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Nigeria looses N3.5trn annually to post-Harvest loses – ActionAid

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By Friday Idachaba, Lokoja

ActionAid Nigeria, an international Non-governmental Organisation has said that Nigeria as a nation looses over N3.5 trillion cumulatively to post-harvest loses annually across the nation.

Manager, Food and Agriculture Programme for ActionAid Nigeria Mr Azubike Nwokoye, disclosed this while speaking at a consultative Stakeholders Meeting on the Kogi State 2022 Agriculture Budget on Thursday in Lokoja.

The meeting was organised by the state Budget Committee Group (BCG) and Small Scale Women Farmers Organisations of Nigeria (SWOFON) in collaboration with the State Ministry of Agriculture.

In his presentation on the Role of Stakeholders in ensuring Food Security and Economic Development, Nwokoye said the loss was affecting the national economy adversely.

He said that the analysis which was based on survey conducted by ActionAid revealed that of the N3.5 trillion loss, the 36 states and FCT were losing a minimum of N94.5 billion each, annually.

“Now this figure is actually an estimate from the Federal Government itself. But what we have done is a further analysis to show states how big these N3.5 trillion is.

Because what is happening is also when state governments hear N3.5 trillion annually, they assume it is Federal Government problem but Federal Government does not have land.

“The lands are in the states and these losses are at the state level. So, we’ve done analysis for instance, taking the N3.5 trillion and sharing it on equal basis across the 36 states and the FCT.

“And it is showing that N94.5 billion is lost in every state and FCT to post-harvest losses annually and it also means that no state is investing that same kind of amount (N95.4 billion) in its agriculture sector in a year.

Nwokoye advised states focus on investing and supporting cottage processing facilities, small modular processing and storage facilities in different communities across the state.

“For instance, if you come to a community that farms rice massively, you provide a small rice processing facility there.

“If it is cassava, you provide the small cassava processing facility there. If it is maize, provide processing facilities, small, small, small, small, you are able to do a lot of savings.

“Government needs to be doing targeted and proper investments in key areas like Women In Agriculture having good first line budget item to support Small Holder Women Farmers in Kogi state.

“Budget lines in areas of access to credit, having a specific budget line to support and strengthen access to credit and we have proffered cogent solution to that”, he said. (Ends)

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Agriculture

Ododo Kicks off wet season farming in Kogi, gives youth, women priority

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Governor Ahmed Usman Ododo of Kogi State has officially kicked off the 2024 wet season farming in the state with the presentation of over 100 tractors to serve about 10,000 farmers in different farming communities across the 21 local government areas in the state.
Special Adviser on Media to the Governor, Ismaila Isah in a statement quoted the Governor to have indicated at the flag off at Ajaokuta local government area of the state that investment in agriculture is a critical step towards poverty eradication in the state

The Governor added that in this year’s farming season 75% of the land cleared for cultivation will be allocated to youth and women farmers.

The Governor who noted that over 90% of the land area in the state is arable, promised to make Kogi a leading state in agricultural production and contribute to the development of Nigeria’s economy.

According to him,
“Across the 21 local government areas of the state, we are opening farmlands and preparing more land for cultivation of crops like rice, maize, cassava, yam and other staple food crops and grains.

“We have also procured farm implements for full scale agricultural mechanization in line with our agenda to ensure food security in the state.

“ Our youth are beginning to embrace agriculture as a credible source of wealth creation and our women in agriculture are already on the field because of their belief in our commitment to transform the agricultural sector in the state.

“I call on wealthy Kogites at home and abroad to begin to explore the window of opportunities that abound in the agro industry.”

The Governor noted that the state government has invested over 7 Billion Naira in farm implements with over 100 tractors to cultivate 7,324 hectares by about 10,000 farmers across the 21 local government areas in the state in the current farming season.

Ododo commended President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for supporting the agricultural transformation initiatives in the country, assuring that his administration has keyed into the cardinal objectives of the Renewed Hope Agenda to ensure food security in all parts of the country.

In his remarks, the state Commissioner for Agriculture and Food Security, Honourable Timothy Ojoma noted that the commencement of the wet season farming across 79 farm clusters in the state is a significant step in the agricultural transformation agenda of the state by Governor Ododo.

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Agriculture

Food Security: GAIN, AFAN ask states, LGs to give microgrants to smallhoder farmers

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***Small, Medium farm business enterprises to improve nutrition, food security

States and Local governmets have been charged to give support to the smallholder farmers, other agric related small and medium enterprises to improve nutrition and food security.
The National President of All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN), Architect Kabiru Ibrahim and the country Director of Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN), Micheal Ojo, gave the charge recently at the 2023 Microgrant funding for nutritious Business Award Ceremony for 16 businesses in Abuja.
The grants were awarded at N3m each to 16 small businesses by Global Alliance for improved Nutrition (GAIN) in Benue, Nasarawa, Jaduna and Oyo States.
Ojo in his keynote address, said the gathering is to celebrate Small and Medium enterprises.
He said, the more the smallholders farmer in the country are empowered and encouraged with support that provude them access to expanding their production and connecting to markets, what they produce would not come to waste that is the big part of the solution to insecurity.

“We have been supporting many of them on this project that we call Strengthening Nutrition in Priority Staples over the past couple of years and the project is aiming to help those who are working in specific value chain, VitaminA maize, VitaminA cassava, Orange sweet potato to help them to produce more and to process what they are producing so that they can have these food Items on the market.
“The point of this is to help to improve the nutritional quality of our food and diversify at times and we all as Nigerians consume a lot of Cassava, a lot of Maize, we consume a lot of potato but we now have opportunity to actually move those foods away from analog varieties to more nutritious varieties.
“All of these new varieties have very high levels of Vitamin A. Vitamin A deficiency is prevalent in our population and it is a very important micronutrient for health and wellbeing for children, for mothers but all of us.
“So this is a very important development. What we are doing with the microgrant that we are providing as support to these businesses is recognizing that many of them face the challenge of finding access to finance to grow the small and medium enterprises.
“We all know how difficult it is to access funding in Nigeria. This helps to take their businesses from whatever level they are to the next level and it can be used for improving their processing, it can be used for packaging or it can be used for assuring the quality of their products.
“It can be used for marketing of their products. It cand be used for so many things and we will work with the businesses to identify the best ways for them to use this micro grant fund.
“For each of the 16 businesses that we are awarding today, we are giving each one of them N3m. For a small business that is a substantial investment to support them to be able to invest in their businesses and to scale up.what they are doing.
“So that is why we are here and I am really pleased that we have been able to bring everybody together and I am thankful to our partners in the four States where we are working, in Kaduna, state, in Nassarawa State, Benue State and Oyo State. These guys are here, the partners are here. I am really pleased
“Currently we have funding to work in the four States but there is still a lot of work to do, we have just done over half way through the project. We are currently working and identifying more businesses in those four States.
“Yes we are looking for additional funding to work across other States but that will depend on new funding. It doesn’t even have to be through GAIN, we are showing the governments we are working with businesses that are in the State you know pouring in State resources doing what we have done to scale it up.
“We bring very small investment but the real investments is going to come from State and also from the private sector.
“So we are hoping that people will look at what we have done, they copy what we have done, they replicate it and expand it so that we can have increased and improved access to nutrition for the country.
“We have worked with at least 4000 food processors across the States. We are working with about 8000 farming households so that is the scale we were able to reach with the project.
“We are not able to solve insecurity unfortunately. Insecurity also stems from the lack of access to livelihood.
Architect Ibrahim, said, the effort to do Nutrition security is complementary to food security as a matter of fact.
“We have been championing the call for farmers to add value to what they produce so that they will get more. The work of GAIN is very apt, it is making our farmers more prosperous and making the food security question more seamlessly achieved.
“Food security actually means eating what you want at the time that you want and it is affordable to you and it is nutritiously balanced.
“Any effort to fortify the conventional crops to make them more valuable nutritiously is a welcome development and Nigeria will only be food secure if it is nutriciously secured because the children will not be stunted.
“I think it is a very good effort and I am glad that I came to witness here. This is what every farmer should strive to do, add value to what the produce because if you sell whatever you produced in its primary form you get nothing.
“It is value addition that took those countries we call the first world to where they sre today. We have the land, we have the manpower, we have everything here but since we don’t add value to whatever we produce, we are always at the losing end.
“For me, my experience spans back to two decades in this business because I don’t believe in donor funding because definitely you to part with that which is actually yours that supposed to be secret.
“You have to ask the motivation for the donation first. To that effect I am saying that we should look inward.
“The State and local Government that is where agriculture take place, they should be more into this than leaving it to the National.
“We should go back to the States and local government to produce and then we learn to add value from there. “Agric business is the thing that would move to food security in the sense that, when you produce something and you get money and the villagers see that you are prosperous they will take up what you so and that way Nigeria will become food sufficient and then we attain food security.
“This is what happens in the first world, agriculture business is the motivation that made 55,000 people in the Neitherlands to have income second only to the United States of America.
“The income in agriculture in the Netherlands is what make the country work and in the country everybody is busy because they are adding value to what they produce and they are doing agribusiness and they are going into everywhere in the world to sell what they have
“The governor’s have started buying into it, a number of them have visited the Minister of Agric lately and on Monday I was in Minna with the Presid2nt where they launched 1000 tractors, 3000 water pumps.
“That governor is doing well, I call him the most farmer friendly governor of this country. All other governors should model after him. Four governors were at the ocasion, two from the central.”

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Agriculture

Food Security: FG Inaugurates Agribusiness incubation centre in FUL

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By Friday Idachaba, Lokoja.

The Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, has inaugurated an Agribusiness Incubation Centre (ABIC) in Federal University Lokoja (FUL), in Kogi towards boosting food production and security in Nigeria.

Dr Ernest Umakhihe, Permanent Secretary of the Ministry, who Inaugurated the centre on Saturday in Lokoja as part of the 6th and 7th Convocation ceremony of the Federal University Lokoja.

Umakhihe said that the Center was focused at enhancing production capacity, value addition, quality control and standards and opening access to local and international markets for the nation’s agricultural produce.

“The incubation centre is being established as a Special Centre of Excellence to support and promote food security in Nigeria, and to support youth and women empowerment as well as promote employment generation, wealth creation and poverty reduction.

“This will be through the development of viable agribusiness and entrepreneurship skills in different Agricultural Value Chains across the country.

“The focus of the centre include; enhancing production capacity, value addition, quality control and standards, and opening access to local and international markets for our agricultural produce.

“The project is aimed at facilitating and attracting investments into the agricultural sector, ensuring survival and sustainability of agri-based businesses and increasing domestic food production and exports, ” he said.

Umakhihe said that the centre would serve as practical knowledge hub where best practical skills, processes and inputs could be acquired on particular commodities.

According to him, the centres will also produce generation of young successor farmers and Agricultural entrepreneurs who can adopt new technologies and innovations across the segments of commodities enterprise/value chain of production, processing, storage and marketing.

“The centre is equipped to provide business basics through comprehensive training programmes along commodity Value chains and business start-ups including access to bank loans and other funds and guarantee programmes.

“The centre will support Market research, linkage to strategic partners, access to investors and the development of business plans and business networking etc”, he added.

The Permanent Secretary expressed satisfaction and appreciated the support and cooperation of the Vice Chancellor, Prof. Olayemi Akinwumi, the Academic and Management of FUL for the successful completion of the centre.

He also expressed the hope that the university would exploit the opportunities to be created by the Center and prove its support as a formidable institution in the concerted efforts of the government to grow the nation’s economy using the agricultural sector.

Responding, the FUL Vice Chancellor, Prof. Olayemi Akinwumi commended the Federal Government for setting up the centre in the University.

Akinwumi pledged to ensure that the institution would make good use of the opportunity offered to it to train the students in to becoming big time agriculturalists that would contribute to the nation’s food production and security.

The Nigerian Pilot reports that the Permanent Secretary also commissioned a six-kilometer road constructed by the Ministry from the university’s Zoo to Lokoja-Okene Road. (Ends)

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