Tag: Dr. Akinwumi Adesina

  • Adesina: Africa must curb $580b yearly leakages

    Adesina: Africa must curb $580b yearly leakages

    President, African Development Bank (AfDB), Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, has warned that Africa cannot resolve its mounting debt crisis without addressing the massive capital leakages that cost the continent more than $580 billion annually.

    Speaking in an interview with Bloomberg in Maputo, Mozambique, Adesina said Africa’s debt pile is approaching $2 trillion and stressed that corruption, tax evasion, trade misinvoicing, smuggling, and money laundering are major drains on resources.

    “It doesn’t matter how much water you pour into a bucket if the bucket is leaking,” Adesina said. “If you’re able to reduce the leakages to illicit capital, corruption and all of these things, Africa will be able to keep a lot of these resources and meet the amount of infrastructure it needs.”

    Read Also: Oyinsan reclaims African memory through fiction

    According to AfDB estimates released in May, the continent loses about $1.6 billion daily to “financial leakages,” including $90 billion annually to illicit financial flows, $275 billion siphoned by multinational corporations through profit-shifting, and $148 billion lost to corruption.

    Adesina noted that while concessional financing and debt restructuring remain necessary, reducing outflows is key to funding infrastructure, education, healthcare, and job creation.

    Africa currently faces an annual infrastructure deficit of up to $170 billion, which experts say is critical to close in order to drive sustainable economic growth and employment opportunities.

  • Tariffs: AfDB president Adesina seeks trade negotiation with US

    Tariffs: AfDB president Adesina seeks trade negotiation with US

    The president of the African Development Bank Group (AfDB), Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, has cautioned against engaging in a tariff war with the United States, urging African nations to prioritise strategic trade and investment partnerships instead. 

    Adesina stated this while delivering the 14th convocation lecture of the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) with the theme “Advancing Africa’s Positioning Within Global Development And Geopolitical Dynamics.”

    Adesina and Speaker of the House Representatives, Abbas Tajudeen would receive honorary doctorate degrees on Saturday (today). 

    While Abbas will be conferred with the Honorary Doctorate Degree of Doctor of Business Administration (D.B.A.) (Honoris Causa), Adesina will be conferred with the Honorary Doctorate Degree of Doctor of Humane Letters (L.H.D.) (Honoris Causa). 

    The AfDB president warned that the new U.S. tariffs could send shockwaves through African economies, weaken local currencies, increase inflation, and raise debt servicing costs.

    According to him, Africa’s trade with the U.S. is minimal, noting that making a trade war with the country was unwise. 

    He called for a recalibrated trade and investment partnership with the U.S stressing Africa’s vast potential in infrastructure, agriculture, and minerals.

    Adesina stated: “This will send other shockwaves right through African economies. Local currencies will weaken on the back of reduced foreign exchange earnings. Inflation will increase as the cost of imported goods rises and currencies devalue against the U.S. dollar. 

    “The cost of servicing debt as a share of global revenue will rise as expected revenues decline. These global tariffs will also have significant indirect effects on Africa, as its exports to developed countries such as China and others in Europe and Asia will buy goods from Africa. 

    “This will be expected to reduce the amount of official development assistance that will come to us from those economies. Of course, today we have the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act. It’s a duty-free access of Africa to the rest of the world.”

    Adesina urged African nations to “tariff-proof” their economies by focusing on domestic consumption, value addition, and the effective implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area.

    He noted that the era of aid was over and growth must now come through disciplined investment, better resource management, and improved governance.

    “What is needed is more trade with the U.S. The current dynamics call for a recalibration of trade and investment between the U.S. and Africa, which would expand trade opportunities, therefore, between the United States and Africa. 

    “The U.S. has huge opportunities in Africa to invest from rail to ports, to corridors, to agriculture, to processing, to critical minerals. And I think I would like to encourage that there be openness in dialogue on this tariff. 

    “I asked the Minister of Finance about that this morning, and that we should prioritize negotiations to make sure that Africa is not underserved in this shifting geopolitically driven economic and investment landscape. Africa should also tariff-proof itself for future jobs,” he said.

    He noted that enhancing education and technological sectors was key to addressing Africa’s challenges, drive economic development, and foster a more prosperous future. 

    Adesina said that by investing in education and technology, Africa can cultivate a skilled workforce, empower entrepreneurs, and position itself as a global player in the digital economy.

    He added: “There is no doubt that development aid plays a significant role for many economies in Africa, especially providing much-needed support for vulnerable populations that deal with shocks. 

    “However, despite its benefits, aid is not the way to develop. Indeed, no nation has ever developed based on aid. Let’s cast our minds back to the challenge of COVID-19. Africa must be 100% self-sufficient in the manufacturing of vaccines and medicines. 

    “In a world where it is becoming increasingly difficult to know allies or where long-time allies suddenly shift their priorities, there is no substitute for self-reliance. Africa must therefore treat health security just like we treat national defense. 

    “We must ramp up public and private sector financing for research and development. Our universities must be supported very strongly to have world-class medical sciences facilities that will allow our countries to drive cutting-edge innovations in medicine and pharmaceutical sciences. We must then connect them to fuel the growth of medical and pharmaceutical industries.”

    The chairman of the occasion, Professor Atahiru Jega, emphasised the need to graduate students of worthy character and learning.

    Jega, who is the pro-chancellor and Chairman of Council, Usman Danfodiyo University, Sokoto, said: “One can have learning and even be considered learned as lawyers refer to, but with no good character, I’m sorry to say. Also, one can be certificated without learning anything or learning much and yet have good character. But the expectation is that university graduates are positioned for the ideal of having both learning and character.”

    Read Also: Tinubu, Sanwo-Olu hail AfDB President Adesina at 65

    The Vice-Chancellor of the University, Professor Olufemi Peters, commended the guest lecturer for the insightful lecture addressing the issues facing the African continent.

    About 17,420 students will receive various degrees during the convocation ceremony. 

    The figure comprises 10,967 undergraduates, 6,413 postgraduates, and 40 students graduating at the PhD level.

    Among the figures, 16 students obtained First class degrees, 1,417 Second Class (Upper Division), 5,518 Second Class (Lower Division), 2,761 Third class and 138 Pass degrees.

    A total of 51 inmates would graduate, including 41 undergraduates and 10 postgraduates from correctional centres.

  • AfDB, South Korea to collaborate on technology

    The African Development Bank (AfDB) is partnering South Korea to step up technology transfers to Africa.Its President, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, made this known during a three-day visit to South Korea.

    Adesina said: “The future is going to be an exponentially different,” noting that the bank intends to “explore the creation of a strategic partnership with Korea that could lead to the creation of a Korea-Africa research and training Drone Centre that could help pave the way for Africa’s fourth Industrial Revolution”.

    Adesina said the AfDB was determined to expand the use of drones in agriculture in Africa. “What we do in Africa today will determine global food security tomorrow,” he said.

    The AfDB boss noted that it was important that the technological partnership with Korea translates into capacity building on the ground, through training, so that Africa can industrialise, build or assemble drones.

    During the visit, representatives of Busan Metropolitan City, Busan Techno Park, and Korea’s Green Technology Centre said there was huge potential for cooperation and immense opportunities for job-creating bankable projects.

    According to the Global Strategy Division, Green Technology Centre Director, Hyung-Ju Kim, “Korean expertise can provide a practical and pragmatic solution to a wide range of Africa’s most pressing technology needs.”

     

  • AfDB wants MSMEs lending in Africa to be increased to $135bn

    AfDB wants MSMEs lending in Africa to be increased to $135bn

    The African Development Bank (AfDB) has called on financial credit providers to increase lending to Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) in Africa to 135 billion U.S. dollars.

    A statement issued by Mr. Emeka Anuforo, the Communications Officer of the Bank, in Abuja on Wednesday said that increasing affordable loans would promote the growth of MSMEs on the continent.

    The statement quoted Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, the President of AfDB, as saying that although Africa had the highest percentage of adults starting or running new businesses in the world, the productivity nonetheless remained low.

    Adesina solicited a holistic policy approach to strengthen entrepreneurship to facilitate Africa’s industrialisation and tackle the myriad financial constraints facing small-scale businesses.

    “The entrepreneurial culture is vibrant, with about 80 per cent of Africans viewing entrepreneurship as a good career opportunity.

    “New industrialisation strategies should focus on leveraging this dynamism and targeting the continent’s fast-growing private enterprises which have potential to create quality jobs.

    “Given Africa’s potential for increased involvement in this sector, AfDB is also increasing its efforts to promote access to finance for entrepreneurs to create start-ups and expand existing businesses,” he said.

    Adesina said that the bank in 2016 provided financial services to 156,000 owners and operators of MSMEs via financial intermediaries to address a key challenge facing efforts to start and grow businesses.

    He said that AfDB had collaborated with USAID, the Fund for Africa Private Sector Assistance and the International Labour Organisation (ILO) to build the capacity of SMEs in Zambia.

    He said that the partnership was to enable the nation’s financial institutions to become efficient in lending to smaller businesses.

    According to him, the bank is also launching some new programmes that are designed to help Africa to attain its industrialisation goals.

    Adesina said that the bank was also collaborating with the European Investment Bank and the European Commission to help create and grow 1,500 innovative businesses, while creating 25 000 direct jobs and 100,000 indirect jobs.

    He said that the collaboration would also improve environmental, social and management practices in youth-owned SMEs across Africa.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that AfDB, a regional multilateral development bank which has 81 countries as members, promotes the economic and social development of its members.

  • ‎AfDB $800 million support for Agric underway – Adesina

    ‎AfDB $800 million support for Agric underway – Adesina

    …As Agric minister denies famine prediction

     

    The President, African Development Bank (AfDB), Dr. Akinwumi Adesina has disclosed plans to launch $800 million scheme to support the agriculture sector.

    Adesina said the initiative called the Technology for African Agriculture Transformation (TAAT) was part of efforts designed to encourage technological innovation in the sector.

    The AfDB president made this known at the opening of the African Economic Conference (ACE) organised by the bank in partnership with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Monday in Abuja.

    He said the scheme when implemented would reach 40 million farmers in one year.

    He added that another $24 billion would be used to support Nigeria’s agric sector to fight hunger and post-harvest loses.

    His words: “To take new agricultural technologies to scale, we are launching $800m initiative known as TAAT. It has a goal of reaching over 40 million farmers in 10 years. We must equally reduce the food system losses along the value-chain from the farm, transport, storage, processing and marketing.”

    The AfDB president called for a rapid and inclusive bottom up approach to addressing challenges facing the agriculture sector.

    He identified poor infrastructure and access to finance as major challenges, stressing that it became imperative to develop the Staple Crops Processing Zones (SCPZ).

    Adesina added that the initiative would also reduce post-harvest losses.

    The AfDB president urged African nations to invest in the SCPZ in order to create jobs, stressing needs to support private agro-allied firms through incentives and infrastructure.

    His words: “It is important to seek innovative approach to solving finance challenges. When I was the Nigerian agriculture minister, we started NIRSAL which increased lending to farmers by six per cent.

    “To drive agro-industrialisation, the role of finance is key so we are investing $24 billion into agriculture in the next 20 years.”

    In his remarks, the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh denied claims that the nation would face famine by 2017.

    The Minister said the Federal Government already mapped out plans to support dry-season farming that would discourage the presumed food shortage.

    He noted that about 10 dams would be constructed in States to support farm irrigation system.

    He said the country has 33 silo sites with capacity to store about 2 million tons of grains so Nigerians should not panic.

    Ogbeh said: “The threat of famine-I think that is a bit of an exaggeration. No danger of famine now. We are doing far better than we did a decade ago. But there is some panic. People are buying and storing. Our neighbours in the West, North and Central Africa are buying, they have always bought. So this is a challenge I am happy about.

    “It says to the farmer, there is a market for your produce. So we are not going to face famine. Government will make sure it doesn’t happen. The GES scheme is working.”

    On recession, he said, “stop buying rice. Eat what you produce, produce what you eat. We have water, irrigation, capacity so we should go into farming. We don’t have business importing foods.”

     

  • AfDB approves US $1m grant to fight malnutrition in Borno

    AfDB approves US $1m grant to fight malnutrition in Borno

    Executive Directors of the African Development Bank (AfDB) have approved a US $1 million grant as emergency assistance to support the fight against malnutrition in Borno State.

    A statement from the AfDB said the Nigerian Minister of Health had declared a nutrition emergency in Borno State.

    In addition to that, the West and Central Africa Regional Food Security and Nutrition Working Group called on the entire international community to respond in order to prevent the situation from deteriorating further.

    The AfDB intervention will strengthen the on-going Government and partners (UNICEF, WFP, OCHA, etc.) support in the North East region of the country. The Bank will focus on Borno State where the situation is dire, to rationalize funds and be more efficient.

    This AfDB said; “will contribute to reducing malnutrition rate among the most vulnerable population, mainly children under five years and women of childbearing age.”

    The support aims to contribute to mortality reduction due to Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM) of children under five years of age in Borno State by 46% and to the reduction of infant mortality by 20%.

    The specific objectives of the project are to: (i) treat 11,468 children in Borno state with Ready to Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF), (ii) provide 60,000 children 6-23 months in the affected areas with multiple micronutrient powder and (iii) Strengthen sector coordination and monitoring at state level to provide effective coordination of nutrition response.

    To achieve high coverage and quality service delivery of the program, community mobilization, capacity building, coordination and partnership (with International Non-governmental Organizations) and strengthening of information management systems will be employed. In addition, monitoring and introduction of surveillance systems using quarterly surveys and mobile technology for real-time reporting and data collection will be introduced.

    “The nutrition sector in Nigeria estimates a burden of 296,601 cases of SAM in Borno state in 2017. If these children are left untreated, it is envisaged that an estimated 59,320 would die. This intervention will augment efforts at attaining the target to reach 80% of the estimated SAM cases in the region by 2017” AfDB President, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina told the Board.

    Nigeria is currently in economic recession which has stretched the Government’s capacity to address vulnerability. Over 2.5 million children under five years are severely malnourished across the country and are 9 times more likely to die than their counterparts. In the midst of these challenges, the humanitarian situation in the North East of Nigeria continues to deteriorate, with an estimated 7 million people in need humanitarian assistance, while about 2.2 million people are internally displaced.

    The conflict in the region continues to restrict farming and other income earning activities due to insecurity. Children and residents in the rural parts are most affected and IDPs continue to be negatively impacted by the food and nutrition deficiencies.

    According to the August 2016 “Cadre Harmonisé analysis” there are 4.4 million food insecure people in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States, 3.2 million of them in the Borno state. The conflict has affected the food and health supply systems and left the health sector with very limited health workers available to provide services.

    This intervention is aligned with one of the operational priorities of the Bank’s Ten-Year Strategy, 2013-2022, namely governance and accountability, which is reiterated in two of the High-5s: Feed Africa and Improve the quality of life for the people of Africa.

     

  • AATF lauds former Agriculture Minister

    AATF lauds former Agriculture Minister

    A team from the African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF), has commended the President of the African Development Bank (AfDB), Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, for his giant strides in the bank since assumption of office.

    The ATTF in a delegation led by its Board Chair, Dr. Ousmane Badiane, including Dr. Denis Kyetere, Executive Director, Dr. Emmanuel Okogbenin, Technical Operation Director and Mr. John Makokha, Resource Mobilization Officer to Abidjan congratulated Adesina.

    The team eulogized him for initiating the Technologies for African Agricultural Transformation (TAAT) program, a critical strategy of AfDB to transform Africa’s agriculture and ensure that the continent is self-sufficient in food production.

    TAAT, which was established in 2015 after Adesina took over as the President of AfDB, aims at eliminating extreme poverty, ending hunger and malnutrition, achieving food sufficiency, and turning Africa into a net food exporter as well as setting Africa in step with global commodity and agricultural value chains.

    The Program, to be jointly implemented by the CGIAR system in collaboration with the Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa and other agricultural research and development organizations in Africa has eight priority agricultural value chain areas: rice sufficiency, cassava intensification, Sahelian food security, savannas as breadbaskets, restoring tree plantations, expanding horticulture, increasing wheat production, and expanded fish farming.

    “TAAT is about right technologies getting into the hands of farmers. AATF’s products fit very well into the TAAT priority areas. Inclusion of AATF technologies in TAAT presents us with a large array of technologies for farmers to choose from. It is therefore important that AATF with its wealth of experience and ready technologies becomes an implementing partner in TAAT,” stated Adesina.

    During the meeting, Kyetere shared with the AfDB team AATF’s approach and experience with public-private-partnerships, accessing technology solutions for smallholder farmers, and enhancing productivity as well as agri-business opportunities for wealth creation.

    “We have ready to roll technologies that are already creating impact among rural farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa and that resonate well with TAAT’s priorities. We are happy to participate in this great initiative towards a food secure Africa,’ said Kyetere.

    He highlighted some of the AATF initiatives that could add value to TAAT’s goals such as the Cassava mechanization and Agri-Business Project that has increased cassava yields from 9 to 25 tonnes per ha and farmer incomes from US$62 to US$92 per tonne through production efficiency and reduction in labour drudgery especially for women; DroughtTego maize, a product of the Water Efficient Maize for Africa Project that is helping farmers deal with climate change challenges, StrigAway technology that is already changing the lives of smallholders  in Striga endemic areas in East Africa and Hybrid rice that aims at achieving self-sufficiency in rice production in the region and currently showing potential to yield up to 7 tons per hectare.

    Other technologies and initiatives that AATF is involved with and that have potential to change farmers’ livelihoods and help TAAT realize the goal of turning African Savannas into Bread Baskets include the Pod Borer Resistant  Cowpea, Bt maize and the Seeds2B initiative that is about getting the right seed to market at the right time and right price.

    The AATF team also met with Dr. Chiji Ojukwu, the Director Agriculture and Agro-Industry Department (OSAN) at AfDB, Ben Kanu and Jonas Chianu, the TAAT Task Team Lead. Ojukwu reiterated AfDB’s commitment to work with all relevant institutions including AATF to make TAAT a success in delivering technologies for agricultural transformation in Africa.

    The AATF team also said Africa will soon have its own rice hybrids due  to a public-private partnership project.

    The varieties which have been developed using the 2-line rice hybrid technology have the potential to produce 7 tonnes per hectare.

    Kenya will be among the first countries to benefit from this pioneering breakthrough in rice breeding in SSA as early as next year considering that two hybrids are already undergoing national performance trials. Farmers in Tanzania are likely to get access to the hybrids in 2018.

    The project is further evaluating the performance of 127 rice hybrids for advancement to national performance trials, according to Dr Kayode Sanni, the Project Manager.

    Hybrid rice seeds currently being planted in Africa are either imported from Asia or America. Egypt, is the only country in Africa that has developed its own rice hybrids. With this breakthrough, Africa will realize its own high yielding hybrid seeds, consequently boosting production and moving closer to self-sufficiency in rice production.

    This is indeed good news to farmers, seed companies and rice consumers in SSA. While global production of rice has risen steadily from 132 million tonnes in 1960 to 491.5 million tonnes in 2015, Africa has not contributed much to the increase, producing only 3 per cent, with Asia accounting for 90 per cent of the global production.

     

  • FG to probe GES scheme

    The Federal Government has said it will probe the Growth Enhancement Support (GES) scheme initiated by the former Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, for farmers in the country.

    The Minister of ‎Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, disclosed this while receiving Senate Committee on Agriculture led by Senator Abdullahi Adamu in Abuja, Tuesday.

    He said the probe became necessary to ‎check the anomalies in quality of seed distributed to farmers as well as financial claims allegedly spent on the farm input especially in 2015.

    The GES scheme was a farm support ‎initiative where registered farmers in the country paid 50 per cent cost for seeds and fertilizers.

    The minister told the Senate that the agriculture ministry spent huge sum on the GES but currently owes some agro-dealers, who took part in the programme.

    Ogbeh said:‎ “We have challenges of seed. Last year under the GES scheme, seed supply happened but the quality of seeds that was sold was not too good. We are dealing with some of those issues now.

    “Even the figures branded around as being spent on seed are so high that we are investigating them because we don’t even have the money to pay. We are also dealing on payment of fertilisers. Mr. President was kind enough to help us find money to clear those arrears, so we can begin to plan for fertilizer blending for this season.”

     

     

  • Furore over ex-President Jonathan’s BoA appointments

    Furore over ex-President Jonathan’s BoA appointments

    Some of the last-minute appointments made by former President Goodluck Jonathan  through former Agriculture and Rural Development Minister, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina yesterday generated furore at the headquarters of the Bank of Industry (BoA),  Kaduna among directors of the bank.

    According to reports, trouble started when the three directors appointed by Adesina suddenly reported for duty at the Kaduna office of the bank yesterday. Their appearance at a time the management of the bank was having a crucial meeting led to the abrupt end of the meeting.

    A press statement endorsed by an Executive Director, Wholesales Finance, BoA, Alhaji Ahmadu Waziri, explained that the three directors were people of questionable character and they were unfit for the job.

    The statement identified Dr Danbala Danju, Mr Babatunde Igun and Mr. Mohammed Adamu Sambo as the  emergency appointees of Jonathan.

    “The next development in the nominations saga was yesterday (Monday, June 1, 2015) morning, when we were holding an informal Monday Morning Review meeting with the Acting MD/CEO and the Company Secretary. Two gentlemen suddenly intruded the office where we were meeting, and proceeded to present two copies of letters of appointment as EDs, signed by the Head of Human Resource Management at the Ministry, to the Acting MD/CEO,” the statement read.

    Waziri observed that the letter having been signed by a Director instead of the Minister or the Permanent Secretary was unusual. In addition, even though the Permanent Secretary only learnt about the approval on May 28, 2015, after which he gave instructions to the Head Human Resource as to what to do, the letters of appointment were dated May 27, 2015.

    “These gentlemen sent as a new management team are nothing but remnants of the last dispensation being catapulted to this side of change to do nothing but sabotage the expected efforts of the new government in the agriculture sector,” the statement added.

    Waziri pointed out that the sudden appointment was a way to truncate the entire progressive model which the bank has been operating and getting a desire result in the recent past before the ouster of the last administration.

  • BREAKING NEWS: Adesina elected as AfDB president

    BREAKING NEWS: Adesina elected as AfDB president

    Nigeria’s outgoing Minister of Agriculture, Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina, has been elected President of the African Development Bank (AfDB).

    He succeeds outgoing Donald Kabureka as the bank’s helmsman.

    Details later…