Tag: Farmers

  • Farmers get implements

    The Sole Administrator of Ejigbo Local Council Development Area, Hon. Ibrahim Adigun has given out farm tools and animal feeds to farmers in the area. The event took place at the council’s secretariat.

    Speaking at the programme entitled: “Ejigbo Distributes Farm Tools and Animal Feeds to Farmers”, Mr Adigun said the goal was to make farming a priority.

    “Agriculture has become an alternative source of revenue for the country. The era when Nigeria depended solely on crude oil for its revenue generation is gone. That explains why this administration could not but assist the farmers,” he said.

    He urged the farmers to attend conferences, seminars, visit other farms and learn to make profits.

    Cheques for various amounts of money were given to the less-privileged. He said it was to extend the love and care of the season to the needy in the society.

    “The population of disabled persons are increasing every day. This shows that they are becoming too many to be ignored,” he said.

    He urged the public not to discriminate against the less-privileged persons, even as he urged them to show them love.

    He called on well-meaning Nigerians to support the less-privileged persons in order to make their lives worthwhile.

    Among the beneficiaries were Adesanya Oluwatoyin (N50, 000), Femi Oyemate (N50, 000), Mrs Aduke Otunlape (N50, 000), Bolarinwa Akeem Ayinla (N25, 000), Akinwale Shina (N50, 000), Mrs Sabaina Oladepo (N50, 000), Akinwunmi Babatunde Oseni (N25, 000) and Omoniyi Ismail (N50, 000).

  • Farmers/herdsmen clash: monarch calls for truce

    The Emir of Gombe, Alhaji Abubakar Shehu, has appealed to farmers and herdsmen to sheath their swords and embrace peace.

    The emir made the call in Gombe yesterday during the Eid-el-fitr Durbar at his palace.

    He said: “Farmers should not take laws into their hands when their crops are destroyed by cattle. I am also appealing to the security personnel to do justice in their judgment and not to take sides.”

    The monarch said there were indications of a good farming season and, therefore, called on farmers to plant in time to have a bountiful harvest.

    He appealed to the public to be patient over the hardship in the country, with hope that things will get better.

    He appealed to both Muslims and Christian faithful to imbibe the teaching of Ramadan, which is peace.

  • Hello Tractor, The Uber for tractors

    Hello Tractor, The Uber for tractors

    For small-scale farmers in Nigeria, especially in the northern parts of the country, getting tractors to use on their farmlands to boost their yield has always been difficult.

    Many farmers can’t afford to buy one due to the high cost, while the country’s federal government, which is the major supplier of tractors, is not able to meet more than four percent of their requirements. Africa has less than 50 agricultural tractors per 100 square kilometres of arable land, according to the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), which ranked Nigeria 132 out of 188 countries surveyed on agricultural mechanisation. Farm sizes in Nigeria are small, making it difficult for individual farmers to own a tractor.

     

    However since mid-2014, the introduction of the Hello Tractor project has been addressing the prevalent problem of crippling poverty and poor crop yields amongst small-scale farmers. Hello Tractor is the brainchild of Jehiel Oliver, an American who developed the idea while working as a global finance consultant focused on SMEs and agricultural industries at Aya Consulting in the United States.

    He relocated to Nigeria to implement the project; a social enterprise that improves food and income security by facilitating Nigerian farmers with the right tools to efficiently harvest their land. Hello Tractor promotes collaborative consumption by building a network of “Smart Tractor” owners, enabling small-scale farmers to request and pay for tractor services via SMS and mobile money, as and when they need specific services.

    On what makes the solution unique, the operators say, “Our powerful booking system allows farmers to conveniently request, schedule and prepay for tractor services, from nearby Smart Tractor owners, through SMS messaging and mobile money. Once service is completed, the pre-payment is automatically released to the Smart Tractor owner.”

    Since it was launched in mid-2014, farmers who participated in the beta period have reportedly seen their yields increase by 200 percent using a machine that’s 40 times faster than manual labor. “We have designed an innovative, low-cost “Smart Tractor” specifically for small farmers’ unique needs,” remarks Oliver, the founder of Hello Tractor.

    “The smart tractor is a two-wheeled tractor with GPS antennae that allows us to track its usage and telematics, which collects and transfers data in no Internet areas such as the rural areas,” Oliver adds.

    According to Oliver, each tractor on the platform reaches an approximate 250 Ha of farmland annually, which is substantial in Nigeria where farmers own, on average, just over one hectare of land.

    With one of the fastest growing populations in the world, and huge pressure on the employment market to provide new jobs, optimizing Nigeria’s agricultural industry is key to combatting youth unemployment for the next generation.

    “Despite the profitability of agriculture in Nigeria, there remains a substantial risk (both real and perceived) preventing banks to engage more deeply,” remarks Oliver. To address this issue Hello Tractor also coordinates low-cost financing to help facilitate the purchase of a Smart Tractor. “Equipped with various attachments, owners can tailor its use for a variety of crops and stages of the production cycle, allowing them to serve their customers throughout the year. The GPS antenna allows Hello Tractor to track its usage and gather data on location, market trends, and uptake,” Oliver explained.

    “At the beta phase we’re prioritizing land preparation because first of all, it’s the first stage of production,” Oliver said. “It’s also the most labor intensive. It takes about 40 days of manual labor to prepare the land. Our tractors do it in eight hours.”

    On the impact so far, Oliver told The Nation that, “Farmers are reporting that having access to tractor services saves them money on land preparation while removing the labor constraints that have prevented them from planting the land that they have access to.”

    Hello Tractor has just been launched in Kenya with a pilot this year. Oliver believes the results there should be as promising as those in Nigeria.

    Lekan Otufodunrin

     

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  • MARIJUANA WAR! NDLEA in running battle with  billionaire Indian hemp farmers

    MARIJUANA WAR! NDLEA in running battle with billionaire Indian hemp farmers

    The journey was risky, the environment hostile and the terrain inaccessible. For weeks, SINA FADARE was on the trails of cannabis farmers in the jungle of government forest reserves in the South West states. In this report, he observes that the battle of the National Drugs Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) against drug peddling is far from being won and the country, indeed, sits on a keg of gun powder.

    Ogbese/Owo, Ogotun, Ikoyi and Olohunde villages in Ondo, Ekiti, Osun and Oyo states respectively have a lot in common. They are the havens of Indian hemp farmers in Nigeria. Immediately you enter any of these villages, the word ‘farmer’, which normally means somebody who produces food or cash crops like yam, beans, maize and cocoa, takes on a new meaning. In the aforementioned villages, the word ‘farmer’ mostly refers to Indian hemp growers.

    Another feature of the areas is that government-owned forest reserves, which cut across all the states in the South-West (Ondo, Osun, Oyo, Ogun and Ekiti) pass through these villages and link up states like, Edo, Delta, Kwara, Kogi and Lagos. The proximity of the thick vegetation of the aforementioned places thus makes it a tempting field for hemp planters.

    The environment has a thick vegetation, sloppy and undulating terrain and rich and fertile soil that has not been used for farming for many years due to lack of access points. The green vegetation oozes smoke from the hills when viewed with the binocular. Welcome to the cannabis empire.

    The Nation investigation revealed that the most notorious sites for hemp cultivation in the country are found in Ipele, Ita-Ogbolu, Owo and Ogbese forest reserves in Ondo State; Ogotun, Ise-Orun, Ikogosi, Emure, Egbe and little Ose forest reserves in Ekiti State; Ikoyi, Orita Ijebu and Gbongan forest reserve in Ayedade Local Government Area of Osun State and Olohunde, Seriki and Gambari forest reserves in Oyo State.

    In 2014 alone, The Nation gathered, hemp farmers in Osun State had pumper harvests that tasked the NDLEA to no end. The agency was said to have employed the services of a tractor to destroy about 57 hectares of cannabis farm in Ikoyi area of the state with a street value of about N6.8 billion.

    The operation, which lasted for three days from October 9 to 12, involved all the arsenals of the NDLEA. A suspected drug baron, Godspower Chibogu, who allegedly funded the cultivation of the cannabis plantation, was traced to his private home in Ibadan, Oyo State, where he was apprehended and taken to the farm to witness its destruction.

    Speaking on the major breakthrough, the then chairman of NDLEA, Ahmadu Giade, said the agency had to take the step in response to the growing magnitude of cannabis cultivation in the area.

    He said: “This is the first time the NDLEA is engaging the service of a tractor in the destruction of cannabis farms. The farms are so large that it takes several days and weeks to destroy manually. Deploying heavy duty equipment to the farms makes the task simpler and faster.”

    Similarly, the Orita Ijebu forest reserve in Ikoyi area of the state was also raided in 2016 by the NDLEA where 27 camps used as storage facilities for cannabis was located. The cannabis retrieved from this location was put at about N300 million.

    The use of tractors for the destruction of such farms was not peculiar to Osun. The NDLEA in Oyo State took a similar step in 2016 when Gambari forest became a recurrent decimal in cannabis planting. About 27 hectares of cannabis plantations were destroyed with a street value of about N2.3 billion.

    On how the menace was tackled, the agency’s commander, Mrs.Omolade Faboyede, said: “We have been monitoring the reserve and it was noticed that the planters were back to business. This prompted the bringing in of tractors to clear the expansive plantation. It will be a continuous exercise until the whole place is rid of cannabis plants.”

    Speaking to this reporter on the volume of cannabis destroyed by the NDLEA between 2011 and 2015, the National Public Relations Officer of the agency, Mr. Mitchell Ofoyeju, said about 8,076.03 hectares of cannabis farms had been destroyed. The street value of this is going to about N963 billion. According to him, the agency was able to achieve this due to the doggedness and determination of its officials despite the numerous challenges it faces.

     

    Call for national emergency

    However, a Deputy Director in the NDLEA, who spoke to our reporter on condition of anonymity, said as laudable as the breakthrough of the agency may be, given the volume of unidentified cannabis farms, particularly in the South West of the country, and the volume that finds itself in the open market through the barons, it is better to declare a national emergency on the issue.

    He said: “This is not a matter of exaggeration, because in some cases, particularly in Ondo and Ekiti states where the terrains are inaccessible, the quantity of weeds stored in various hidden locations aside the ones on various farms which poor funding has prevented the organisation from identifying, the country is sitting dangerously on a keg of gun powder.”

    Worried by the high population of cannabis farmers in the South West, NDLEA’s chief executive, Col. Muhammad Abdallah (rtd), noted that “unless the current trend of cannabis cultivation is addressed, the country is on the verge of a devastating food security. It is worrisome that the cartels are using government forest reserves to cultivate cannabis.”

    According to Food and Agriculture Organisations of the United Nations (FAO), between 2000 and 2005, Nigeria recorded the largest deforestation rate in the world, having lost 55.7 per cent of their primary forest. More worrisome, it noted, was the fact that close to 904,100 hectares of forest land had been lost.

    The Nation gathered that Indian hemp farmers are among the culprits of deforestation. Thousands of forest reserves are destroyed to make way for their illicit venture. Cannabis is planted far away from the eagle eyes of law enforcement agencies.

     

    Dynamics of hemp planting business in forest reserves

    Papa Michael, as he was fondly called by neighbours and admirers in Ore, a town in Odigbo Local Government Area, Ondo State, was a famous hemp farmer. According to him, there was virtually nobody in the area who did not know him because of his popularity. He knew what it entailed to survive in cannabis farming.

    According to him, for about 35 years, he had a beautiful romance with cannabis, which he usually calls weed. The gap toothed, petite innocent-looking man in his late 70s could not forget in a hurry his involvement in illegal cannabis business for several years. For this, he was detained in various police cells many times.

    A native of Amuno, Kwale area of Delta State, before he relocated to Ogbese and later settled in Ore when he was barely 25 years old. “I came to Yoruba land through a friend when l could not make success of my transport business then. I used to work for a man in our area who had a large farm of hemp plantation. Each time he was in police or NDLEA net, I used to take charge of his farm,” he recalled.

    Papa Michael, who said he never felt he was doing anything unusual, said: “Weed is a spiritual vegetable. I don’t know why you people are disturbing yourselves about it. That was the only business l did for about 35 years before age told me to stop. Twice l collapsed on the farm and my family, particularly my children, said enough was enough. That is why you see me now doing my vulcanizing job to make ends meet.”

    Explaining why the business is done in forest reserves, the father of five children said: “My people are many here and l doubt if they can do any other job. All these areas (referring to Ondo, Ekiti, Osun and Oyo) have good soils that are very good for weed. If you get about 10 bags of weed from a hectare of land in my area (Delta), the same hectare of land will give you about 50 bags here. If you are the one, will you leave such a place?” he queried.

    From Papa Michael’s explanation, it is easy to see why the South West is usually invaded by Indian hemp farmers from other parts of the country and would not leave in a hurry no matter the circumstances. The Nation investigation revealed that cannabis barons have integrated in the aforementioned states so much so that they have formed a syndicate that is very rich and ready to wage a serious war against any government agency that poses a threat to their illicit business.

    It was gathered that in Ondo State, for instance, cannabis farmers have an association called Akunnubas, a name derived from Kwale language. There is an executive that runs the affairs of this association and pull resources together if need be to achieve its desired goal. Through this association, they map out their operational strategies on how to beat security agencies in transferring processed cannabis from the state to other parts of the country as well as for export.

    Their operations are seriously coded for security reasons and they employ some members of a militant group as their own internal security. The militants on their pay roll are to gather information concerning the NDLEA and the police. The Nation gathered that they are effective in this job to the extent that they have percolated the security agencies such that their strategies at security meetings are divulged to the executive members who then take the necessary step for safe landing of their produce. Although this costs a lot of money, it is always jointly funded by all members of the association.

    The Nation investigation revealed that this association also links up with others states in the South West while Akure, the capital of Ondo State, is the headquarters where all operational activities, including the control of cannabis price per bag, are dictated. In the same manner, the Akunubas link up with Delta State where most of the barons and financers come from to control the price and coordinate the market for the maximization of profit.

    The Nation also gathered that resources are pulled together by the organisation to have a notable nursery where cannabis are initially planted and watered to maturity before it is transferred to a larger farm. Aside this, during harvest period, which normally takes up to two or three months depending on the size of the farm, the service of a chopper is usually engaged to drop food and drinks for the people on the farm because of the difficult terrain and to avoid the eagle eyes of security operatives

    A bag of cannabis, according to investigation, sells for about N180,000. If a baron with a large farm is able to deliver all his harvest to the end user without any difficulty, he would be smiling to the bank with as much as N500 million.

    Speaking with our correspondent in his office at Alagbaka area of Akure, NDLEA Commander, Alhaji. Mohammed Malami Sokoto, who confirmed the activities of Akunnubas, said they are an organised crime syndicate. According to him, recently the command arrested the body’s vice chairman (name withheld), who incidentally was the son of the soil.

    “They are so organised that they use a pseudo name to avoid being nabbed, and the name was coined from Kwale language. Their chairman, who is now at large, is from Kwale, while his deputy is from Ondo State. We have charged him to court but he was released on bail. After his arrest, the group is now in disarray,” he said.

    Sokoto explained that the organised crime is always coordinated and extremely coded. “It is an established, organised crime. The one who farms on the land and plants the cannabis sometimes does not really know the real owner. There is a middle man that runs errand between those that tilt the land and the farm manager and the owner of the cannabis. Each time you make an arrest on the farm, he cannot give you any useful information concerning the real owner of the farm.

    Giving an insight into the operation of the cannabis business, the NDLEA boss said “There is usually a disconnect between the person farming on the land and the baron that owns it. The baron does not know those that are working on his farm and vice versa. The middle man is the farm manager who most of the time has no fixed address. All of them know the middle man, but it is difficult to nab him. We call them middle baron.

    “The dynamics of it is that the middle man runs on proxy. He will just recruit men to work on the farm and disappear. They have an association they gave a pseudo name which nobody can identify. The funny thing is that those who actually own the business are not the people from the state, but some Kwale people from Delta State who have a link with the Omo onile(sons of the soil)”.

    Explaining the challenges confronting the command in combating deadly drug barons, Sokoto explained that “there are environmental threats and poor logistics in accessing the farm. At times, it takes two days. There was a time we went for such an operation and by the time we are through, the bridge that we came through had been dismantled.

    “Sometimes, to communicate with them is not possible. Operation is timely so we have to do a back-up team to avoid a calamity. It is in a jungle where telephone network is not feasible.”

    Besides poor funding which is the major problem of NDLEA as an agency of government, the Ondo command headquarters was littered with heaps of cannabis. The seized vehicles in the compound and the three stores were filled to capacity. To this, Sokoto explained that there was about 100 tons of cannabis in their custody waiting to be destroyed as soon as the National Assembly approved it.

    “There is the latest development concerning some of our seizures. Though we have a court injunction to destroy it, the National Assembly must give us the go ahead,” he said

     

    Cannabis barons’ mode of operation

    To beat the law enforcement agencies, a lot of organised strategies are employed by the barons to carry their produce to the end user. The Nation gathered that cannabis consignments are compressed, packaged like a book parcel and carried in a normal vehicle without anybody except a trained NDLEA official knowing what it is. This type of package is called ‘the bible’ in security circle.

    Aside this, cannabis are tucked in specialised trunks with half of it opened on the roof and the produce is packed and then sealed up. This is later dismantled when it gets to its final destination.

    While taking the reporter round to see some of the seizures made at the Ondo Command, the Assistant Commander in charge of operation and intelligence, who did not want his name in print, said a lot of methods are used by barons to deceive security agencies, including petrol tankers, ambulances, toilet cans, soft drink cartons and tipper lorries loaded with granite.

    Papa Michael said packaging weed requires a lot of experience and networking. He said: “There are various methods the operators use, which l cannot tell you. But the fact is that once the weed is ready, it will definitely get to the end users. I can pack it like baby wear or like Okrika (second hand) clothes. My brother, it is brain work.”

    Like any other business with its hazards, the barons may not always succeed in bribing their ways through the checkpoints. Such goods are confiscated by the NDLEA. At times, through intelligence gathering, the goods are seized at various warehouses. But such seizures are just a like a drop of water in the ocean compared to those that find their ways to the open market or outside the country.

    The Nation also gathered that what makes the business of cannabis more complicated is that it has two end chains, meaning it can be exported and at the same time imported. According to an NDLEA source, the imported ones are using Nigeria as transit route to other destinations within and outside the country.

    The reporter was shocked at Ogotun village in Ekiti when the son of a prominent cocoa farmer in the area said that during harvesting periods, the barons use chopper to drop food and evacuate finished products from the jungle.

    A graduate of Economics who did not want his name in print said: “On numerous occasions when we go into the deep forest to hunt for games, we see choppers hovering in the air and dropping food for cannabis harvesters. Sometimes, they do that three times in a day,” he said.

     

    Why government-owned forest reserves?

    Speaking to The Nation in his office in Osogbo, Osun State, the Assistant Commander in charge of operations, Mr. Julius Dzer, noted that government forest reserves are the targets of cannabis farmers because of its numerous advantages to their illicit business.

    According to him, “More than 95 per cent of the people planting cannabis in the South West are from Delta State. They have to come here because the land is fertile and friendly with the weed. If you take a modus of hemp seed and plant it in Delta, it will give you between 15 and 20 bags, while it will give you more than 50 bags here.

    “Secondly, the land is fertile and the quality of the hemp produced is enhanced, far better than what you have in other areas. The best weather and soil that accommodate hemp is here in the South West. They take cover in the forest because it is wide and deep. This cannot be easily accessible to security agencies.”

    Dzer, who has led various operations against the barons, pointed out that because of the difficult terrain which most of the forest reserves occupy, coupled with the fact that the land belongs to the government and nobody can lay serious claim to it except a few Omo Onile who are majorly settled, cannabis farmers seek solace in this jungle to perpetrate their crime.

    Thinking along the same line, an NDLEA official who did not want his name in print, said that 90 per cent of the cannabis planted in the country and exported are cultivated in various forest reserves because the soils are not only fertile but far away from the prying eyes of security agencies.

    He explained that most of the lands have not been used for farming at all. “As such, cannabis produced here is said to be one of the best in the world. Therefore, the barons may not be in a hurry to abandon such an environment unless they are rooted out by force.”

    The Nation gathered that the barons also prefer the forest reserves because they (forest reserves) give them natural protection from the security agencies as it would take many months of operational planning and huge mobilisation before security agents can beat them to the game.

    Sharing his experience during the destruction of 68 acres of cannabis farm at Gambari forest in Ibadan, Oyo State, on September 11, 2016, NDLEA Director of Operations and General Investigation, Mr. Mabo Olugbenga, who led the operation, noted that gaining access into the place was a huge challenge.

    He said: “The team drove from Ibadan through several villages like Iki-Oke Alayo village, Idi Ayunre and several communities before getting to the forest. The bush paths were rough with streams and swampy areas making movement extremely difficult.”

    Olugbenga, who described the place as an “evil forest”, explained that the cannabis farm which was worth millions of naira was discovered through intelligence reports.

    Speaking in the same vein, an operation officer with the Ondo Command, who did not want his name in print, said the major headache of the agency was the inaccessible terrains where the cannabis plantations are located.

    He said: “In one of our previous operations, we left the office in Akure around midnight and did not get to the jungle until 2 am. After our vehicles were packed because of the swampy terrain, we had to trek another three hours before we could get to the farm. We were virtually lost in the jungle because we could not communicate with our base any longer. For two days, we were more or less in the wilderness.”

  • ‘Bumper maize, soybean harvest for Northern farmers’

    Struggling Northern farmers could press their luck with soybeans and maize, as  international organisations move to improve farmers’ capacities to increase   yields  across   acreage  as demand nationwide  offers a potential lifeline.

    Globally and nationally, rising exports demand is providing a path to profitability for farmers pushing increasing soybean plantings.

    To this end, 15,000 maize and soy farmers in Katsina and Kaduna states will benefit from the collaboration between the West African Soy Industries Limited (WASIL) and the Business Innovation Facility (BIF) to enhance maize’s and soy farmers’ productivity.

    In line with this a Memorandum of Understanding has been signed between WASIL and BIF on improving the productivity of maize and soy farmers in a replicable manner in Nigeria,

    WASIL, a sister company to WACOT Limited is a member of the TGI Group,  an international investment and holding company with diversified interests and investments in Nigeria, Ghana, Republic of Benin, Morocco, UAE, South Africa, China and several other emerging markets with Mr. Rahul Savara as Group Managing Director. On the other hand, the Business Innovation Facility (BIF) is a five-year (2014 – 2019) DFID-funded market systems development programme that aims to improve the lives of the poor in three countries: Malawi, Myanmar and Nigeria.

    BIF identifies and addresses constraints in selected markets, providing technical assistance (and some grant funding) to businesses and other market players.

    According to the General Manager, Corporate Affairs of TGI Group, Mr. SadiqKassim, “WASIL is currently working with the Federal Ministry of Agriculture & Rural Development and the Central Bank of Nigeria under the Food Security Programme of the Federal Government to improve the productivity of maize and soy farmers in a replicable manner. The company has commenced the setting up of a large oil milling facility in Nigeria which will provide off-take of Soybeans from out-grower farmers while its affiliate company, CHI Farms will procure maize for its feed milling from the out-grower farmers as well”.

    “WASIL is targeting 14,000 farmers in Katsina and 1,000 farmers in Kaduna State in both maize and soy value chains making a total of 15,000 farmers during the current cropping calendar”, Kassim added.

    With the signing of the MOU, BIF will provide WASIL with technical assistance in realizing its objectives.

    Identified areas of collaboration include data capturing and building data base of farmers and cooperatives in Maize and Soy. While WASIL/WACOT is expected to provide its current database of existing cooperatives which had been formed earlier, BIF will support the Group in designing a pre-assessment survey form to assess the farmers’ socio –economic conditions, determine the sample size and assist with getting the same administered on ground.

    BIF will also provide the required Information Technology (IT) support and database software and trained field staff to conduct registration of 15,000 new farmers while also conducting farm mapping and re-validation of database of farmers collected by WASIL staff and provide continuous supportive supervision

    The  Managing Director of WACOT Limited. Mr. Ujwalkanta Senapati disclosed that WASIL and BIF through the collaboration will create new farmers’ associations and cooperatives alongside expansion of existing cooperatives. Facilitate the involvement and support of relevant public agencies and state governments in formation and registration of cooperatives and Self-Help Groups. Ensure inclusion of registered farmers into the National Farmers Database and also conduct a joint exercise to mobilise and strengthen farmer cooperatives in areas such as conflict resolution, group functioning, record keeping, etc.”

    Senapati said the agreement includes training and capacity building for maize and soy farmers. In this area, WASIL will assistBIF in setting up a project office in Funtua, Katsina State. While, BIF will provide soy and maize crops’ experts as resource persons to develop manuals and training resources for the farmers.

  • Farmers grappling with challenges, say FACAN, others

    Farmers’ income will continue to be under pressure as they face challenges, the National President, Federation of Agricultural Commodities Association of Nigeria (FACAN), Dr Victor Iyama, has said.

    Iyama, said there was no “short-term fix” to the problems, saying  the outlook was difficult.

    He observed that though there were a few bright spots, the overall impact had been significant with a lot of producers still looking at how to get through the recession.

    For instance, he noted that young farmers faced challenges getting a foot onto the business ladder, adding that it was having an impact on the entire industry.

    He explained that they are an high tech group who hold a realistic picture of farming in their heads and want a career on the land but are seriously constrained in a number of ways.

    Unless these investments are secured, Iyama said it was unlikely that the economic potential of the young people would be unlocked.

    He urged banks, governments, families, and communities to come together to ensure young farmers receive the support they deserve.

    He  described  agriculture as  a shining light in an otherwise challenging economic landscape ,urging  the government  to partner agribusiness companies to  discuss how they could bring even more investment in the country’s agriculture sector.

    Expressing delight that the budget has finally been signed, Country Manager, Harvest Plus Nigeria , Dr Paul Ilona    added  that it  would be the enabler the government needs to propel economic growth.

    He expressed hope that the budget will not only create an economic revival for the betterment of the country but will also pave the way for sustainable growth.

    Ilona expressed the hope that major changes were introduced into the agric sector as the ministry tries to implement the agric policy.

    Food Safety expert, Prof Stephen Fapohunda,      urged the government, among others, to focus on stimulating entrepreneurial development among young people.

    In the face of a weaker economy, Fapohunda of Department of Biosciences and Biotechnology, Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State expects the  budget  to  focus  on value-addition  and  creating the enabling environment  for businesses to survive and thrive  through  creation of  products and services.

    He explained that adding value and maximising the agriculture sector’s limited resources through targeted investments will strengthen links in the supply chain for food and develop competitive advantages.

  • CBN engages Ogun farmers, SMEs on financial inclusion

    CBN engages Ogun farmers, SMEs on financial inclusion

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has engaged farmers and Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in Abeokuta, Ogun State on financial inclusion initiatives.

    The exercise was in continuation of the apex bank’s enlightenment campaign, aimed at bringing more people into the formal financial sector.

    The apex bank used the opportunity provided by the financial inclusion fair to educate participants on its numerous real sector intervention programmes.

    These programmes the bank said were geared towards enhancing the wellbeing of Nigerians and promoting economic development in general.

    CBN’s Deputy Director, Consumer Protection Department, Hajia Khadijah Kasim said the bank took its enlightenment campaign to the ancient city of Abeokuta in order to inform the people about its activities, interventions and recent developments in the financial system.

    Speaking on the theme: Promoting Financial System Stability and Economic Development,  she said: “We want to interact with you one on one. The bank’s officials are here to talk to you about rights and responsibilities of bank customers, how we can lodge complaints to CBN if we have issues with our financial service providers.

    “You will also be informed about different efforts of the CBN to ensure that every Nigerian is financially included, so that all of us can enjoy enormous opportunities that abound in this space.”

    The Abeokuta branch controller of CBN, Babatunde Amao called on the farmers and SME operators to make constructive criticisms and suggestions that could serve as useful contributions towards pulling the country out of recession.He said the CBN recognises the importance of the city, and the fact that Abeokuta is home to most prominent Nigerians some of whom are dead and some are still living.

    A senior manager in the development finance department of CBN, Xavier Okon, explained to participants that the apex bank helps to solve the problems most businesses face in Nigeria, especially that of long-term financing needs which commercial banks cannot meet because their funds are mainly short term in nature.

  • Relief for farmers, widows in Niger

    Relief for farmers, widows in Niger

    Like the country at large, Niger State is quite a paradox. Its soil is rich enough to grow a wide range of food and cash crops, including melon, cotton, beans, millet, sorghum, soya beans, yam and sugarcane. Yet, its farmers produce very little of these crops and essentially struggle to get by. This is because they get little support. For instance, they cannot buy or rent tractors or bulldozers needed for mechanised farming. This has left the agriculture sector poorly developed and unfruitful.

    Help has come. A member of the House of Representatives, representing Kontagora-Wushishi-Marga-Mashegu constituency, Niger State, Hon. Abdullahi Garba has provided farmers in four local government areas with mini-tractors to aid their farming.

    The mini-tractor is a 13 horse-power machine which can be used for harvesting, make ridges and perform other farming activities.

    According to the lawmaker, empowering farmers in the state with mechanised tools will boost agricultural production and also facilitate exports, which would in turn encourage more participation in agriculture.

    Garba, who is the House Committee Chairman on Population, noted that no amount was too small for empowerment adding that such would be repeated annually.

    “About 365 days ago I did exactly what you are witnessing today. It is all about motive and determination. I need to empower them year-in year-out. So it is what I enjoyed doing.

    “Imagine what these people are facing and what these support will do to alleviate their challenges. If they can make N4000 per day through these empowerment tools, you know what that will be in a year,” he added.

    Speaking with some of the beneficiaries, they commended the gesture, describing it as one which would help improve farming activities especially in the LGAs and further encourage more youths in farming.

    Umar Aliyu, 45 and father of 11 children disclosed how he manually cultivates about 12 Acres of land through the use of cattles for making ridges, this among other factors, he said has continued to hamper on harvests.

    He affirmed that with the new empowerment, his production would be increased by 50 percent.

    “Now I have increased capacity to do more cultivation but on behalf of other farmers, I want the government to help construct better road for accessibility and easy transportation of our produce,” he added.

    Another farmer, Umar Isah, 28, from Wushishi, LGA said  the mini-tractor will increase his farm cultivation to seven acres as against three acres production that produces only 50 bags of maize.

    “I am extremely happy for this. What can I say than to thank God for using this man. He has helped with mini-tractors, it is now the turn of government to provide fertiliser, pesticides, insecticides and above all, seeds,” he said.

    The farmers, however, called for road rehabilitation across the local governments by the appropriate authority to ensure easy transportation of Agriculture produce to cities where they are needed.

    Other empowerment tools distributed by the lawmaker included 90 sets of complete grinding machines for women, 45 motorcycles, 32 Tricycles for commercial purpose, 32 Hair, 45 Deep freezers among others.

    There were other beneficiaries, one of whom  Hajia Kunu Musa, a 50-year old widow. She got a grinding machine from the lawmaker. Hajia Musa said she could not believe her luck, noting that the grinding machine would help ease the burden of having to cater for a family of nine.

    “I am 50 years old with eight children. My husband died about 15 years ago, so it’s been difficult but I run a local restaurant which I used to take care of their welfare. I believe that is my fate.

    “With this grinding machine given to me free, I will be able to make more money for the family by grinding corn, potato, tomatoes and now that is Fasting period, people do lots of grinding, no doubt it will help my family.”

    The job tools were eventually distributed to other beneficiaries including young women, artisans, youths, farmers among others drawn from 45 wards in the four local governments the House of Representative member represents.

     

  • Widows, farmers get a lift in Niger

    For the two needy women, despair has given way. Hajia Kunu Musa and Mrs. Raliatu Laisi, both widows, got a lift from an empowerment programme launched by Hon. Abdullahi Garba in his constituency in Niger State. The lawmaker, of the All Progressives Congress (APC), represents Kontagora/Wushishi/Mariga/Mashegu Federal Constituency.

    On May 28, he invited his constituents to give back to them.

    During the event, Hajia Musa, a 50-year widow from Mariga Local Government Area of the state, relived how difficult life was for her.

    “I am 50 years old with eight children,” she said. “My husband died about 15 years ago, so it’s been difficult but I run a local restaurant which I use to take care of their welfare. I believe that is my fate.”

    She got a complete set of grinding machine which she said will be used to mill grains to support her family.

    “With this grinding machine given to me free, I will be able to make more money for the family by grinding corn, potato, tomatoes and now that is fasting period, people do lots of grinding, no doubt it will help my family.”

    Her story was not really different from others, especially farmers crippled by poor or non-functioning farm equipment.

    Unlike many empowerment strictly tailored for indigenes, this seem to have extended to residents from other parts of the country such as the South East, South West and other regions.

    Mrs. Laisi was one of those residents from the South West, whose husband also died 20 years ago. At age 65, she managed to train her children but got a new deep freezer. “I am so excited. I pray that God will surprise him as well because I don’t know I will be among those that will get this new freezer.” When asked if it will make any impact on her livelihood, the reaction on her face was like the reporter could not comprehend her hardship. “I will use it to sell juice, water and other cold drinks and as I do this, I will always remember him in prayers.” She lauded the humanitarian gesture of the lawmaker, stressing that the intervention would help cater for needs of the four children.

  • Hard times hit cocoa farmers

    Hard times hit cocoa farmers

    These are not the best of times for the cocoa industry. Hit by falling prices, oversupply and debts, cocoa farmers and processors are in dire straits. This may lead to a cut in supply, writes DANIEL ESSIET.

    Cocoa is important to the consuming and producing countries. According to the World Cocoa Foundation, more than three million tonnes of cocoa beans are consumed worldwide annually. Globally, at least five million smallholder farmers work on cocoa plantations, providing jobs for roughly 40 to 50 million people. The overall chocolate market, which main raw material is cocoa is worth $101 billion.

    But all is not well with the industry. A key indicator is the fall in price, which has affected cocoa farmers since last year. Indeed, prices have suffered their sharpest fall in years, piling pressure on hard-pressed farmers.  Since last year, prices have plunged on expectations of the bumper crop.   For instance, the price dropped to $1,780 per tonne. This year  for instance, cocoa has traded at £1,562 per tonne, its lowest level since 2013.  New York futures slumped to $1,869 a tonne on March 2, the weakest price in 9-1/2 years. Between July 2016 and March 2017, global cocoa price fell by more than a third. According to experts, the cocoa market has been on a wild ride over the past year.

    Giving the reason for the drop, Euromonitor, a market research firm, noted  that the market has stagnated in Western Europe, in part due to increasing health concerns about sugar — which is present in high volumes in most chocolate confectionery.  Also, there is a forecast that  prices will continue  to drop  till 2019, as supply grows faster than demand. The International Cocoa Organisation (ICCO) forecast  a global surplus of 264,000 tonnes in the current 2016/17 season, but  some players   forecast surplus substantially above the ICCO – more like 400,000 to 500,000 tonnes.

    At the receiving end of this negative development are farmers and exporters from West Africa, who are losing billions in export earnings due to the fall in prices. Incidentally, supply of cocoa is extremely concentrated in the sub region. Roughly, three quarters of global production is grown in West Africa with Ivory Coast, Ghana and Nigeria.  While a certain degree of volatility is expected, the price plunge revealed serious pain points in the cocoa value chain.

    Caused by massive oversupply, the global glut, according to President, Cocoa Association of Nigeria (CAN) Sayina Riman is detrimental to the production of cocoa with high price fluctuation.

    The significant cut in the export price, he noted,   hurts production, and affects cocoa production. Riman’s worry is that the price volatility will leave a bitter taste in the mouth of many farmers and processors.

    Instead of exporting to face a price backlash at the international market, CAN President, advised local  farmers to apply the brakes and produce  for local consumption by supplying local processors.

    Already, to encourage local consumption, Riman said his organisation is running programmes to help increase productivity, competitiveness and quality.

    For experts, high price volatility has had a considerable impact on the livelihood of farmers and made it very difficult for all market participants to decide whether to invest in the value chain or not. Besides price, other factors, such as weather patterns, pests and diseases, cost of land tenure, transportation and input influence the income of a farmer.

    This is not enough. Right now, also, the   cocoa processing segment has been choked by a N50 billion debt it owed commercial bank operators in the country.

    This has led to a decline in the country’s value addition in recent years and resulting to a $2 billion annual loss, industry sources said. Key players in the industry said unless there was a well-defined policy for processing of agricultural commodities, the country would continue to export and lose revenue it would have generated through value addition.

    “Most of the indigenous cocoa processors are really under the heavy weight of debt and that is why none is operating at full capacity today. The total debt in the industry today is not less that N50billion among six processors,” said Chairman, Cocoa Processors Association of Nigeria (COPAN), Akin Olusuyi, during a press briefing in Lagos recently.

    He continued:”We have a total of eight cocoa processing firms in the country with only 2 functional. The two that are functional now are foreigner owned. There is no indigenous processor that is functioning now as we speak,” said Olusuyi, who is also the Chief Executive Officer of Ile Oluji Nigeria Limited.

    Total installed capacity of cocoa processing plants in the country, according to him, is 270,000 metric tonnes, but cumulatively, the industry is operating below 15 per cent capacity. Nigeria, the world’s fourth largest cocoa producer and supplier, saw the value of its global supply decline by 23.4 per cent from 248,000 metric tonnes in 2014 to 190,000 tonnes in 2015, according to the International Cocoa Organisation (ICCO) in its latest data on global production.

    According to COPAN, the debt incurred by the industry was as a result of the harsh operating environment in the country and the inability to secure loans at single digit interest rate. “An average borrowing cost to any cocoa processors by any bank in the country is 25 per cent interest rate, when processors in Ivory Coast and Ghana obtain loans at single digit. How can we be competitive?” asked Executive Director, FTN Cocoa Processors PLC, Akin Laoye. Adding:”We are yet to access the EEG that was designed to cushion structural misalignment in our economy since 2013. Since last year we have been given approval by NEXIM and our banks, but we are yet to get it.”

    According to Olusuyi, the government has failed to provide a clear cut policy direction as to what it intends to do in terms of industrialising the economy through processing of agro commodities.”This why our agriculture has remained at the rudimentary stage because the active players that take the commodity from the farmers do not add any value by processing it,”he added.

    He noted that Nigeria cannot develop without developing agriculture to include processing. “The direction to economic growth is industrialisation and not the exporting of raw agric commodities,” he further stated.

    Similarly, another challenge facing the sector is the crisis rocking the 65,000 capacity Multritrex Integrated, the country’s largest cocoa processor, which has cut industry production by over 26 per cent, according to calculations. Multritrex was shut down by the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMNCON) over N5 billion debt.The company officials said though firm had been handed over to a new receivership, production was at the peripheral level. “Since AMCON took over Multitrex Foods, nothing meaningful has been achieved. The best option is to work out a plan so that the business can continue,” Olusuyi said.