Tag: cassava bread

  • Many challenges stalling production of cassava bread

    Many challenges stalling production of cassava bread

    From shelf to shelf I searched for cassava bread in Shop Right, Roban stores, Spaar, Games stores, Park&Shop, Just Right, Osata, Blenco and other major super markets and bakeries in Nigeria.

    For those who have eaten the Nigerian cassava bread, you will agree with me that it was delicious. Though a little different in taste, texture, flavour from the normal wheat bread. It was something different from the usual. Cassava bread is made with 10% inclusion of cassava flour into wheat flour. Though the cassava must be derived from a day old harvested cassava for best results.

    However, for sometime now, cassava bread has disappeared even in Government functions where it was mostly served during the past administration.

    With everything that was invested in the initiative ranging from money, energy, labour, time etcetera and the huge success and progress recorded in that regard during the time of the former Minister of Agriculture, Dr. Adesina Akinwumi, one thought that by now cassava bread would have permeated every Nigerian household thereby bringing the price of bread down and saving the Government a whopping over N127billion  being the cost of wheat importation.

    To see to its success, major stakeholders in the industry rose to the occasion. Measures were put in place for farmers to increase their area of cultivation while the International Institute for Tropical Agriculture [IITA] came in to support the initiative by introducing and promoting wide varieties of cassava to the farmers and further facilitated the establishment of processing centres and fabricating enterprises. Much was invested, but not much was reaped because there was no follow-up. By the calculations of that period, Nigeria should by now be producing some 150 million tonnes of cassava annually.

    What is the story today, you may ask? The Association of Master Bakers and Caterers of Nigeria said that lack of continuity is what is stalling the project. “The current Administration does not seem interested in pursuing the cassava bread project. We have had three meetings which has yielded nothing with the current Minister of Agriculture Dr. Audu Ogbe”. Lamented a very senior member of the association who pleaded anonymity.

    “All our agreement with the past  Minister of Agriculture, Dr. Akinwunmi on how to encourage cassava farmers, processors and bakers for the success of the production of cassava bread have all been broken and we can not do it alone without Federal Government support.

    Explaining he said,  for the success of the project it was agreed between the association and the past Administration that cassava bread will be inculcated into the menus of Government schools and used in Government functions so as to build awareness and make the bread popular and acceptable to the public.

    “Steady and further research into the project is supposed to be taking place in order to find ways of extending the life span of the bread from 24hours. The short life span is a big discouragement to consumers who may not be able to finish the bread within a day and will like it to last longer. Since the exit of the past administration, no research has been made on the project” lamented the industrial Baker.

    The top official of the Association regretted that the lack of  Government interest in the cassava bread project has put a huge number of cassava farmers in debt. “Many farmers took loan from the Bank of Industry but as Government did not continue with the project, cassava processors stopped patronizing them and now they are stock with their products and they need to pay off this loan”.

    Prince Jacob Adejorin, President, Lagos chapter of the Association also lamented the display of lack of interest in cassava bread by the Federal Government. “The project can not continue if the present Government is not interested in it.

    “This Government has no interest in cassava bread and unfortunately we are now indebted to the Nigerian Bank of Industry and must continue to pay the loan whether we are producing cassava bread or not”, he lamented in a telephone interview last week with the Nation.

    The Director General Federal Institute of Industrial Research Oshodi [FIIRO] Dr. Mrs. Gloria Elemo also regretted that the inability of members of the National Assembly to pass the enabling law is responsible for the non implementation of the cassava bread initiative.

    She confirmed this development in a previous interview with The Nation at FIIRO’s headquarters. “The cassava bread initiative was actually a programme in the institute. The programme has been the baby of the FIIRO back in the 60s. We were already looking for utility ways of using and reducing the importation of imported foods in this country, especially wheat because a large sum of the forex was being expended in the importation of various materials from overseas,” she recalled.

    The DG of FIIRO who noted that the technology is completely finished and the transfer is even completed, however regretted that “What we are waiting for is legislation for proper implementation and if there would be legislation, to say a percentage of cassava flour should go into bread in Nigeria, then it is as well done. There’s nothing left in the area of technology that hasn’t been done yet. Even sorghum can actually be constituted into flour. So we’re looking at sorghum and cassava as inclusion in wheat bread to reduce the importation.”

    The 30% inclusion alone, she stressed, “Will help conserve over N127b savings in forex expended in the importation of flour and gradually, we will be improving on our savings to go into other sectors of the economy.”

    Besides, she said, across the value chain, it will create about three million jobs.

  • ‘Non-implementation of cassava bread initiative, loss to Nigeria’

    ‘Non-implementation of cassava bread initiative, loss to Nigeria’

    The President, Association of Systems Management Consultants, Mazi Coleman Obasi, has said the Federal Government is losing so much by not implementing the cassava bread initiative. The initiative was designed to achieve about 20 per cent cassava flour in bread.

    He said if the government had implemented the policy, the country would have saved significant foreign exchange through the reduction in wheat imports.

    He also said apart from creating jobs in the agric and agro-allied processing sectors, the cassava bread initiative would have spurred farmers to grow more cassava.

    Obasi recalled that some years ago, the Federal Government, under former President Goodluck Jonathan, introduced the cassava bread initiative as part of its Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA).

    He said the former Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, now President of African Development Bank (AfDB), Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, vigorously encouraged Nigerians and farmers to embrace the initiative because of its obvious benefits to the economy.

    The Federal Government felt the initiative would encourage increased cultivation of cassava on commercial scale, drive down cost for bakers and save the nation huge foreign exchange by reducing 100 per cent importation of wheat, which was gulping N635 billion yearly.

    Also, the government through the Federal Institute of Industrial Research (FIIRO), Oshodi, Lagos, envisaged that the cassava bread initiative, if fully developed and implemented, could generate over three million jobs to reduce unemployment in Nigeria, especially in the agric and agro-allied processing sectors.

    The policy essentially targeted achieving 10 per cent cassava inclusion in a short term, 20 per cent in the medium term and ultimately, 40 per cent.

    Obasi regretted that despite the initiative’s laudable objectives, the current administration has failed to follow it through despite the current emphasis on growing the non-oil export economy. “I have never seen cassava bread to buy or eat,” he said, adding: “by now we should begin to see the impacts of the policy if the economic managers had implemented it.”

    He said with the lack of political will to implement the cassava bread policy, “one should not be too eager to expect much from the current focus on making Nigeria self-reliant in production of other staple food crops such as rice”.

    Obasi said if Nigeria must exit the economic recession, it must muster the necessary political will to implement the cassava bread initiative and other policies aimed at stimulating local production.

  • Cassava bread: Lofty dream, much noise, little success

    Cassava bread: Lofty dream, much noise, little success

    In the beginning the noise was on high decibel that cassava bread will soon flood Nigerian markets. Today the hope has waned drastically as the dawn of reality has proved that it is more of illusion than reality despite billions of naira down the drain writes Sina Fadare.

    Perhaps, if the former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo looks back at what has become of his former pet project, the cassava bread and inclusion of 40 percent of cassava flour into daily production of all confectioneries in the country, he will properly chuckle in his characteristic manner and shake his head in pity for his beloved country.

    The former president expressed his disappointment at how his successors made a mess of his pet project in his book, My Watch. Today despite the huge investment on the project, it is still in the limbo and the hope of having 40 per cent cassava flour for bread bakers remain an illusion. Former President Obasanjo during his tenure initiated the idea of cassava bread in order to promote  the cassava  value -chain by not only creating demands for its consumables, but  also  provide job opportunities for thousands of Nigerian youths who are roaming about  on the streets.

    Abbreviated dream

    Obasanjo approved and pursued the policy of 10 per cent cassava flour inclusion in bread baking and challenged flour mills and bread bakers in the country to cue into this laudable idea. However, the effort could not yield the desirable result before his exit.

    Seeing the potentials inherent in massive production of cassava, the former Minister of Agriculture, Dr Akinwumi  Adesina took a bold step by canvassing for a 40 per cent cassava flour inputs. Though Adesina had a tall dream, he insisted that if the dream could be actualised,  the country will be able to save about 30 per cent of money  spent on the importation of wheat, running into N200 billion.

    Part of the government plan was to impose a levy of 15 % on wheat grain imports, which will increase the effective duty from five to 20 %. The gain from the levy would be used to establish the Cassava Bread Development Fund under the Cassava Bread Wealth Development Fund.

    This led the Federal Government to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Bank of Industry (BOI) to manage the N4.3 billion cassava bread fund that would support small and medium enterprises (SMEs), master bakers and large industrial cassava flour mills.

    The BOI and Bank of Agriculture (BOA) are to manage disbursement of the N9.9billion cassava bread fund released by President Goodluck Jonathan, according to Adesina.

    Out of this amount, N4.3 billion will be disbursed by the BOI to support SMEs who are involved in cassava processing, while the BOA is to manage N3.4 billion of the fund in collaboration with 13 key private stakeholders, he said.

    The Minister insisted that the fund will be 50 per cent grant, 50 per cent loan, adding that “it is a huge step forward in terms of supporting our farmers to produce more cassava.”

    The initial hiccups

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that the project almost crumbled with the same  velocity it started due to poor consultation by the Obasanjo regime with all the stakeholders  who are to be the pilot of the project. For instance, most of them read the policy on the pages of the newspapers without knowing what it contains and the sacrifice to be made.

    Though Obasanjo insisted that the private sector should be the nucleus of the project, unfortunately the concerned ministries (Agric, Industry and Commerce) failed to liaise with the relevant stakeholders particularly the flour mills who were supposed to play a vital role in the chain value.

    More embarrassing was the pronouncement by Obasanjo that the government’s targeted 40 per cent inclusion of cassava flour in the daily operation of all cassava mills in the country without thinking where to get the available improved cassava variety that can be used as flour which in turn serve as raw materials for the flour mills. Unfortunately the hype in the media suggested as if cassava bread will soon be on the table of all and sundry.

    Equally affected were the Master Bakers and Caterers Association of Nigerian who had to close shop immediately after government pronouncement, a situation that has thrown them into the waiting game of uncertainty.

    Speaking on the effect of the new policy, the President of the Association,   Simeon Abanulor said “20 per cent of master bakers have closed shops because of high cost of flour. Now, we buy a bag of wheat flour between N6000 and N7200, which is above what it used to be. Some with three lines (producing morning, afternoon and evening) have reduced their lines to two or one, while so many jobs have been lost because business has been so bad for us,” he said.

    He added, “We thought we are being the patient dog but this seems to be making us hungry. The minister said the deadline for machine supplies is January 20, 2014. But this is not the first time they are giving us deadline. I have been asking a lot of questions. Some bakers are accusing me of being bribed. They say either drop that 15 per cent levy so that the flour millers can go back to the former price or make the wealth funds benefits available to us.”

    Recounting their loss, Abanulor said the association is the second largest employer of labour, adding, “On the average, a bakery employs 15-70 staff. Any bakery that runs three lines must have not less than 20 staff.”

    If the Master Bakers are lamenting, the cassava farmers who were expected to plant the needed cassava for the project were not only frustrated but at a cross road because majority of them cannot access any fund dedicated to cassava farmers. This reporter went to six states of the federation (Oyo, Ogun, Osun, Ondo, Lagos and Kwara) last year to feel their pulse; it was a tale of frustration and uncertainty.

    A cassava farmer in Owode village in Ede North area of   Osun State, Pa Ilori Akintade who has been a cassava farmer in the last 40 years regretted that despite all the chains of form given out to them to fill with the hope that money will come from the government; nothing was heard about it till today.

    According to him, the formation of cooperative societies in order to hasten the facilitation of the loan was futile, “Some of us even went to the extent of opening bank accounts with our cooperative names but we still could not access any fund as I am talking to you till today.”

    It was the same story of lamentation when The Nation spoke to some group of farmers in Igboho in Orelope local government area of Oke-Ogun in Oyo State. To Mr. Alani  Adewuni who decided to venture into tobacco farming when there was no help from anywhere, none of the  cassava farmers in the area has ever  benefitted from the Federal Government grants or soft loans.

    “Despite that this area is noted as the food basket of Oyo State, cassava farmers have not benefited anything from the government be it state or federal, all what we are hearing in the  media everyday is that a huge amount of money has been allocated to either cassava farmers or cotton farmers, but we did not see it. That is why some of the youths decided to embrace the British America Tobacco (BAT) grants to plant tobacco, if they have any other choice, they could have exploited it, he lamented.”

    Pa Jacob Olakitan shared Alani’s view saying that it takes extra energy and time to tender tobacco which he ventured into when he had no money to plant large scale cassava. “There is nobody who did not know me as a cassava farmer in this town, but today I only plant the little needed by my family since none of the government incentives to cassava farmers ever gets to us here.”

    Perhaps this confirmed the fear of Dr (Mrs.) Oluwatoyin  Oluwole of Federal Institute of Industrial Research (FIRRO), Oshodi who posited at a stakeholder meeting in Lagos in 2014 that “the project could be of immense benefit to the nation if the necessary loose-ends are tightened especially in the areas of ensuring closely monitoring, ensuring  that the funds are not misappropriated, curbing smuggling, reduction of official bureaucracy that could bar the real beneficiaries – millers, small scale farmers, bakers and entrepreneurs – from accessing the funds and to make the desired impact, it is when this happens that I believe cassava bread can really add value to the economy.”

    Another major crisis was the issue of who to partake in the largesse if all the chips are down. Against the backdrop of previous experience when   such loans are seen as the national cake which can be taken without any solid channels to refund it, the affected government agencies, the Bank of Agric and Bank of Industry made use of the members of the affected associations (Master Bakers and Caterers Association of Nigeria and Cassava Growers Association of Nigeria) as beneficiaries with the association standing as their guarantor.

    This on its own created a lot of acrimony among the members of the associations, majority of who thought they have been schemed out.

    Reality on ground

    Though Adesina’s ambition seemed to be a tall dream, but he audaciously want to cut the country’s annual spending of about N625b importing wheat by 30 per cent which at the long run would save close to N200 billion annually in foreign exchange, unfortunately this became an illusion

    Contrary to the impression by the former minister  that a whopping N9.9 billion was released  by former President Jonathan, to both BOA and BOI to be  shared to all the stakeholders  on N4.5 billion each, in the value chain. The Nation found out that while a sum of N3 billion was released to the BOI, BOA got N2.4 billion to date.

    The Nation equally gathered that contrary to the belief that 10 per cent cassava was being mixed with the wheat flour in order to produce a cassava bread for the country, only 2.5 per cent of the cassava flour is feasible for now, though it can increase to 10 per cent later.

    The Chief Executive Officer of Honeywell Mills, Mr. Olarewaju Jaiyeola, said that the company is fully ready to integrate the 10 per cent high cassava yield flour in its production process   in order to key in, into the federal government’s policy on cassava bread, but it would be a gradual process.

    Jaiyeola who disclosed this after taken some journalists round the facilities provided by the company  to accommodate cassava flour in Lagos said the policy  has brought the ministry of agriculture closer to flour millers in the country  in a collaborative effort that has yielded  more economic benefits for the country at large especially in the area of employment generation.

    According to him, the government for the first time was able to back up the policy with a holistic approach in terms of collaborative efforts with the private sector in the value laden chain that includes the cassava farmers, the processors, the flour millers and the master bakers who have been producing wonderful results.

    The CEO noted that Honeywell Flour Mill has started with 2.5 per cent  cassava  flour inclusion in production with a view to increasing it to 10 per cent next year, adding that the gradual process is necessary in order to have a solid back up plan for greater performance in the not too distant a future.

    He explained that series of meetings were held with the people at the ministry of agriculture and the facts and opportunities were laid on the table for all to see, adding that on this basis that it was agreed that the process will be gradual since it has a lot of cost implications.

    “We went back to the drawing board to make sure that we incorporate cassava flour into our daily operation with additional machine into our fleets since it is all automated, therefore it costs the company close to a billion naira to make this realisable and based on this we were able to add 2.5 per cent of cassava flour to our operation. By this time next year, we ought to have moved to the 10 per cent cassava flour addition.

    “The expectation of government is that flour mills should add about 10 per cent of cassava flour to our operation; this will be gradual because we are mindful of all other variances and the cost implications. It is expected that this inclusion will assist the farmers to produce more cassava with a readymade market and by and large it will create employment opportunities,” he explained.

    Jaiyeola, who said that though there are some challenges especially in the area of sourcing for raw materials, however noted that by the time all the value chains are operational such a problem will become a thing of the past.

    “As long as people are more convinced about the policy and could see the turnover for those people that ventured into it, more investors will come in and the multiplier effect will solve the problem of unemployment.”

    He said the government also took a bold step by giving flour millers the opportunity to acquire some of the processing machines in their custody  and that  Honeywell benefited , with acquisition of about 500 hectares of land in the  states where these machines were located.

    According to him, this will go a long way to have a dependable cassava farm and monitor the quality of the cassava flours that are being used in our daily operation, “As of today a 50kg of cassava flour costs N8, 000 but by the time it was shuffled some of it are wasted and dumped into thrash bin.

    “The quality of cassava flour we are receiving is getting better each day, as time goes on and there are many people who are involved in processing, the quality will be better and millers will be able to reject any one that is not up to the expected quality.”

    Reacting to some of the window of opportunities   said to have been provided by the Federal Government   in terms of access to grants and loans from the BOI, Jayiyeola noted that this is another dimension that will go a long way to assist flour millers to achieve the inclusion of 10 per cent cassava flour in their daily operations.

    “We believe in this policy and the overall back up strategy. If this consistency can be maintained and all other value chains key in, it is a matter of time before cassava bread will flood the market,” he said

    Success story

    It is extremely difficult to measure the level of success achieved so far about cassava bread if compared with the amount of money spent on the project.  As of the last count, about N5.3 billion had been expended by both BOI and BOA.

    Speaking to this reporter at the headquarters of the BOA, Kaduna, the Chief Executive Officer and CEO of the bank, Mr. Babatunde Sadiku said the bank was mobilized to the tune of N2.4 billion to cultivate cassava tubers in the country.

    According to him, a total of 3,713 members of Cassava Growers Association (NGGA) benefited from the phase one of the project while about 3,699 others benefited from the second phase with a total of N2.3 billion dispensed all together.

    Sadiku explained that all the beneficiaries are chosen from NCGA who forwarded the names and all their particulars to the bank throughout the country, adding that “before approving and eventually distributing the monies to respective beneficiaries, due diligence have been carried out by NCGA and BOA branches that are scattered all over the country.”

    Speaking in the same vein, the Divisional Head, Large Enterprises, BOI, Mr. Joseph Babatunde noted that 193 beneficiaries have accessed the bank’s loan. According to him, 32 of this number are for high quality cassava while the rest 160 are master bakers across the country, adding that N2.2 billion has been disbursed so far.

    Babatunde explained that  the loan granted are managed by the branches of the bank all over the country, adding that the facility has rekindled the lost hope of making agriculture the hub of the nation’s economy at this critical period.

    Going to the field to verify some of the claims made by these banks about some of these beneficiaries, The Nation stumbled on a fish farmer in Kaduna who was able to tell his success story about the facility granted by BOA.

    Mr. Leo Akuwudiko, the Managing Director of King Star Farm in Kaduna told this reporter that he accessed N4.5 million from the bank for fish farming and was able to make a success of the project adding that without the intervention fund from BOA, it could have been difficult for him to raise such money.

    A graduate of Agric -Economics, he explained that apart from occasional flood which washed away his fish farm, it was an enterprise that can gave succour to Nigerian graduates roaming the streets.

    Speaking in the same vein, Mr. Joshua Ishola, popularly known in Kaduna as ‘Omo Jesu Nigeria Ltd’ is a fabricator who accessed N2.9 million from BOA to fabricate agricultural equipment in 2014.

    According to him, he has been in the business in the last 20 years producing equipment such as cassava peeling machine, cassava fryers, dryers and maize huller machine, “Most of the people patronizing us are local farmers who most of the times are not buoyant enough to buy this equipment unless government comes to their aid.”

    Ishola explained that the intervention role which the BOA is playing would encourage the younger ones to embrace agriculture but regretted that the interest rate was too high, “If the interest rate can come down to one digit figure, it will encourage a lot of people to take the risk and venture into agriculture, not that alone, at our end we would be able to employ more hands to assist us.”

    Perhaps to make sure that farmers are monitored and can access funds anywhere they are in the country, even at the remotest village; BOA has introduced a Green Cash model.

    Executive Director, Wholesale Finance, Alhaji Ahmadu Haruna Waziri, said the Green Cash will key into the cashless policy whereby any of the bank’s clients can transact businesses with minimal cash flow.

    According to him, it is e-banking system whereby all the clients can do their business with the bank in a fast and secured way within a twinkle of an eye, “You can use your mobile phone to transact all your businesses. You can also use internet transaction in addition to other e-banking businesses. It is a platform for us to provide our client a viable service at the remotest village you can get mobile telephone. People who are dealing in little flow of cash can easily be reached.”

    Waziri pointed out that “This Green Cash will allow them to access their fund in any part of the country even at the remotest village. We have sent marketers to the field to sensitise the people on the need to key into this concept. Now, we are at the process of recruiting agents that will serve as intermediary between the bank and the farmers. The agents will act as outlet to the services of the bank.”

    The renowned agric-business expert said, the first recruitment of the agents will be between one and two per each of the 774 local governments and will be saddled with the responsibility of transacting business with the bank clients without going to ATM stands.

    “The idea is that cash can be transferred to our customers through their phone numbers. The handling of the physical cash will be minimal. Outside the eco system, all other transactions can be done on the phone. The agent will be categorized into silver, bronze and gold the amount they are handling will determine their category.

    Challenges

    Perhaps the greatest challenge to cassava bread project was the poor enlightenment programme on the part of the federal government and the noise making about the project towards the end of Jonathan’s tenure as one of its success story whereas the project was at its teething level.

    However, most of the farmers who are not members of NCGA felt that they were shortchanged because they were edged out of the scheme. Speaking to The Nation, a cassava farmer in Owiwi village in Abeokuta North Local government area of Ogun State, Alhaji Eniola Gabriel lamented that it is high time the Federal Government stopped using the farmers in the country to enrich some of their cronies under the disguise of incentives to farmers.

    “It is almost a year now that the issue of grants to cassava farmers has been on, we were compelled to form cooperative societies based on what you are producing in order to have access to some of this grants, but nothing came out of this apart from the hype in the media, whereas the planting season is almost gone.”

    Speaking in the same vein, a farmer in Ido-Osi local government area of Ekiti State, who has been a cassava farmer in the last 20 years, Pa Joseph Ayanniyi regretted that “whenever I hear that people are talking about grants to farmers, it makes me laugh because it was the same old story and the funny aspect of this grant is that we hear it in the media every time, yet the farmers did not get anything.”

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that any farmer who did not register with the NCGA which has all their branches all over the country cannot be considered for BOA loans, a situation that does not go down well with majority of them.

    Aside this, the poor attitude that any loan from government is a national cake, that should not be refunded.  Babatunde of BOI noted that that is one of the challenges facing them on the field.

    According to him, there should be attitudinal change on the part of the beneficiaries who should see it as a revolving loan which should be returned as at when due so that others could benefit.

    The former Commissioner of Agriculture in Ekiti State, Mr. Babajide Arowosafe, regretted that most of this laudable agricultural policy from the federal government is killed by wrong approach at the point of execution.

    Speaking in the same vein, his former colleague in Ogun State, Mrs. Ronke Sokefun, observed that state ministries are not always involved in federal government’s  grants to farmers in the state because “they administer, if there is any at all directly.”

    According to her, “the grants for cassava growers and master bakers is not popular in Ogun State, we are yet to see those that benefitted.”

    If the Cassava Adding Value for Africa (CAVA), phase 1 that encompassed Nigeria, Tanzania Uganda and Malawi with a grant of $13.6million and managed by a Nigerian, Dr Kolawole Adebayo, could record minimal success, what happens to the one embarked upon by the federal government seems to be the question on the lips of every Nigerians.

    The Director of Grants Management at the Federal University of Agriculture (FUNAB), Abeokuta and the Project Manager of the Cassava Adding Value for Africa, Dr. Adebayo while speaking in his office noted that poor execution is always the bane of grants disbursement coming from the federal government.

    He argued that the major threat to cassava bread could be traced to the politicisation of government’s good policy. According to him, “Government’s policies work around political timelines and that’s a major issue, if we could get our policy to work outside political timelines, I think that will help us a lot so that once we start a policy for good or for bad, let it outlive a timeline before revision.”

    With the situation on ground, it is obvious that cassava bread will take a long time to get to the table of Nigerians despite the hype and noise about its flooding the market as alternative to wheat bread.

    To Babatunde, the development is gradual putting into consideration that it will take time before all the components could provide the desired result.  “But the fundamental is that the project has revived hope and raised awareness that there will be a better tomorrow.”

    Meanwhile, Nigerians are waiting to taste and eat the much fabled cassava bread.

  • Inability to access N10b cassava bread funds worries farmers

    Inability to access N10b cassava bread funds worries farmers

    Cassava in the country  farmers  have raised the alarm over their inability to access the N10 billion cassava bread fund.

    They alleged that instead of giving them funds, they were given pesticides/herbicides.

    The cassava farmers ought to access part of the funds through the Nigeria Cassava Growers Association (NCGA) to grow cassava in their respective farmlands across the country.

    Some of the farmers who spoke with our reporter on condition of anonymity lamented inability to access the fund.

    One of the farmers, from Fagun in Ondo State, said only herbicides had been given to the 33 members who grow cassava in Fagun. He noted that despite several visits to his farm by members of the association, he was yet to receive any money.

    He said: “They have been to our farms three times now. They even asked us to put up signposts in the farm to be sure if we are the owners of the farms. Is there anybody who does not know that the farms belong to us?

    “There is no money to maintain the cassava we have planted on the farm. We are like 33 in number growing cassava I can’t even pay the people working for me now.

    “They just promised and since they promised us, they have not put the money into our accounts. They said they have released it but they have not paid us. Our pass book is with them together with the money we put there. We have not been given anything. Only herbicides have been given to us.”

    Another farmer from Ile Oluji, Ondo State  also denied receiving money from the body.  He said: “I have not got any money from the fund. I don’t know when we will receive the money but they said very soon.”

    Another farmer in ADP, Ondo said: “Cassava stem that has not gotten to us. It is the one we have planted on our own. We have planted some on our own. They have come to check it from Abuja. Even they took the photograph. We were all there. But as I speak with you, money has not been released to us.”

    But the National President NCGA, Pastor Segun Adewumi  said the association had used its own money to help farmers establish their farms.

    He said N708 million was supposed to be used to develop cassava stems, N912 million on land preparation, while N706 million was expected to be used to purchase herbicides and fertiliser.

    He said: “We have already used our money to help farmers establish the farms. So we have given them some advance.  It was N708million is for cassava stem. N912million is for what we call land preparation that is tractor work and everything. “The balance, I think it was N706million or something is for herbicides and fertilisers. This is what we did even before the government ever brought the money. We have our own money, we pre-financed it then the government inspects it, then go and pay.”

  • Give us this day  … cassava bread

    Give us this day … cassava bread

    Thirty years ago, the concept of making bread from cassava was like a mirage. Today, perhaps, all the cassava bread just needs to become a staple is legislation, Joe Agbro Jr. writes

    Though widely con-sumed from time in Nigeria, it used to be the dreg of crops – heavily despised in the southwest as the ‘lazy’ man’s staple, second-rated to yam in the Southeast, and largely just perceived as a hunger buster in the north. But, it seems that is not the case anymore. Cassava has become the new king of crops. And attention is focused on it.

    From Abuja to China, cassava is in high demand. Locally in Nigeria, cassava is processed as food in the form of gari, akpu or fufu, starch and some other local snacks. It is also used as animal feed and in other climes, production of bio-fuels is actively being extracted from cassava. However, this time around, the interest cassava is generating, especially from the federal government, is coming from bread-making. Yes, cassava bread.

    Pioneered by the Federal Institute of Industrial Research, Oshodi, (FIIRO), Lagos, about 30 years ago, the cassava bread never really did enjoy widespread commercial patronage. In bits, people consumed it but largely, it didn’t fly. However, in April 2012, President Goodluck Jonathan once again reiterated government’s commitment to ensuring that all bread consumed in the country and made from wheat contained a good measure of cassava flour.

    At the time of the pronouncement, fears were rife that the policy would not succeed. Speaking around that period, the then President, Association of Master Bakers, Confectioners and Caterers of Nigeria, Chief Bayo Folarin, had cited lack of equipment needed in processing and blending the composite wheat/cassava flour and lack of training to bakers as hindrances. The target was ultimately set for 40% cassava flour versus 60% wheat flour. Two years after, that target is yet to be achieved.

    President Jonathan’s interference is the third time a campaign about introducing cassava flour into bread-making was being spear headed by federal government. The first was during the military regime of Gen Ibrahim Babangida and the second was during the reign of Olusegun Obasanjo as civilian president. This time around, government, through the Minister of Agriculture, Akinwumi Adesina, re-echoed the whole cassava bread rhetoric. It has gulped significant funds and last December, a cassava bread fund worth N4.3b was set aside for the upgrading of small cassava flourmills. And it was agreed that the fund be managed by the Bank of Industry (BOI).

    The fund which was designed to drive the cassava bread initiative aimed to stimulate about 5,000 bakers to begin producing cassava bread within one year. Part of the fund was also poised to enable the bakers acquire baking equipment like rotary ovens easily. And of that amount, 35 existing small cassava flourmills are to get N1.05bn to upgrade their facilities 50:50 loan/grant ratio. And N2.2bn would be used to support bakers, also on a 50:50 loan/grant ratio. Also, under the arrangement, the BOI would provide working capital of N425 million as loan to the SME and about N468 million would go to medium and large-scale cassava flour millers. The loans are to attract single digit interest rates.

    According to the minister, “The fund is to provide support for many cassava farmers to grow cassava in commercial quantities and to thousands of master bakers to move into the use of cassava wheat.” As at December 2013, there were six industrial bakers and 20 master bakers producing cassava bread with 20% cassava flour.

    Chief on this is the ministry of agriculture that ensures the master bakers realise it benefits the nation’s economy to adopt cassava in its bread. And the minister in January said that adopting cassava into bread-making will generate N240m annually for farmers. He said then that “if bread is not produced and processed in Nigeria, eaten by Nigerians, it is not good enough for Nigeria.”

    And buttressing the minister’s point, the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has also reiterated the need to start using cassava flour in baking bread and other confectionaries.

    Also, last December, the President, Association of Master Bakers and Caterers of Nigeria, Simeon Abanulo, was reported as saying that the association had certified 360 trained bakers for the facility while about 740 more bakers would be trained by the end of January 2014. No doubt, cassava is the new king, especially as the federal government wants to ensure the cassava bread really flies.

    Also, research for the bread has also taken place at International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Ibadan, Oyo State. In 2002, they played a huge role in Obasanjo’s policy of 10% inclusion of cassava flour to wheat flour. And in May 2013, Obasanjo, an IITA goodwill ambassador and a farmer himself, promoted the cassava bread in Tanzania. And after eating the bread for the first time, Tanzania’s president, Mrisho Kikwete, described it as having an ‘excellent’ taste and not different from the “normal bread we are used to.”

    IITA’s present cassava bread embraced by President Jonathan is made with 40% cassava flour.

    And with so much being said about the cassava bread, curiosity got hold of me. And off I went to the FIIRO to have a taste of the bread. At the bakery which regularly bakes the bread, the whiff of the bread was a sweet one. And to my taste buds, there was little difference from the bread largely consumed in Nigeria which was made from 100% wheat flour. It tasted ‘normal.’ The workers at FIIRO said that particular loaf was made of 20% cassava flour. While that is not near the 40% targeted, the bread easily passed my taste buzz. That is the result of about 30 years’ pioneering research by FIIRO.

    The Personal Assistant to the FIIRO’s Director-General, Mr. Deji Oyediran, said that, now, it is up to the millers to incorporate cassava flour to imported wheat flour. Currently, a policy exists whereby millers are directed to incorporate five per cent cassava flour.

    “It is that composite flour that bakers buy from millers,” said Oyediran. “So, for the baker, he would be aware that XYZ miller is incorporating cassava flour into wheat flour because it is a policy.”

    But, he said, at the end of the day, it is only the upscale industrial millers that incorporate it.

    Pertaining to the taste, Oyediran said, “it has been so done to make sure that the taste and texture is good because you’re going to produce something that is different all of a sudden in terms of taste to the consumers.”

    And the over-all plan is to incorporate a larger percentage of cassava flour into the wheat flour. “So, the wheat content in bread would be reduced by 30 to 40% over time,” Oyediran said.

    At FIIRO, however, the level of cassava flour used in some confectionaries could get as high as 80%.

    And Oyediran said, “FIIRO’s recipes are now being tested in the market through training programmes where some of our staff go to workshops where Master Bakers are trained jut for them to understand the technicalities.”

    However, Dele Oyeku, a deputy director at FIIRO who facilitates training on behalf of ministry of agriculture and FIIRO for some of the bakers also said an absence of legislation has made the policy to be a bit ineffective. But, come March 6, stakeholders are expected to converge at a workshop at FIIRO in Lagos to conclude drafting a bill, which, among other things, will look at legislating the percentage of cassava flour that flour millers should add to wheat flour to make bread.

    “Once we do that (conclude drafting the bill), the bill will be sent to the House (of Assembly). And once there is legislation, whatever percentage that is agreed upon; whether five per cent or 10%, it will be incorporated right from the flour mills. So that, any flour that you see in the market will contain that. And any bread you’re taking is cassava/wheat component bread.”

    Oyeku also said that while flourmills strive to comply with the policy directing them to include five percent cassava flour, the level is still is low.

    “We did a survey some years back to monitor level of compliance,” Oyeku said, “and we found out that the average level of inclusion is about 2.5%.”

    However, despite these hiccups, FIIRO is focused on pushing the cassava bread. At their office in Lagos, intending small-scale milers interested in processing cassava flour can purchase either the flash dryer or the rotary dryer. Other manufacturers are also exploiting opportunities in that sector.

    On fears that we might run out of cassava, Oyediran dismisses it. “It is unlikely,” he said. “Once there is demand, farmers would grow more cassava for the processor to process for the flour mills.”

    Cassava is grown locally and Nigeria is the highest producer of cassava in the world and over 40 varieties are produced. And being cheaper than wheat flour, by adopting cassava flour in the bread-making process, the price of bread is expected to become cheaper. But with a draft-bill just about to be prepared, it seems the dream of achieving 40% cassava flour in bread in Nigeria still remains in the foreseeable future.

  • Jonathan approves N10b cassava bread fund

    Jonathan approves N10b cassava bread fund

    President Goodluck Jonathan has approved N10 billion for the Cassava Bread Development Fund, the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, has disclosed.

    Adesina also announced Jonathan’s readiness to launch the Youth Employment Agricultural Programme called the “Nagropreneurs.”

    The minister said President Jonathan would be actively involved in the programme of creating employment through value-chains of the Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA).

    In a statement issued by the Deputy Director, Press and Public Relations, Mr. Greyne Anosike, on Wednesday in Abuja, the fund was to complement the ministry’s target for the nation to achieve food security.

    “The N10b approval is a way of encouraging us to work hard to feed the nation. The dream of being self-sufficient in food production is a task this ministry must accomplish. No excuses,” he stated.

    Adesina tasked staff of the ministry to work and exceed Key Performance Indicators (KPI) for the year.

    However, the minister instructed directors in the ministry and value-chain leaders to deliver account of their stewardships in the last one year.

     

  • Cassava Bread Fund ready in April, says minister

    The Cassava Bread Fund (CBF) will be ready for users to access next month, the Federal Government has said.

    Speaking at the National Stakeholders’ Forum on Cassava Bread in Abuja, the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, said to support the use of cassava flour substitution in bread; the government came up with some fiscal policies.

    These, he said, included, raising the tariff on imported wheat, removal of duty on enzymes for the production of cassava bread, as well as the removal of duty on equipment and machinery required for cassava bread production.

    Adesina said: “Nigeria is one of the largest importers of food in the world, spending annually about N635billion importing wheat flour for use in bread, confectionaries and other foods. This level of importation of wheat is economically non-sustainable.

    “Wheat accounted for a small share of the national food consumption in the 1960s as bread was not even a significant part of our food consumption. Total wheat import was only 78,000 metric tonnes in 1960. This rose to 1,400,000 MT in 1980; 1,913,000 MT in 2000 and an all-time high of 4,051,000 MT by 2010. By 2011, Nigeria spent N635billion on wheat imports.

    “The substitution of cassava flour for wheat flour is not a political decision. The substitution of up to 40 per cent wheat flour with cassava flour will save the economy N254billon annually. The savings will go to our own cassava farmers and processors, creating millions of jobs instead of exporting jobs to other countries.”

    The minister lamented that farmers were experiencing low and variable prices for cassava due to poor development of markets, adding that the use of cassava in the production of bread was one of the thing that would shore up the value of the produce.

    In a related development, the government has begun talks with the United States to fast-track increased investment in the agricultural transformation agenda.

    At a meeting with the U.S Corporate Council to Africa, led by the U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria, Terrence McCulley, Adesina, who solicited investment in Staple Crop Processing Zones (SCPZ), said the government had identified 14 sites, where infrastructural facilities, such as roads, water and electricity would be provided for investors.

    The government, he said, is working with the ministries and its departments, and international development agencies, to attract private sector agribusinesses into the storage, preservation, processing, and distribution of local agricultural produce in clusters of high food production.

  • In lieu of cassava bread and fish pepper-soup

    In lieu of cassava bread and fish pepper-soup

    As Nigeria prepares for its Independence anniversary, I was hoping that the beleaguered Jonathan Presidency would, out of the discontinuities of the year past, diligently search for a common thread around which common purpose can be constructed, to reinvigorate the Administration and move a stalled nation forward.

    A key event in the celebrations, a lecture delivered by Ghana’s former president John Kufour, offered President Goodluck Jonathan a fine opportunity to articulate this common thread and, with it, weave a narrative that can reassure and inspire his compatriots and summon them to greater endeavour.

    Even those who felt that a foreign head of state, serving or retired, was not the most appropriate person to present the lecture on such an occasion, would still have allowed that that it was as good a platform as any for the host to reach out in solidarity and renewal to his compatriots.

    But Dr Jonathan blew the opportunity big time.

    Even if Dr Jonathan is saving his National Day broadcast for precisely the kind of address, charging him with blowing the opportunity presented by the Kufour lecture hardly amounts to a rush to judgement.

    He could have confined himself to some bland remarks on the substance of the lecture and the guest speaker. He could even have drawn some praise – which he surely can use – by claiming it as an instance of the commitment of his Administration to the spirit of ECOWAS and the African Union and the African Peer Review Mechanism that it invited a former head of state from the neighbourhood to deliver the Independence Anniversary Lecture.

    Instead, Dr Jonathan chose to use the occasion to denounce and demonise Lagos residents who staged, in response to his ill-advised decision to end a phantom subsidy on petroleum products last January, one of the most stirring and ennobling protests Nigerians have witnessed in recent memory.

    Lagos, consistent with its status and history, was the epicentre of the protests that went on without loss of momentum for nine days and would have continued if Dr Jonathan had stuck to his vow that there was “no going back” on the issue. He did not go back all the way to the status quo ante, but go back he did, forced to beat a petulant retreat.

    Most parts of the country, except the South-east, were also convulsed by the protests. It is necessary to recall this fact, which Dr Jonathan seems to have conveniently forgotten or deliberately ignored. Rarely had Nigerians been so united, for so long, on a single issue, with such firm resolve.

    In his extempore recreation, the protests had nothing to do with the contentious subsidy; rather, they were a pretext for executing a plot to topple his Administration. The protesters were not actuated by genuine grievances; rather they were “manipulated” by persons intent on preserving a corruption-soaked regime of subsidy re imbursements.

    “Look at the demonstrations back home, look at these areas this demonstrations are coming from, you begin to ask, are these the ordinary citizens that are demonstrating? Or are people pushing them to demonstrate?” Dr Jonathan quipped.

    Then he zeroed in on Lagos, in the manner of someone who had been nursing a bitter grievance.

    “Take the case of Lagos, Lagos is the critical state in the nation’s economy, it controls about 53 per cent of the economy and all tribes are there. During the demonstration in Lagos, people were given bottled water that people in my village don’t have access to, people were given expensive food that the ordinary people in Lagos cannot eat. So even going to eat free food alone attracts people. They go and hire the best musician to come and play and the best comedian to come and entertain, is that demonstration? Are you telling me that that is a demonstration from ordinary masses in Nigeria who want to communicate something to government?”

    Yes, Dr Jonathan; that demonstration was “from ordinary masses in Nigeria” who wanted “to communicate something to government.”

    And what these “ordinary masses” who had put aside the divisions of class and creed and tongue wanted to communicate was this: that they are tired of being victims of serial misrule, of policies that subvert rather than advance public well-being, of cluelessness and lack of vision in high places, of having their names taken in vain, without corresponding adherence to their interests and values.

    This was the same message that rang out loud and clear wherever the protesters staged their rallies.

    Thanks to that N1 billion annual feeding allowance from the public purse, Dr Jonathan was probably too busy eating fresh-baked cassava bread and fish pepper-soup and any victuals under the sun or even beyond it that presidential plate may fancy – to hear what the protesters were saying or see what was really going on.

    But did he not read the “security reports” sent daily to his office by “security agents”?

    If those reports are of any value, they would have recorded that one Friday afternoon at the height of the protests, demonstrators formed a protective ring around their Muslim brethren to enable them say their Jumat prayers in relative peace without constituting a target of opportunity for religious fanatics or agents provocateurs.

    That is the kind of solidarity Dr Jonathan should seek to build upon, not demonise; solidarity born out of common purpose, and of the realisation that we all are keepers of one another.

    The security agents would have told him that no serious crimes were reported while the protests lasted. Their reports would have related that the bottled water that seems to have moved Dr Jonathan to such high dudgeon was provided by some of the civil society organisations that coordinated the protests, and that no “packaged meals” were on offer.

    Perhaps they would have remarked the woman in the Lagos suburb of Agege who ordinarily fried and sold akara by the roadside but gave away her entire ware for one day to the protesters as a mark of her support

    This was the spirit that animated the protests.

    It is therefore an egregious misreading of the events of last January to portray the protesters as the unthinking dupes of unpatriotic manipulators bent on extracting unearned subsidy reimbursements from the treasury even if that meant plunging the country into bankruptcy.

    It is worse: It is a libel, and a gratuitous one at that.

    Now, it is incontestable that the Presidency has the most formidable instruments of manipulation at its disposal – NTA and FRCN, to mention only two. So why didn’t it deploy them to manipulate Pastor Tunde Bakare and Owei Lakemfa?

    If the protesters could not eat fresh-baked cassava bread and other delicacies flowing from the state-of-the-art grill at the Presidential Villa, why can’t they eat akara without being slandered? If they cannot afford the pleasure of downing cocktail after choice cocktail, why begrudge them bottled water?

    Even it they were served “packaged meals,” when did that qualify as conduct deserving presidential censure? When did “packaged meals” become the preserve of the Presidency?

    If residents of Dr Jonathan’s village cannot afford bottled water, whose fault is it? What did he do to empower them to afford bottled water when he was a director of the development agency for the oil-producing areas, OMPADEC, later as deputy governor, and subsequently as governor of Bayelsa?

    Can it be that, as President, he caused a university to be sited in the village with federal funds and corralled a government contractor to “donate” a church to the community but didn’t give a damn about providing something as basic as water for his people?

    If there is any redeeming grace in all this, it is in the revealing glimpse the Jonathan we still don’t know provides into the presidential mind. We now know that he is not in the least intimidated by those seeking to join issues with him, or for that matter by manipulators.

    “For me,” he said at the Independence Anniversary lecture, “if I see somebody is manipulating anything I don’t listen to you but when I see people genuinely talking about issues I listen.”

    So, there you have it.