP – a percentage only exceeded by Ghana’s 29 per cent, amongst Africa’s main frontier markets. Over the coming decades, the transition in the Nigerian economy will gain more traction. But transitions within industries should also be under watch. Agro-processing will define the changes in the agriculture sector, even as it will drive wider industrialisation and therefore catalyse further adjustment in the structure of the Nigerian economy.

    For Nigeria, the size advantage is a huge one. Egypt’s $284.9 GDP of 2014, of which agriculture constituted 14.6 per cent, grew her food exports revenue by $1.9 billion in just one year (2013). From our current low base of agricultural exports, with vast arable land and favourable climate, we are more than able to drive more momentous change through value-added agriculture, considering Nigeria’s $594.3 billion GDP.

    The most important recommendation for promoting Nigeria’s agro-industrial sector is the potential for job creation across the agric value chain. The value chain of the agric sector is well capable of generating additional ten million jobs over the next decade, and it can serve as one of the centrepieces of capital formation in Nigeria’s new economy. Indeed, agro-processing promises exciting prospects for inclusive growth and social stability.

     

    Roberts Orya is Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Export-Import Bank

  • ‘How N5billion fund will boost agric funding’

    ‘How N5billion fund will boost agric funding’

    Access to finance has remained the number one challenge of enterprises in the country especially among the Micro Small Medium MSME business models, with the government’s intervention through the recent launch of a N5billion Cottage Agro Processing CAP Fund. But the Managing Director of the Bank of Industry, Rasheed Olaoluwa has allayed entrepreneurs’ fears as he gives valuable tips on how to access the fund in this interview with Bukola Afolabi 

    Access to finance remains the number one challenge of enterprises in the country especially among the Micro Small Medium MSME business models.

    Entrepreneurs have continued to call on the government through policy interventions to come to their aid, but whenever such interventions arrive majority are unable to access them, not for lack of trying but due to technicalities.

    As most scientists would state, “one cannot do the same thing over and over and expect a different result each time.”

    So what are those defects of loan applications and what can would-be loan seekers avoid/improve on in their next loan applications, especially with the recent launch of a N5billion Cottage Agro Processing CAP Fund by the Bank of Industry (BoI) recently, in order not to bite the dust of bitter disappointment and start witch-hunting government, loan administrators and even relatives in the village again.

    Addressing newsmen at a media launch of the Fund in Lagos , the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of BoI, Rasheed Olaoluwa, disclosed that the loans will be granted at a single digit interest rate of nine per cent per annum with a total management fee of one per cent, for a five-year tenure with a moratorium of six months.

    He said that the Fund has been projected to help create an estimated 20,000 direct and indirect jobs, even as the priority products for each state have been identified and a number of partners have been pooled together to ensure effective operation.

    Underlining the development institution’s commitment to achieving the objective of the CAP Fund, Olaoluwa said, “We want to encourage all SMEs to take full advantage of this Fund. Loan applicants must come prepared with viable business plans. We expect them to utilise the loans judiciously, add value and create jobs.”

    He assured that full and timely repayment of loans under the Fund will attract bigger project loans from BoI to the beneficiary entrepreneurs, in order to ensure greater wealth creation opportunities for their companies.

    “We wish to also inform all our stakeholders that the CAP Fund is only the first in a series of Funds targeted at specific sectors and customer segments of the Nigerian economy. As more Funds become available to BoI, we shall in due course, unveil them to enable us play our developmental role and create employment for millions of our youths,” he said.

    According to Olaoluwa, the Fund size of N5bn for the CAP was only a starting point, as the bank intends to deploy a second phase after the full utilisation of this initial Fund.

    He noted that as a result of the Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA) of President Goodluck Jonathan, significant progress in crop production was being achieved in the country, resulting in some very significant investments by notable investors like the Dangote Group and the Olam Group.

    “The objective of the federal government’s ATA is not only to increase crop production, but also to create value-added food processing industries, as a means to reduce food imports and create jobs. This is where the role of Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development intersects with that of BoI. I am pleased to report a very active and fruitful engagement between us,” he said.

    In fulfillment of its commitment to launch special funds targeted at specific sectors and customer segments in order to deepen its penetration, the Bank of Industry Limited (BoI), has announced the establishment of a new dedicated fund, Cottage Agro Processing (CAP) Fund, to boost Agriculture in the country.

    The fund is targeted at small and medium industries at the low technology, labour intensive end of the agro-processing spectrum. It is also designed to enable BoI, being Nigeria’s leading development finance institution, play its catalytic role of paving the way for other financial institutions to follow.

    Besides, Olaoluwa said that the bank was working with the Ministry of Agriculture on N13billion Rice Intervention Fund, to establish 10 integrated rice mills and six cassava mills across the country.

    Speaking at the launch of the N5billion Cottage Agro Processing (CAP) Fund designed to finance 1,000 cottage projects with focus on processing activities across the country in Lagos, Olaoluwa, disclosed that the loans would be granted at a single digit interest rate of nine per cent per annum with a total management fee of one per cent, at a five-year tenor rate and a moratorium of six months.

    He said that if processors take advantage of the opportunity, an estimated 20,000 direct and indirect jobs would be generated, adding that priority products for each state have been identified and a number of partners have been pooled together to ensure effective implementation of the scheme.

    Olaoluwa said: “We want to encourage all SMEs to take full advantage of this Fund. Loan applicants must come prepared with viable business plans. We expect them to utilise the loans judiciously, add value and create jobs.”

    He assured that full and timely repayment of loans under the Fund will attract bigger project loans from BoI to the beneficiary entrepreneurs, in order to ensure greater wealth creation opportunities for their companies.

    “We wish to also inform all our stakeholders that the CAP Fund is only the first in a series of Funds targeted at specific sectors and customer segments of the Nigerian economy. As more Funds become available to BoI, we shall in due course, unveil them to enable us play our developmental role and create employment for millions of our youths,” he said.

    According to Olaoluwa, the Fund size of N5billion for the CAP is only a starting point, as the bank intends to deploy a second phase after the full utilisation of this initial Fund.

    He noted that as a result of the Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA) of President Goodluck Jonathan, significant progress in crop production has been achieved in the country, resulting in some significant investments by notable investors like Olam Group.

    “The objective of the Federal Government’s ATA is not only to increase crop production, but also to create value-added food processing industries, as a means to reduce food imports and create jobs. This is where the role of Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development intersects with that of BoI. I am pleased to report a very active and fruitful engagement between us,” he said.

    He stated that recently BoI successfully implemented the N3.4 billion Cassava Bread Fund, established by the Ministry of Agriculture and designed to finance the establishment of 41 processing plants for High Quality Cassava Flour (HQCF).

    The Bank explained that the objective of the Federal Government’s Agricultural Transformation Agenda is not only to increase crop production, but also to create value-added food processing industries as a means of reducing food imports.