For instance, the semi-arid of the far
north through the Guinea savannah of the north central to the thick
mangrove forests of the south of Nigeria is cultivated with abundant
varieties of fruits. Water melon, pineapple, pawpaw, citrus, banana,
guava, mango and cashew, to name but a few, are the common fruits grown
and harvested in abundance across the country. Each region of the
country produces at least three of these seasonal fruits in commercial
quantity.
But the irony, however, is that much of
this potential remains a mirage, because Nigeria still imports about
$22billion worth of food annually, especially on foods that can
otherwise be grown locally, namely: wheat, rice, dairy, fish and sundry
items, including fresh fruits.
Thus, Nigeria is not food secure as
wastages remain high in production areas, thus reducing supply of
feedstock to processing factories, requiring them to keep importing
supplies. The net effect is limited job growth across the agricultural
value chain from inputs production to market systems, and continued use
of limited foreign currency earnings to import vast quantities of food.
Challenges of agriculture development
Speaking on the nation’s unrealised
agricultural potential, Ada Osakwe, Chief Executive of Agrolay Ventures,
said there is need to harness this untapped potential, as it is a key
priority for the country.
In the view of Nneka Okekearu of
Enterprise Development Centre (EDC), “There’s no way we can say we’ve
done a good job at exporting or encouraging the agriculture space if we
don’t look at things like standards, like certification and that’s where
NAFDAC and SON come in. It’s a very, very trying thing to try to get
your products certified and to try to get them NAFDAC approved in this
country. Moving your goods from one point to the other is also very
difficult. For people that are farming in the South-south and the
North-east, you have a minimum of 31 checkpoints. If you’re moving your
pineapples from the South south to Lagos, for instance, you will come
across at least 31 checkpoints and these checkpoints you know what the
financial implications are at the end of the day. When you also add the
losses and wastages encountered on the road due to the bad roads when
you transport these goods then you can imagine the economic loss to the
farmers. Until we address some of these issues, the talk about
agriculture being the new gold is still talk.”
Investigation further revealed that the country is facing shortages in staple crops because of overdependence on imports.
Information sourced separately from data
drawn from the Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Nigeria Bureau of
Statistics, CNBCAfrica, Food and Agriculture Organisation and private
estimates show that the country requires 6.3million tons of rice
annually, but is only able to provide just about 2.3million tons, thus
filling the gap with import. Ditto for wheat, whose domestic consumption
is 4.7million tons but the country produces a paltry 60, 000 tons. The
demand is driven mainly by various types of wheat required for the
production of white, hard and durum for bread, biscuits and semovita.
Perhaps, the only crop the nation easily produces is maize/corn. While it requires 7.5million tons, it produces 7million tons.
Like maize/corn, the country also has
self-sufficiency in the production of yams. The nation requires
39million tons annually but produces 37million tons.
Whereas the nation requires 2million
tons of milk and dairy per annum, it is only able to produce a paltry
600, 000, leaving a shortfall of 1.4million, which is sourced from
overseas market.
The demand for tomato is 2.2million tons
but the actual amount produced locally is 1.5million tons. But over
700, 000 tons is lost to post-harvest.
The country also produces 4.5million oil palms but the local demand is 8.5million tons.
Surprisingly, Nigeria requires at least 3.6milliuon tons of cocoa, but it is only able to produce 250, 000 tons.
The demand is 700, 000 while 200, 000 is
produced and 7million tons with 6.2million tons is produced for cotton
and sorghum respectively.
A review of ATA
From 2010-2011, the Federal Government
began the reform of the agriculture sector. To refocus the sector, the
government implemented a new strategy, the Agricultural Transformation
Agenda (ATA), built on the principle that agriculture is a business and
therefore policy should be about supporting it.
The strategy was in place from
2011-2015. The ATA focused on how to make Nigeria’s agriculture more
productive, efficient and effective. ATA, however, did not deliver on
all the targets identified.
From ATA to APP
Expectedly, the President Buhari
administration through the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development (FMARD) has come up with the Agriculture Promotion Policy
tagged: ‘Agric Sector Policy Roadmap, the Green Alternative.’
According to the ministry, the
“Efficiency Team” is made up of 10 officers, drawn from the core
external advisors to the Minister; Minister of State and headed by a
Permanent staff member of the Ministry.
Inaugurating the team in Abuja, FMARD
Director of Planning & Project Coordination, Mrs Bunmi Shiyanbola,
said: “The need for the team to be headed by a permanent member of staff
of the ministry is to guarantee sustainability and institutional
memory.”
Information obtained from the ministry’s
website described the responsibilities of the team to include:
Monitoring performance and result-oriented interventions towards the
realisation of the Green Alternative; Making meaningful impact on the
entrenchment of efficiency, transparency and accountability in the
utilisation of resources by the Ministry of Agriculture and serving as a
secretariat to the ministry’s project coordinating committee headed by
the Permanent Secretary, with all directors in the ministry as members.
Zero oil plan
As to be expected, the Federal
Government is really desirous of diversifying into the non-oil sector,
especially agriculture. Speaking on the Zero
Oil Plan, the Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian Export Promotion
Council (NEPC), Mr. Olusegun Awolowo, said it was actually inspired by
President Muhammadu Buhari, when in 2015, the crude oil prices below
US$30 a barrel.
“With the Zero Oil plan, we have
designed a Nigerian economy without crude oil exports. The plan lays out
the journey for us to make US$100 billion annually from non-oil
exports, with a first milestone of reaching US$30 billion a year in
non-oil exports. Today, Nigeria does less than US$5 billion of non-oil
exports a year. The plan identifies 11 key products where Nigeria will
make the most money through exports, as well as other export sectors
that have less financial impact, but are essential to employment. Under
our One-State One Export product programme, we tie Zero Oil into the
existing assets and resources which can be mobilised within each of the
36 states of Nigeria. This links federal policy to state economic
policy, and turns every state into a major export hub, based on their
specific areas of export advantage.”
In the view of analysts, it is strongly
believed in economic circle that Nigeria could reap a huge foreign
exchange fortunes from export of fruits produce just as South Africa,
Kenya and Ghana are doing.
Economists are of the view that the
Federal Government needs to draw up an industrial development policy
that would transform its agriculture sector and upgrade its produce to
attain the specified global standard. The country would then equally tap
and take full advantage of the opportunities in the agriculture sub
sectors, just as these other African countries.
Northern Nigeria holds the aces in agriculture
There are many reasons why northern
Nigeria continues to hold the aces as far as food production is
concerned compared to other states of the federation.
Anyone who doubts the region’s
‘supremacy’ in the area of food production needs to visit any part of
the north to erase every iota of doubt in his mind. Truth is the north
still dominates the rest of the country in agriculture. Yes, if there is
an area where the north literally suffers from an embarrassment of
riches of some sort, it’s her rich heritage of agriculture resources
including flora and fauna.
A road trip from Okene in Kogi to Abaji
in FCT, Abuja, to Langtang in Plateau, Kafancha in Kaduna, Ningi in
Bauchi to Mayo Belwa, Mubi, Yola, all in Adamawa across other northern
states of Yobe, Jigawa, Kano, Zamfara, Katsina, Sokoto and Kebbi shows
that economy is driven largely by farming activities, whether in sorghum
production, tomato, pepper, cowpea, millet, wheat, cotton, rice, yams,
to mention just a few.
A combination of factors may be
responsible for the north’s good fortunes in the area of farming when
compared to other parts of the country.
Mallam Muhammed Usman, RUFIN Coordinator
in Adamawa, Bauchi, Zamfara and Katsina states, while assessing the
level of agricultural development in the northern states he oversees,
said quite a lot has happened in that regard.
“We’ve strengthened them and built their
capacities and we’ve linked them to sources of finance, especially to
microfinance banks, financial cooperatives, financial NGOs. Hitherto
they had no interactions with such institutions. As a result of our
activities in the states, they now deal with the banks. They transact
their businesses and their lives have improved seriously.”
RUFIN to the rescue
It is, however, instructive to note that
the Federal Government and the International Fund for Agricultural
Development – a specialised agency of the United Nations dedicated to
eradicating rural poverty in developing countries, implemented Rural
Finance Institution Building Programme (RUFIN) – have been doing a lot
to assist smallholder farmers scale up production in some parts of the
country.
The total cost of the project is US$40 million with IFAD contributing the sum of US$27.58 million.
Thanks to initiatives like RUFIN, a
pro-poor programme, today many women in the north constitute themselves
into different cooperative societies known in local parlance as ‘Adashe’
with the sole purpose of working their way out of poverty through a
common front: agriculture.
Thankfully, most of these women are beginning to earn their deserved respect from the otherwise chauvinistic male folks.
More than that, the men are also lending
their full support to the women in a way that clearly suggests that the
long held stereotype about the demeaning status of women has now given
way for respect and honour for the womenfolk in their newfound roles as
breadwinners.
One of such economically empowered women is Fatima Sirajo in Sanawa village, in Dutsin-Ma, Katsina State.
The programme aimed to develop and
strengthen Micro Finance Banks (MFBs), other member-based Micro Finance
Institutions (MFls), to enhance the access of the rural populace to
financial services in order to expand and improve agricultural
productivity and Micro-Small Rural Enterprises.
The programme uses group lending methodology to form over 18,000 women groups in 12 implementing states.
The north western states of Katsina and Zamfara are among the 12 pilot states, where RUFIN is being implemented.
When World News Center, visited
Dutsin-Ma, Katsina State, our correspondent saw several rural women
groups who shared their success stories and the challenges they have had
to grapple with thus far.
The 55-year-old mother of five leads Noma da Kiwo, a cooperative group involved in crop and livestock production. Speaking with World News Center,
Hajia Sirajo, a mother of five, said many of her members have accessed
about seven to eight circles of loans from microfinance institutions and
microfinance banks respectively.
Hajia Sirajo, who spoke in Hausa,
recalled: “My journey out of poverty started with micro-credit I
received from a microfinance bank. We were linked to the FG/IFAD rural
financial inclusion programme for the smallholder women. Through the
loan, I was able to buy farmland on which I cultivate soya beans,
sorghum and millet.
“I bought two calves, which I raised to
bulls that can fetch me N300, 000 or more. I also have three rams and
four sheep. Also, I bought one goat, which today has multiplied to six
goats. Today, my husband is proud of me because I bought a new motor
bike for him,” Hajiya Sirajo said.
“Thanks to programmes like RUFIN which
has taught us how to fish today, as we speak most of our women are
dutifully engaged in one form of business across the agriculture value
chain. Most of us are into mechanised farming as a group. We plant cash
crops like wheat, millet, sorghums. We also rear goats, rams and cows.”
Shedding more light on the RUFIN
initiative, Mrs. Mrs. Unekwu Ufaruna, Deputy National Programme Manager,
RUFIN, said the programme has helped in no small measure to alleviate
the sufferings of rural women in terms of providing empowerment for
those engaged in farming.
“Before the advent of the programme,
there was dearth of credit facilities for women, especially the rural
poor. But so far, we’ve helped to facilitate the women into groups. We
linked them to financial services providers.”
To ensure sustainability, she says there
are ongoing discussions as to how the states government can take
ownership of the programme.
At Sanawa village in Dutsina Local
Government Area of Katsina State, many of the womenfolk have all been
empowered. Thanks to RUFIN, they are all involved in farming – crop and
livestock production – in addition to engaging in agro-enterprises like
trading in farm produce and processing.
For Malama Nana Murtala, 25, who is the
scribe of the group, she raised her livestock from initial two to seven
sheep and three rams, with a loan of N20,000 she got.
According to the young mother of five,
she used the four circles of the micro-credit, which went up to N50,000
to raise livestock which she later sold and bought a groundnut
processing machine and later expanded her farm.
“In the last five years, I have been
accessing micro-credits which I use in raising livestock to sell and
make more money. I thank God, at least I’m doing better now,” Nana said.
Aisha Bishir is the president of another women group called “Dogon Ruwa” with 16 members in the same area.
According to the 49-year-old mother of
10, thanks to RUFIN intervention, her family has moved away from the
poverty trap and has so far accessed over nine circle of loans.
Life, she notes, literally is good for
her household. Now financially independent, she has been able to send
two of her wards to Isa Kaita College of Education in Dutsin-Ma, Katsina
State.
“After the capacity building, I accessed
credit ranging from N20,000 to N60,000 nine times. Through these loans,
I bought animals – sheep, goats and cow – and farmland (1.5 acre) at
N225,000 where I grow groundnut, millet, sesame and then bought a house
for N170,000,” she said.
Aisha said she sold one of the bulls she
raised at N145,000 and some of the rams along with her farm produce
which fetched her the sum of N225,000 with which she bought land,
stressing that “I couldn’t have done that without the RUFIN loan.”
Another group led by Aisha Hamisu, in
Gidan Makera, in Dutsin-Ma, is into rice production and has so far
harvested 27 bags (100kg) with more yet to be harvested.
In neighbouring Zamfara State, ‘Kainuwa
Dashen Allah’ women group, led by Aisha Abubakar and Hindatu Usman, has
made investment into orchard farming – planting orange, guava and date
palm trees in a land the group collectively bought at N300,000 from
their monthly group savings out of the profit they get from the micro
credits.
The 4-year-old 20-member association
with individual credit access of between N30,000 and N70,000 has helped
many of the members to strengthen their production capacity – farms
expanded, more animals bought and more engagement in meaningful
enterprises.
Da Rarrafe Ake Tashi Tsaye, another
cooperative, pooled its profit to buy cows at group level. When the
cows were sold, proceeds were shared among members.
For Islamiyya women group in Tsafe, the
members have seen good value in groundnut processing. Processing oil and
cake, with processing machines acquired through the loan, they have
been able to extend loan to their members to undertake good farming or
trading activities.
A women cooperative group known as
Dongoruwa, headed by Hajia Rabi Alkali along with other executives
including Hajias Turai Audu, secretary and Wazata Sanni, treasurer, are
predominantly farmers involved in palm produce marketing, produce
millets, cowpea, groundnut, soybeans, sorghum, rice, etc. Most of them
are enjoying a good time, thanks to their association with RUFIN.
Speaking on the Zamfara agric endowment,
Alhaji Ibrahim Usman, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Agriculture and
Natural Resources, said, “Over 89% of the entire Zamfara population are
all into farming activities.”
Echoing similar sentiments, Alhaji
Mainasara Ashiru, State Programme Coordinator, RUFIN, in Zamfara State,
said, “Farming is our pride in Zamfara. We will remain committed. Our
plan is to move our farmers from peasant farming to commercial farming
in the not too distant future.”
An elated Hajia Awawu Mode, 46-year-old,
who speaks English fairly, said the loan she got through RUFIN really
strengthened their finances. “The coming of RUFIN has brought a great
change and development to us. Our businesses are going on fine. So far
we have collected four circles of loans both from DEC, LAPO and BOA. I
have bought a house at the cost of N650, 000, which I want to put up for
rent. Before the advent of RUFIN, life was terribly bad. By the end of
the year, I hope to raise money to go on holy pilgrimage to Mecca.”
The RUFIN group’s methodology has made
lending and repayment easier to micro finance banks to deal with the
women as most of them require as little as N10, 000 to make them more
productive.
The challenge for the women groups,
however, is that of sustainability as the RUFIN programme is billed to
end in 2017. But Mallam Appeh Auta, the Special Assistant to the
Minister of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh on Donor Programmes, has
hinted of plans by the Federal Government to expand funding channels for
the project to enable it continue in states that were willing to pay
their counterpart funding.
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