Tag: Dr. Victor Iyama

  • FACAN seeks more exports of non-conventional produce

    The Federation of Agricultural Commodities Association of Nigeria (FACAN) President, Dr. Victor Iyama, is seeking increased export of non-conventional agricultural produce to  contribute to the government’s strategy of diversifying foreign earnings.

    Speaking  with The Nation,  Iyama  noted  that trade in non-traditional agricultural exports, including fruits and vegetables and selected speciality and processed products,such honey  can  fetch Nigeria  more foreign exchange, urging  the government and  producers  to embrace produce other than  cocoa and cashew.

    He said beekeeping and products derived from it could generate income for the country.

    He  said Nigeria needed to diversify into the production and export of produce with higher unit values, and build capability to become large scale, very low cost exporters across a wide range of non-traditional products.

    According to him, there was substantial trade in mangoes, other fresh and tropical fruits, and the  global market for non-traditional agricultural produce is both valuable and dynamic.

    He explained that supermarkets and international buyers play an important role in increasing the opportunities for developing countries to produce and supply agric produce.

    Against the backdrop of falling prices for primary commodities, he urged  the  sector  to diversify its  production and/or export base, including improving measures to address issues  such as phytosanitary rules and other  criteria perceived as the major barrier to trade for local exporters.

    According to him, there are several important pre-conditions for the successful agro exports trade, including technical expertise, a well-structured production and export sector and a highly efficient supply chain from the field through to port or airport.

    In practice, the greatest challenge for existing and new entrants to the agro exports market is to meet the high standards of compliance set by the supermarkets and large retailers.

  • FACAN seeks task force on export products

    To prevent the rejection of Nigeria’s agricultural and processed food exports,  the government should up an inspectorate unit in key markets.

    This is the advice of Federation of Agricultural Commodities Association Nigeria (FACAN) President, Dr. Victor Iyama.

    The European Union (EU) ban on agric exports, such as beans, continues, even as it is mandatory for exports of perishable items to the EU to be certified under the vigilance of plant protection inspectors.

    In the last three years, export of Nigerian agro commodities has faced  maximum Sanitary & Phytosanitary (SPS) hurdles in Europe and the United States’ markets.

    Speaking with The Nation, Iyama said the association was ready to set up a compliance task force that would ensure that farmers comply with the specific concerns raised by European and United States’importers on food safety that affect health and safety, including excessive chemicals, pesticides, synthetic colour and microbes.

    If given the mandate to set up the inspectorate taskforce, Iyama stressed that quality and safety would be  top priorities and that the association would ensure that farm gate produce  meet the standards.

    The FACAN chief added that the problem of agro commodities not meeting global standards was of concern and that farmers should take the issue serious.

    He added that there the need to monitor the supply chain to avoid rejectable products infiltering the system.

    According to Iyama,  there is a plan to support agro-industries to venture into the export market. He said the association’s goal was to drive transformation through the commodity value chains and  to achieve self-sufficiency in key commodities, such as rice, cocoa, palm oil, horticulture and cashew.

    The strategy, he  explained,  was  to ensure that farmers know the markets for products, activities required along the supply chain, and the standard and volume of products.

    According to Iyama, import refusals by the US and Europe paint a grim picture of Nigerian agro and food products.

  • Rejected abroad, ‘kings’ at home

    Rejected abroad, ‘kings’ at home

    • How Nigerians consume contaminated food rejected in European countries

    CAUTION ALERT. That was the mood triggered when the European Union banned several food items originating from Nigeria last year.  Prior to the ban, cases of food poisoning leading to loss of lives were often reported. Last year, a family of six reportedly died after eating contaminated beans cake.

    In 2015 and 2016, the European Union rejected 67 processed and semi-processed foods from Nigeria, citing poor quality, contamination and high levels of chemicals in the preserved products. Food items such as beans, melon seeds, palm oil, bitter leaf, pumpkin, shelled groundnuts and live snails topped the list. The pesticide level of banned beans from Nigeria was said to be between 30.03mg per kg to 4.6mg per kg of Dichlorvos pesticide, while the acceptable residue limit is 0.01mg/kg.

    The chemical contents notwithstanding, Nigerians at home consume these food items with relish. The absence of labeling or inadequate labeling in many cases, render many consumers helpless as they are forced to buy food from the open market without gleaning adequate information on the chemicals used for preservation.

    Findings show that melon, one of the exported food items banned by the European Union, which is a soup delicacy consumed with relished in Nigeria can be compromised by aflatoxins, a toxin produced by certain fungi found on agricultural crops. Contamination of melons has become rampant in recent time as many no longer follow the conventional style of removing melon seeds from its protective shell but rely on ground melon wrapped in cellophane bags purchased in the open market. The melon reacts with the cellophane’s petroleum residue, making it become oxidized over time. This eventually prompts free radicals to be stocked into the melon soup.

    Also, with Nigeria’s haphazard storage system and the long process of transporting food from the farms to ready markets; shelled groundnuts, another exported banned food item consumed in Nigeria, is easily infected with fungi. The fungi react by denaturing the oil.

    Aflatoxin causes infertility, abortions and delayed onset of egg production in birds; a research published by Dr. Oladele Dokun, a veterinary doctor at the Nigeria’s Animal Care Laboratory has shown. Dr. Dokun further said that loss of appetite, skin discoloration or even yellowish pigmentation on the skin can be observed in fish.

    In humans, aflatoxin poisoning, known as aflatoxicosis is said to cause nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and convulsion. Side effects also include a collection of fluid in the lungs (pulmonary edema), a collection of fluid in the brain (cerebral edema), abnormalities of the blood and blood cancer even in children. Bleeding, liver damage and cancer, kidney and heart damage are also listed.

    Sharing a personal experience, Mr. Femi Kusa, a columnist and fellow of the Nigerian Association of Physicians of Natural Medicine recalled how he once ordered 20 litres of fresh palm kernel oil from a region of the country but was shocked to find a white film over it days later.

    “It was fungi! So, I threw the keg and its contents away and proceeded with the detoxification of my system. This sort of thing can make one ill, and an inexperienced doctor would merely provide drugs to suppress symptoms he observes and not uproot the cause(s).

    “If you shrug your shoulders in disbelief, saying our grandparents ate these things and live to ripe, old age, you may not have looked at the other side of the equation. That other side was their diet! Did they consume sugar the way we do today? Did they eat junk foods? Were they stressed up the way we are? Did they not sleep longer and more restfully than we do? Their bodies were not as weak as ours, and probably didn’t collapse as easily as ours do under aflatoxin bombardment”, Mr. Kusa queried, in a piece titled “Aflatoxins in Nigerian Foods”, published in the Natural Remedies for Sound body and Mind column.

    Prof Kolawole Adebayo, a rural development expert, believes the influx of contaminated food in the country is as a result of activities in the informal food sector which produces most of the food consumed.

    “If you want to buy garri, you don’t look for the National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) number because you are going to buy it in the local market. However, if you set up a company who wanted to sell packaged Garri, then you need a NAFDAC number. This same rule applies if you want to export outside of Nigeria”.

    Commenting on the banned Nigerian food items in Europe, Prof Adebayo who is also the Project Director, ‘Cassava: Adding Value for Africa Phase II (CAVA II)’, affirmed that once there is evidence of some unwanted bodies in a food crop, the importing nations are within their rights to reject it.

    “I think the problem the agric export sector faces in this instance is that some of the exporters did not get the required certificate, not because the food in themselves were bad. This is a problem of the government per say in terms of how it implement its own programmes and policies and what it allows to go in or come out of this country”, he stressed.

    Emphasizing on the need for active inspection of food items in the open market by regulatory government agencies; he also canvassed for the promotion of radio awareness jingles to inform consumers on the need to be discerning. 

    Also, the President, Federation of Agriculture Commodity Association of Nigeria, Dr. Victor Iyama in a chat with The Nation maintained that contamination of food from Nigeria is not as rampant as orchestrated by the European Union.

    Speaking on unsafe food in the informal sector, he averred that contaminated foods imported are compromised by packaging, based on the presence of preservatives and storage.

    “The few contaminations from the farms would be those that use expired or banned chemicals. That is why we are trying to eject bad packaging, especially hydrocarbon free bags. We are also training farmers to adopt organic fertilizers. Though that has its cost as the yields would be limited, but it is better to have safe food than fantastic yield,” he submitted.

    Faced with the reality that some of the food items in the open markets are infected with rodents; he revealed that plans are underway to embark on radio jingles to educate food vendors in order to prevent possible outbreaks of diseases like Lassa fever.

    Early last year, the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Audu Ogbeh raised a warning, saying Nigerians might be killing themselves in installment through the food they eat.  Food items mentioned included moi-moi wrapped with cellophane and sachet water exposed to the sun at 28 degree Celsius. He also added that many of the cows shepherd by herdsmen are already infected with tuberculosis.

    Asked to speak on efforts made at safeguarding food in Nigeria, Dr Abubakar Jimoh, the Director of Special Duties and Communication, National Agency For Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), told The Nation that the agency  is  working with farmers to ensure that whatever is produced at home will not be rejected by the international community.

    “We have recently established a veterinary department which works closely with Nigerian farmers and even animals that have contaminated drugs administered to them. We do not want them to get into the body of an average consumer”.

    Dr. Jimoh also stated that the agency has been educating farmers on correct chemical applications for food storage in order to prevent food contamination.

    Advising Nigerians on precaution measures, Prof Ngozi Nnam, a former National President of the Nutrition Society of Nigeria tasked Nigerians to consume fruits and vegetables rich in powerful antioxidants in order to suppress the effect of contaminated food.

    “Nature has a way of taking care of contamination but our problem in Nigeria is that we don’t take enough food rich in antioxidants. Vitamin A and C are good sources derived from fruits and vegetables. Nigerians should consider adding fruits and vegetables to their diets as they help protect the body from the harmful effect of contaminants”, she advised.

    Reporting done with support from CodeforAfrica.

     

  • ‘Bad policy killed cocoa industry’

    ‘Bad policy killed cocoa industry’

    Dr. Victor Iyama chairman, Board of trustees, Cocoa Association of Nigeria and President, Federation of Agricultural Commodity Association of Nigeria, is very passionate about cocoa business. In this interview with Bukola Afolabi he speaks on the problems and prospects of the cocoa industry

    Before the oil boom, can you tell us how many metric tonnes of cocoa Nigeria grew compared to what we are growing now?

    Before the oil boom, actually, we were growing up to 400 or 410, 000 tonnes but as that time, the consumption level was not as high as this all over the world and even at that time, we were number two. As at that time too, Ghana was producing less, Ghana was producing about 300 and something tonnes; Cote d’ivoire was producing about 400 and something tonnes. They were only a little bit higher. Today, Cote d’ivoire is on 1.5, 1.6 million tonnes, Ghana is on about I million, 1.1 million tonnes, we are going to 300,000 tonnes. But, I will tell you why it was like that. You know when cocoa board was introduced; the board was making all the money while the farmers were suffering.

    They were dictating prices, cheating the farmers, so it got to a stage where the farmers said what the heck, if I have to waste all my time like this and I get this peanut, why don’t I cut off this tree and leave it and grow maize, yam, cassava, crops that will be useful to me because of course, cocoa is not beans, it is not rice, you can only export it so the man concentrated growing arable crops that people will eat and that was what happened to cocoa. So, when they scrapped the cocoa board, infact, cocoa in Nigeria then to a level of about 81,000 tonnes per annum. So, when they scrapped the cocoa board and cocoa association came online, it was free enterprise, free entry, you can do your cocoa, quote your price, follow the world price, quote whatever you wanted to quote, sell your cocoa the way you want it and we were overseeing it, the farmers started getting back.

    So how much did we generate from cocoa?

    It is not too much of a difficult question to answer but I can tell you that in Nigeria today, we generate about $900million. You know that cocoa price fluctuates. Cocoa price is determined by what they call the London terminal market and the New York terminal market. So, it goes up and down. But presently, we are generating between, $900million. At times, it could be $800million because out of non-oil export in this country today, cocoa bean is still the second largest earner of the foreign exchange. Even the way we are even talking that cocoa has gone down, it is still the second largest foreign earner of the country today, it is only second to oil, even as we speak. So, you can now imagine if we concentrate our efforts in developing it further, cocoa can easily compete with oil.

    What do you think is the problem of the cocoa production in Nigeria?

    Naturally, if you talk of farming, cocoa has its own peculiar problem. I will show you some pictures of some farms that were devastated by natural attacks. At first, we thought it was normal caterpillar, within one month, they have cleared the farm, I will show you some pictures. Cocoa has its own natural disease and natural hazards that come from time to time. But many of the challenges stem from lack of funds to invest in farming. To invest in farming, for example, is a difficult thing. Some people who are clamouring for processing, I told them it is because it is easier to go and borrow money, to put it in buying machine, you know fully well that put off the machines and buy cocoa beans and put it through the machines, it is easy but you go and farm. Ideally, I have so much countries where there is cocoa, I visited Epadom, Victoria company; it is a company which I am looking towards too. From their farms, they have established large farms. From their farms, they take it to their factory, they process it to chocolate and sell but here, people will go and borrow huge money, a factory that is not supposed to cost more than $1.9 billion. Something, he will go borrow like 2.5 billion naira for a factory that will not be more than 1 billion or 1.2 billion, you have already created trouble for yourself and then you will start lying to government that it is because you are not getting cocoa to buy that is why your factory is not making money. Do you know what government has done, I must be sincere, I am not part of the people who just blame government, in cocoa in export, and government has tried a lot. Do you know that if you are an exporter in this country, especially if you processed or manufactured goods, do you know that government gives you 30%, 25% of your turnover as grant, which government does that. The only government which does something similar is the Chinese government, 30% and tell me all of us went to school. If you are getting 30% as turnover and you are not making money, won’t you close that thing? Do we continue to use our money to help foreign countries, 30%, 25% of your turnover, government gives you as grant as long as you can prove that you have shipped and CBN can confirm that the money came in, what else you want this government to do in terms of that

    What is your relationship with government agencies, especially NEXIM which is the saddled with the responsibility providing capital for export trade?

    Well, NEXIM is a bank like every other bank. The relationship is always cordial. If you want to take money from NEXIM, you go to NEXIM, their interest rate they claim is about 14%, but by the time, you take it through banks, it is more than that.

    I have not finished with this farming issue. You see, funding of farming, you cannot continue to say farmers should bring collateral, the collateral should be the farms that is what is been done in the develop countries, you will involve the insurance company to insure it and you give them money against that. At the very worse, you involve the association to guarantee their members, you cannot tell a farmer to go and bring a house at Victoria Island or Ikoyi to come and take money, it is not done, if we really want to grow that is the way to go

    You’re saying that government is planning to…

    (Cuts in) It is not that government is planning, some people that called themselves (COPAN) Cocoa Processors Association of Nigeria, and we’ve been at logger heads with them. I use to process and use to take tones of cocoa to the factory since I have a buyer. I wanted to set up my own processing but when I realised that it is a drainpipe that is why I put it on hold for now. I have gone for so many training, from processing to chocolate manufacturing in Malaysia. So many people in our association went for training for grafty because those cocoa farms that have been abandoned, we want to resuscitate it through grafty and distribute to the youths.

    What we are saying here is that these are the people going behind and they just want to cause unnecessary problem in the cocoa economy of this country because if we say like Babaginda did though he quickly rescind his decision because then too he was deceived to believe that it is processing and it wasn’t. You process something and you can’t sell it you will be begging somebody to come and buy it and he will tell you it has the stanzas, he will be giving you almost half the price. Many people who set up factory because of 30%, they have forgotten that for you to get 30%. You will have to process that thing and you would have brought in the money before you can get 30%. They also give to people who seek other commodities; even cocoa beans should get up to 5 to 10%. The cocoa processors now are even trying to tell them that they shouldn’t even give cocoa beans anything, whereas who does the work, is it the person processing cocoa or the person producing the cocoa beans?

    But this people, are they an association, are they part of you to form their own association?

    No, from day one, what my elders handed over to me, we have a new president right from time. You know I’m the chairman of board of trustees but I’m the president of the Federation of Agricultural Commodity Association of Nigeria. So I’m overseeing about 42 different commodity associations.