Tag: Farms

  • OCP Africa, Black Country Farms facilitate National Agric Science Contest

    OCP Africa, Black Country Farms facilitate National Agric Science Contest

    OCP Africa and BlackCountry Farms have been unveiled as the headline sponsors for Brightest National Agric Science Quiz Competition which is about to debut across top TV stations in Nigeria and Africa from Saturday April 6, 2024. Brightest, themed the biggest and most engaging high school competition with special focus on food production, preservation, and technology.

    Agriculture is the foundation for civilization and a stable economy’. Industrial agricultural development in Africa has had very low offtake. For this to change positively, there is the need for Africa to start a deliberate agricultural revolution, which will invariably increase food production, processing and preservation using technology. This evolution brought about the Brightest National Agric Science Competition.

    Read Also: Ginger farmers to get N1.6b for damaged farms

    The Brightest National Agric Science Quiz Contest 1.0 started in October 2023, with 16,039 students from 2,559 schools involved and sitting for the National Qualifying Examination, an online series of tests conducted on the CruxCBT platform. At the completion of the tests, 81 students from across the six geo-political zones made the cut for the second phase of the competition where various amounts of university scholarships will be won by each of these students depending on their performance in the competition.

    To usher them in, these students attended a special Brightest Masterclass 1.0 where OCP Africa Group; Backcountry Farms and Providus Bank had an interaction with the students on technology in agriculture.

    In his session, Dr Donald Madueke, Head of Agronomy, Africa at OCP Group and Ms. Ifunanya Meka, Agronomy Service Officer took the students on an interactive journey of food production titled “From farm to table; the journey of our food”, where he analyzed the food chain process from planting to human consumption using technology.

  • Homes, farms in danger as floods rage

    Flooding have done much damage in many parts of the country amid predictions that danger still lie ahead, report Okungbowa Aiwerie from Asaba and Mike Odiegwu from Yenagoa.

    Flood ravaged no fewer than 400 houses in Bar’kwari community in Dawakin Kudu Local Government Area of Kano State on Sunday afternoon, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

    The spokesman for Kano State Fire Service, Saidu Mohammed, made this disclosure in an interview with NAN on Monday in Kano.

    He said the flood also affected primary schools, animals and foodstuffs, adding that firemen were, however, able to rescue the victims.

    “We received a distress call from Hajia Gambo Usman, who lives in the neighbourhood at about 3:22 p.m., reporting that there was flooding in their area.

    “On receiving the information, we quickly sent our rescue team and a vehicle to the scene at about 3:38 p.m.,’’ he said.

    The official, who said that the flood washed away 400 houses, foodstuffs, animals and schools, added that  firemen assisted them by creating way for the water to pass, so as not to affect other houses.

    Mohammed, however, urged the public to desist from indiscriminate dumping of refuse in order to stop blocking the waterways.

    He reminded the community of the Nigerian Meteorological Agency’s (NiMET) warning of downpour this year.

    200 households displaced in Plateau

    About 200 households have been displaced by flood in Rikkos community of Jos North Local Government Area of Plateau, following heavy downpour on Sunday afternoon.

    Mr Al’Amin Yakubu, Head, Emergency Response Team of the community disclosed this to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday in Jos.

    Yakubu said though no life was lost, the flood had destroyed properties and washed away valuables.

    “The flood didn’t claim lives, but because it was huge, it displaced over 200 households.

    “These households have lost all their properties and are left with nothing,” he said.

    He said that the displaced persons were currently staying with neighbours, as no camp had been put in place for them.

    Yakubu described the condition of the displaced persons as pathetic, adding that access to food, shelter and clothing is already becoming serious challenge for them.

    “As a community, we don’t have the capacity and resources to camp these people; we would have done that pending when government will intervene.

    “But we have contacted the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), and both have promised to respond soon,” he said.

    Efforts to reach Alhaji Alhassan Barde, SEMA Executive Director, proved abortive, but a senior employee of the agency who preferred anonymity confirmed the incident to NAN.

    He said that the agency had already sent its personnel to the affected community to assess the level of damage.

    Farmers lament losses in Delta

    Several Delta communities have started experiencing flooding with the River Niger gradually overflowing its banks.

    Many farming communities have been worst hit with floods taking over farming communities situated on the banks of the River Niger and the hinterland.

    When The Nation visited the banks of River Niger in Oto-ogu, Oshimili South, the water level was high.

    Similarly, in Ughwru- Ughelli, Agbarho community, Ughelli North has started counting their losses following ravaging floods.

    The floods, according to sources, wiped out poultry and fish ponds as well as farm lands. Some residents have relocated to higher grounds.

    A poultry farmer, Mr. James Igho lamented he lost that over 500 birds as a result of the rains.

    Another fish farmer, Victory Johnson, said her two ponds were submerged by the floods. They appealed to the Delta Government to come to their aid.

    Bayelsa prepares for looming flood

    The Bayelsa State government yesterday began setting up measures to counter flooding following a red alert by the Nigeria Hydrological Service Agency (NHSA) identifying the state as high risk.

    Bayelsa was among the nine states on the axis of River Niger and River Benue identified as flood-prone by the NHSA, which passed the warning to the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA).

    But in a statement by the Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Daniel Iworiso-Markson and his Environment counterpart, Ebipatei  Apaingolo, the set up emergency mobile telephone lines.

    The government said the emergency call lines would be open 24 hours, every day of the week.

    The statement urged Bayelsans to take advantage of the mobile numbers to report flood cases and also support government’s effort by keeping their immediate environment clean and open up drains within their vicinity.

    The statement added that monitoring teams would be set up soon to go round the state to monitor flood prone areas and also respond swiftly to any emergency situation.

    According to the statement, the government is partnering relevant stakeholders and experts including the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) to ensure that the situation if it occurs is put under control.

    Insisting that the there was no need to panic, the government maintained that the proactive measures were geared towards preventing any recurrence of the 2012 flood disaster in the state, “even though floods are natural disasters and inevitable”.

    The 2012 flood disaster was one of the biggest challenge of the Restoration Government but, it said Governor Seriake Dickson spared no effort to ensure that the state was not consumed by the disaster.

    The statement averred  Dickson mandated the Ministry of Information and Orientation and that of Environment to carry out the task of coordinating sensitization and monitoring efforts to safeguard residents.

    NEMA begins data collection on victims in Kebbi

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) yesterday held an emergency meeting with the Kebbi State Emergency Management Agency (KSEMA) to gather data on flood victims in the state.

    Dr Onimode Bandele, Deputy Director, Research and Rescue Department of NEMA, said the agency would soon hold an emergency meeting with stakeholders affected by flooding in the state, to enable the agency to gather data on the victims.

    “The data we are looking for is the number of houses and farmlands destroyed, as well as the number of deaths recorded in the incidents across the state.

    Bandele also said that they were in Kebbi to commiserate with the Government and people of the state over the loss of lives recorded in the incidents.

    “Let me use this opportunity, on behalf of the Director-General (NEMA), Mr Mustapha Maihaja, to condole with the government of Kebbi and the families of victims who lost their lives in the flood disasters,’’ he said.

    He also apologised for the delay in donating relief materials to the victims, stressing that it was as a result of some restructuring in NEMA, which would enhance the agency’s operations.

    Bandele assured that NEMA has been repositioned to enable it to effectively address its challenges.

    Alhaji Sani Dododo, the Chairman, Kebbi State Emergency Management Agency (KSEMA), commended the NEMA Director for the visit.

    Dododo said the disaster, which occurred in Danko, Wasagu and Fakai local government areas of the state, led to the deaths of 9 persons, including an Army Officer, who died while trying to rescue a woman following the collapse of a bridge.

    NEMA prepares for quick response in Southeast

    In anticipation of flooding in some states in the South-East, the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) in the zone has begun to reposition itself, to ensure improved disaster management.

    Mr Walson Ibarakumo, the Coordinator, NEMA, Enugu zonal office, said this in Awka on Monday, during a workshop organised for all the staff of the agency in Anambra.

    The workshop had the theme, ‘‘Repositioning, Strengthening and Reorientation of the Agency’s Operations.”

    Ibarikumo said there was the need to acquaint the agency’s personnel with the modern response strategies which the new management had introduced.

    The coordinator emphasised that the aim was to make the services of the agency meet world highest standard.

    He said the Search and Rescue Department of the agency had been changed to Response and Recovery Department as part of the re-strategising process.

    ‘‘This workshop is to share understanding of the identified gaps in order to reinforce and reposition the agency for better service delivery.

    ‘‘It has become necessary for staff to come together especially in this flood season to brainstorm so that we can operate more efficiently and effectively and gear ourselves up towards a world class agency.

    ‘‘Every staff should realise the enormity of the task ahead and brace up for it; therefore you are expected to apply the information gathered here to make your service delivery better,’’ he said.

    Ibarikumo said further that NEMA had started delivering food, non-food and livelihood relief materials to the state in readiness for the anticipated flooding.

    He said the agency was working with the Anambra Emergency Management Agency to ensure that the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps in the state were in good shape.

    The coordinator called on those living in the disaster-prone areas and other disaster-exposed persons to contact the agency for quick response and rescue in case of any eventuality.

    ie from Asaba and Mike Odiegwu from Yenagoa.

  • Insurgency, drought destroy farms in Borno

    Insurgency, drought destroy farms in Borno

    Boko Haram militants, drought and pests have wreaked havoc on farmlands in Borno State, leading to low output and huge losses to farmers.

    About 1,800 hectares of rice wilted due to drought in some parts of the state, according to the farmers.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that some of the rice farms were affected by pest infestation.

    Read Also: Boko Haram, drought, pests destroy farms in Borno

    Some farmers at the Biriri and Koshebe rice plantations said the incident dashed their hopes for a bumper harvest.

    Hajja Amina Isa, a rice grower, blamed the pests and drought for her woeful cropping season.

    Isa said she planted her crops several weeks into the rainy season but the rain stopped before the plants matured.

    She said: “There were delays in the distribution of farm inputs to enable us cultivate our land on time. Few weeks after planting the fields; the rain stopped. We complained and water pumps and tube wells were provided to enable us save the plants through irrigation. Nonetheless the plants wilted.

    “Ravaging quelea birds further destroyed what remained of the plantations.”

  • Herdsmen burn ex-naval chief’s farms in Kwara

    Herdsmen burn ex-naval chief’s farms in Kwara

    Ex-naval chief, Vice-Admiral Samuel Afolayan, yesterday claimed that herdsmen burnt his 20 hectares of orange plantation, 20 hectares of cassava farm and five hectares of palm plantation.

    He said the farm is about 500 hectares and put the damages at over N200 million.

    Afolayan, who addressed reporters in Ibbo-Ile, Ekiti Local Government Area of Kwara State, said herdsmen had been destroying his plantations in the last 10 years.

    His words: “The burning of my farmland has become an annual routine. This is the first time of letting people into what has been happening in the last 10 years. It is the cow-rearers that have been damaging my farms, and right now, there are about three cases in court.

    “Every year, my farm is burnt and I thought it was not deliberate when it first started. When I realise that those involved are people of low means, I will release them. But along the line I discovered they were being sponsored by people of means.

    “Somebody is presently in detention and he is from Zamfara State; the one in court is from Niger State. So most of the damages I have been incurring are from the North. They carry their cows, mindless of the size of what you have or get, and destroy it with impunity.

    “No less than 20 hectares of oranges, five hectares of palm trees and 20 hectares of cassava had been burnt or destroyed this year. I am not an expert or a valuer, but my estimation is that the current loss is over N200 million.”

  • ‘Let’s return to Imo rice farms’

    ‘Let’s return to Imo rice farms’

    Did you know that Imo State was once known for rice production, churning out over 10,000 tonnes a year? When the Nigerian economy thrived on agriculture, the state was one of the major contributors to the national GDP, ranking among the highest producers of rice.

    In Okigwe zone were majority of the rice farms were located, over 10000 tonnes of rice was produced annually. The economy of the rural communities was buoyant and the youths were gainfully engaged. The state was then exporting rice to other parts of the Southeast and the rest of the country.

    This prompted the World Bank in conjunction with the Federal Government in 1977 to cite the multi-billion naira irrigation project in Egweleze Umukara in Ihitte Uboma Council Area to aid commercial rice farming in the state.

    The project with an expansive rice farm measuring 66 hectares and 6,500 meters wide dam was constructed by Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) and managed by the state Agricultural Development Programme (ADP), which engaged a workforce of over 5000.

    Apart from the rice farm and irrigation project, the state government and other private investors consequently built rice milling factories across the district as part of the value chain.

    The economy of the state, especially the immediate communities was buoyant. The enterprise created wealth and employment. That was then when agriculture was the mainstay of the nation’s economy.

    An irrigation expert and field engineer in the defunct rice farm, Mr. Keke Ikechukwu, described it as a food basket of the state, which he said provided the food security for the state. But shortly after Nigeria jettisoned agriculture for oil, this critical investment was abandoned and soon died out altogether. The once important dam has turned to a major threat to the agrarian communities after the water broke the barrier and flooded not only what used to be a flourishing rice farm but other surrounding farmlands.

    Today all the farm equipment, as well as administrative and other office buildings, are dilapidated. The connecting farm roads have all been washed away and overgrown by forest.

    This is the sorry state of the World Bank Rice project that was once a major employer of labour in the state. Most painful is the fact that neither the World Bank with a controlling share of 60% and the state government has taken any step to salvage the situation.

    For more than 20 years it laid comatose, while the weary staff dispersed after appealing to successive governments to revive the farm without success.

    Fortunately, the abandoned project has gotten the attention of the Senator representing Okigwe Senatorial zone, Senator Benjamin Uwajumogu, who has begun an agricultural revolution to revive dead and dying agribusinesses in the zone as part of his constituency projects.

    The Senator during a fact finding tour of the project, lamented that such huge project with the potential of creating wealth for the entire nation was abandoned to decay.

    The Senator, who blamed government’s indifference to agriculture for the collapse of the project and other similar agro-allied companies across the country, said that the rice farm has the capacity to meet Nigeria’s annual rice demand, which he put at 6.5 million tons a year.

    He said, “At a time when countries like Thailand, which is among the world’s highest exporters of rice, were setting committees to control rice production, Nigeria under Muhammadu Buhari’s regime set up a Committee headed by Umaru Dikko to supervise rice importation instead. This is how we got to where we are today”.

    Speaking further, he said, “Today Nigeria consumes 6.5 million tonnes of rice annually, while the production rate is at 1.5 million ton annually leaving behind a huge deficit. But if projects like this are up and running, it will help to return Nigeria back to the map of global rice producers”.

    The Senator, who was conducted round the abandoned rice farm by the former field Engineer, explained that, “with the global economic situation, agriculture is the way to go. Today the Federal Government spends huge sums of money to finance agricultural ventures in the North but if a quarter of that sum is spent in the Southeast, we will soon be exporting food to the North”.

    He stressed further that, “we are going to attract private investors to partner in this project because as you can see, it will take about N1 billion to get this project back to track. We need the support of the Federal Government and the Ministry of Agriculture to revive this all important venture.

    “In this part of the country, we have arable land that has not been cultivated all we need is for the government to provide equipment. For instance we have only three dams in the Southeast. But I am using this opportunity to show that we can surpass even the North in agriculture. Today, Anambra and Ebonyi states have quadrupled its rice production and we hope to even beat that record in Imo.

    “I am appealing to the FG to see the need to help these communities to realize their agricultural potentials. We have fertile lands, all we need is to open up these lands and provide palliatives and other incentives for the people to return fully to agriculture. We must feed ourselves and our nation”.

    Some of the villagers who expressed fear over the rising threat by the dam appealed to the government to quickly repair it to avert impending disaster.

    “If the irrigation project is revived, apart from working in the company, we will also go back to rice production fully and we can cultivate all year round,” they said.

  • Thugs sack residents from farms

    A Lagos-based developer has been accused of using thugs to terrorise some residents of Aiyetoro village close to the Redemption Camp on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway.

    The thugs armed with weapons, such as guns, cutlasses and charms, were said to have been brought by the developer to take over the village.

    The residents accused the thugs of forcefully dispossessing them of their money, jewellery and phones and destroying their farms.

    They alleged that the developer brought in the thugs at the instance of a woman, who they accused of masterminding the forceful takeover of their land.

    The Owosina family, which is laying claim to the land, has called on the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) and Director of Department of State Services (DSS), to hold the developer responsible for any breakdown in law and order.

    Otunba Zacchaeus Kunle Owosina said since the invasion they have not been allowed to enter their forefather’s village.

  • Why farms fail, by experts

    Why farms fail, by experts

    There is a dearth of farm managers who know their onions. This has led to the closure of many farms. However, some experts and organisations are  working to solve the problem. DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    A series of life-changing  events brought the Chief Executive of High-Hill Moringa Limited,  Sola Adeniyi, back to agriculture – into a small business outfit that packages Moringa.

    The farm has expanded to have hundreds of acres of fresh market produce, which include cucumber, watermelon, vegetables, and plantains.

    According to him, the dynamics of agriculture drive investors to embrace it. Crops – turmeric and basil – beckon from the horizon. Many investors experiment with field and cover crops.

    Yet, the challenge is lack of trained farm managers. This has led to closure of many big farms, especially those run by investors without agric background.

    Adeniyi is successful because he is trained and has experience. He acknowledges that the greatest challenge for agriculture is experienced farm managers. Adeniyi’s farm, and those that grow other high-value crops, are at the leading-edge of profitable farming.

    For him, there is so much to learn to avoid missteps that are  inevitable as a beginner. Yet, he added that failures do provide an opportunity for learning.  As an instructor, he sees the same set of errors, making investors feel cassava farming and processing are not profitable.

    While there has been huge interest in farming, Country Manager, HarvestPlus Dr Paul Ilona said even farms opened with most modern design and equipment in the last 10 years, have  gone through crises. This is because they are managed by ill trained and inexperienced farm managers.

    To address this, he is undertaking a campaign to train farm managers. He is starting with partners of Harvest Plus involved in cultivation of bio-fortified maize and cassava. Most of the hi-tech farms, he explained, went for large scale  formula, cultivating large hectares.

    Ilona said most investors have good intention, but lack farming experience. According to him, many failed farms were started by highly educated people, who had built castles in the air. In addition,  many owners depended on others to take care of their farms who themselves did not have much knowledge. According to him, farming requires extensive knowledge and patience.

    When one is inexperienced, Ilona advised that it was good for him to start small.

    He  said  farm managers should be aware of the costs and returns of farm enterprises at farm-levels and along the marketing chain and of ways to reduce these costs.

    He  said the  industry needs  farm management specialists who can   gather information and develop a true picture of the farm business and its problems and opportunities. With this understanding of the situation, he said the farm manager could  give practical and relevant recommendations.

    Ilona said Harvest Plus was ready  to  provide guidance on the development of farm management  skills  in agricultural development. At his monthly business forum, speakers featured are role models who can inspire others and encourage them to innovate in agriculture. Their stories are a testimony of how to transform agricultural value chains through their innovations.

    One of its partners, Federal College of Agriculture (FECA), Akure is mobilising mentors to work with the youth.

    The Provost of the College, Dr Samson Odedina, said the belief that young people do not want to go into agriculture was not true. They need more support in getting to where they need to be, he said. At the college, he said the youth had seen the success of its work with HarvestPlus.

    According to him, FECA is ready to work with professionals who can support young people in agriculture to learn new things and rediscover a passion for their own work.

  • Of billions buried in farms

    SIR: House of RepresentativesSpeaker, Yakubu Dogara, it was who recently made a shocking revelation of looted funds said to have been buried in a farmaround Abuja. Said he: “As we speak, they (referring to the EFCC operatives), are recovering money from someone’s farm somewhere around Abuja”.

    Since when have farms become cash vaults? When has money turned into yam seedlings to beburied in farm grounds?  I cannot imagine such bizarre occurrence.

    Really, the development is a metaphor, showing us in a way that here is a nationflourishing in corruption. Corruption here has grown wild and with little or no hindrance to stop its gargantuan growth.

    Here, the environment is fertile for corruption and stealing; that is why a public looter is a king; worshipped and hailed to high heavens by supporters, kinsmen/women who take crumbs of the loot.

    Worse still, the people would hardly raise an eye brow on such criminality. So citizens engage in all manners of illegalities to amass wealth for no one would query the source of wealth and such people are lavished with all manners of tittles including national awards. Pity!

    We are all aware that corrupt people do not make good leaders. That is why instead of feeling the presence of government in our cities and communities through massive execution of infrastructural projects, what we see are the ostentatious living and display of prodigious wealth of few individuals in power while the people wallow in poverty and misery.

    Someone may want to say: what is the big deal about this? Could this have been the only looting? Haven’t you heard about those who hid monies in soak-away pits and overhead tanks? Those who vehemently fight back and defend their loot by hiring top (please,read SAND) lawyers so as to escape justice in courts.

    Corruption needs to be tamed in this nation because if we don’t, we will definitely be doomed.  And as it has been generally acknowledged: if we don’t kill corruption, corruption will kill us.

    With serial episodes of unimaginable loots hidden by corrupt Nigerians, the argument in some quarters that the identities of these looters be exposed is appropriate. Covering their identities will definitely send a wrong signal.

    The  fight against corruption requires  the support of every one, so is the pursuit of  unveiling our treasury looters  as being canvassed by Socio- Economic Right Accountability Project(SERAP), after all  no one, not even a court will recommend the  blowing of  their silly  greedy heads off  the China way.

     

    • Sola Lebile,

    Akure, Ondo State.

  • Pest attack fears on farms in Lagos, Ogun

    Pest attack fears on farms in Lagos, Ogun

    •Don explains water hyacinth on river

    Massive clumps of the notorious water hyacinth, Eichhornia crassipes, are responsible for the partial “sealing” of the Ogun River at Kara on the Lagos-Ibadan Express Road, near the boundary between Ogun and Lagos states, an investigation by The Nation has confirmed.

    But the massive weed infestation has raised fears of a possible massive locust-type attack of farmlands in and around Lagos and Ogun states.

    The uncommonly heavy clogging of the river surface by the water weeds, has virtually turned the surface of the river near the Lagos-Ibadan Express Way into a massive land of green vegetation.

    Environmental journalist O’seun Ogunseitan, who spoke  to The Nation in Lagos, last night said the clogging could get worse and cause massive flooding of land areas west of the river.

    Ogunseitan, who incidentally broke the story of the first water hyacinth infestation in Nigeria 30 years ago at The Guardian, has been to the Ogun River site at Kara. He identified a huge population of the notorious water weed.

    Ogunseitan confirmed the water weed as the cause of the blockage and advises very quick response from Environmental Protection Agencies in Lagos and Ogun State to prevent a new and totally unknown environmental threat to Agriculture in the Nigerian South West.

    Ogunseitan said he identified huge populations of a particular moth and some grasshoppers already feeding voraciously on the water weed and he fears for the local plant population in the area been able to resist the insects, should they be allowed to spread.

    Live samples of the unusual grasshoppers feeding on the water weed will be delivered to Scientists at the University of Lagos today.

    The notorious aquatic water weed, Eichhornia crassipes came into Nigerian waters from the Republic of Benin, through the Lagos lagoon  in 1985. Efforts were made by the federal government back then, to prevent the weed crossing the Lagos lagoon, where salty waters of the Atlantic Ocean killed the weed and kept its spread in check.

    The weeds which have been reported to be capable of covering hundreds of kilometres of fresh water surface within days, overan the Yewa and Ologe lagoons in Lagos in the 1980s and crossed into the Mahin Lagoon from where it reached other fresh water bodies in Ogun, Ondo, Edo and other states in south eastern Nigeria and the middle belt.

    A lecturer at the University of Lagos (UNILAG), Dr Olusola Shonubi, said hyacinth increases in population as a result of low salinity, adding that it has  strong roots that intertwine to form a carpet.

    “The water hyacinth normally comes up when the salinity of the water is low; so it is easy to propagate very fast.  The root of the hyacinth is fibrous so they lock strongly.  In areas of Ondo, fishermen cannot paddle their canoes when there are lots of water hyacinths,” she said.

  • The race for huge rice farms

    The race for huge rice farms

    In collaboration with the private sector, some states are investing in local rice production. According to experts, this strategic move will create jobs, reduce poverty and fast-track the Federal Government’s self-sufficiency plan for rice, if smuggling and policy inconsistency, among others, are addressed. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports.

    A subtle battle for the control of the rice segment of the agriculture sector is raging among some states in the country. From the Southwestern states of Lagos and Ogun to Ebonyi, Anambra and Enugu in the Southeast; the Middle Belt and Northern states of Kebbi, Benue, Borno, Kaduna, Kano, Niger and Taraba, among others, a state-led push to boost rice production, processing and distribution has taken centre stage.

    For instance, the push by each state, in collaboration with private sector investors, to position itself as the number one rice producer, has seen Lagos and Kebbi states set ambitious targets of meeting 70 per cent of Nigeria’s rice needs.

    This is on the strength of a recent strategic partnership that culminated in both states signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to leverage their areas of comparative advantage to develop the rice value chain.

    The MoU, ratified by Governors Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos and Atiku Bagudu of Kebbi, hopes to end the era of imported rice. “…we have the economic prowess to produce rice locally. The era of imported rice is gone,” Ambode said in Lagos, at the signing ceremony.

    Nigeria, Africa’s largest  rice consumer, consumes about six million metric tons of rice annually, and spends an estimated N360 billion yearly on the importation of the product. This translates to an average of N1 billion per day. While half of the volume is imported mostly from India, Thailand, and Brazil, about 2.8 million metric tons is produced locally. The country, however, targets a total rice import replacement by 2018.

    The Lagos/Kebbi partnership, as well as interventions by other states, may have raised hopes of achieving this target. For instance, highlighting the Lagos’ areas of strength, Ambode said it is the largest consumer of food commodities in Nigeria, by virtue of its population, estimated at 21 million.

    He said Lagos State has an estimated consumption of over 798,000 metric tonnes of milled rice per year, which is an equivalent of 15.96 million of 50kg bags, with a value of N135 billion per annum. It also has the market, with the required purchasing power.

    To engage youths and boost rice production, 100 farmers have been settled on the 500 hectares of land acquired in Eggua, Ogun State through the FADAMA III additional financing programme. The Commissioner for Agriculture, Mr. Toyin Suarau, who made this known at a press briefing last week to commemorate Ambode’s first year in office, said through this arrangement, rice cultivation had improved.

    “The yield has improved from less than one tonne per hectare to about three tonnes per hectare with double cropping in some areas where irrigation facilities are provided. The state government is also poised to expand its rice mill at Imota from 2.5 metric tonnes per hour to 10 metric tonnes per hour, while at the same time encouraging private sector operators to invest in rice processing,” Suarau said.

    On the other hand, Kebbi State boasts of a vast arable land suitable for the cultivation of rice. It is an agrarian state with over 1.2 million hectares of arable land characterised by very large floodplains, lowland swamps and gentle slopes. In the 2014/2015 wet season, over 600, 000 hectares of land were deployed for rice cultivation in the three senatorial areas of the state.

    Kebbi people are also traditionally rice farmers with average land holding of about 10 hectares. Presently, Kebbi has over 50,000 metric tonnes of paddy in store produced from the last two planting seasons.

    “What we are doing is to pioneer a collaboration that will bring other states on board later as we believe that our potentials are enormous and we must have pacesetters to start that process of joint collaboration for our collective good,” Governor Bagudu said.

     

    Anambra, Ebonyi also involved

    Ebonyi and Anambra states appear determined to give Lagos and Kebbi a run for their investments. The Southeast states, as part of their plan for life without oil, are investing in rice production.

    For instance, Anambra State has projected an increase in the volume of rice production from the present 80,000 metric tons to 400,000.

    To achieve this, the state has begun the distribution of 120,000 metric tons of high-yielding rice species to farmers for this year’s planting season through their various cooperative societies. This, according to Governor Willie Obiano, will  give the state over 300,000 metric tons of rice at harvest time.

    The target is coming on the heels of the inauguration of a multi-billion naira farm project in partnership with the Coscharis Group at Anaku town in Ayamelum Local Government Area of the state. The state government, The Nation learnt, has committed N300 million to the partnership.

    The project, known as the Coched Farms Project, is a joint venture between the state government and the Coscharis Group. It is expected to lead to the cultivation of 2,500 hectares of rice per season and a production capacity of 12,000 metric tons per annum in the first phase.

    Obiano said the project will generate about 1,000 full-time and seasonal jobs for youths and women across the entire rice value chain.

    The farm is expected to produce 8,000 to 12,000 metric tons of paddy per annum with an expected income of N400 million to N600 million per annum when fully developed. At an estimated market value of N140,000 per metric ton of processed rice, the expected income will be between N784 million to N1.176 billion per annum when the production and processing infrastructure are fully developed.

    “These estimates fall nicely into my campaign promise to ‘Ndi Anambra’ that we shall drive development through agriculture to create jobs, boost our domestic economy and shore up the revenue profile of the state,” Obiano said.

    According to Maduka, the project at full operation would provide 500 direct jobs and 2, 000 indirect jobs and would extend to other parts of the state. He said in addition to the rice farm, the project also had a rice mill of 20 tons per hour capacity that would provide services to local farmers.

    With what the state has done in the rice sector so far, Obiano is optimistic that in few months time, the state would not only have enough rice for domestic consumption, but  export the product. He hinged his optimism on the existence of a cluster of investors in the state for rice production.

    Similarly,  Governor David Umahi of Ebonyi State recently ordered the disbursement of N1 billion to rice farmers as a revolving loan.  He said the money would not be given to the farmers in cash, but as seedlings, fertilisers, and pesticides among other facilities.

    The governor, who made this known at a special stakeholder’s forum on rice production in Abakaliki, the state capital, said the money was borrowed  from the Federal Government, and will be deducted from the state’s monthly allocation .

    To underscore the state’s determination to be a major player in the rice business, the state government went a notch higher, compelling each public office holder in the state to cultivate at least five hectares of rice this 2016 farming season. The public office holders include state executive council members, local government area caretaker chairmen, coordinators of development centres, and council liaison officers, among others.

    “We have so far acquired 54, 000 hectares for massive rice cultivation and more are expected to ensure the attainment of the rice production goal”, the state’s Commissioner for Agriculture and Natural Resources, Mr. Uchenna Orji, said.

     

    Edo, Jigawa, Kwara, Niger, others intensify push

    Anambra State is not the only state riding on the support of private sector investors to claim the number one spot in the rice business. Edo State has also opened its doors to the Stallion Group for investment in rice production. The group recently stormed Government House, Benin, the Edo State capital, to indicate its interest to invest in rice farming.

    The Business Development Manager, Stallion Group, Mr. Sunil Dhermappa, said the firm has the largest capacity of rice mills in sub-Saharan Africa, with factories at strategic locations in Lagos and Kano to enhance prospects of processing local paddy and with capacity of four million bags per annum.

    Interestingly, Edo State is also one of the five states across the country where foremost industrialist and President, Dangote Industries Limited (DIL), Alhaji Aliko Dangote, is investing $1 billion (about N165 billion) in rice production and processing. Others are Jigawa, Kebbi, Kwara, and Niger states. A total of 150, 000 hectares of farmland had been acquired in these five states for the project.

    Expected to become the largest single investment ever made in rice production in Africa, the project, according to the MoU DIL signed with the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD), also involves establishment of two state-of-the-art large-scale rice mills with a capacity to mill 120,000 metric tons of rice paddy each.

    This brings the total capacity to 240,000 metric tons, with plans to double the capacity within two years. The rice plant is estimated to produce 960, 000 metric tons of milled rice, representing 46 per cent of rice imported into Nigeria. “Our goal of making Nigeria a net exporter of rice will be achieved faster by this significant investment,” Dangote said. That was last year when the deal was consummated.

    As an integrated operation, the Dangote farms and the mills are expected to significantly boost smallholder rice production in the regions through a nucleus and out-grower farming model, thereby transforming livelihoods in rural Nigeria. Also, the selected sites are rice-growing communities and they will be supported by Dangote’s provision of agro-inputs, training, and marketing linkages in order to improve community farming operations. Employment opportunities will also be created for at least 8, 000 Nigerians.

     

    Smuggling, policy inconsistency, others are threats

    Heart-warming as the state’s involvement in rice production is, there are formidable hurdles, one of which is the nation’s numerous porous borders through which rice smuggling thrives.

    According to experts, cross-border smuggling, particularly via the Cotonou Port, remains one of the greatest huddles before local rice producers and this may frustrate the current move by state governments to take advantage of the sector to diversify their economies.

    Smuggled rice often finds its way into various communities and towns in Nigeria through the neighbouring countries. The penchant of most Nigerians to consume imported rice at the detriment of local ones also fuel smuggling.

    This is partly responsible for why local rice production accounts for less than 50 per cent of the country’s total consumption, leaving the huge demand gap for polished/milled rice imported mostly from India, Thailand, and Brazil.

    The consensus is that until and unless government stems the rising tide of cross-border smuggling, manage the tariff regime to ensure product availability, fair/stable consumer prices, and protect local producers/processors that are rendered cost uncompetitive by environmental factors and infrastructural handicaps, among other challenges, the latest intervention by state governments may not enhance the nation’s chances of achieving the rice self-sufficiency target by 2018.