Nigeria: AfDB approves $134m to boost local food production
The programme will support fast-tracking of the implementation of key policy and institutional reforms and boost private sector participation in agriculture. This will help increase cereals and oil grains production by 7 million tonnes to 35 million tonnes.
It will also increase average cereal yields from 1.42 tonnes
to 2 tonnes per hectare during the September 2022-December 2023 implementation
period.
The program aligns with the Bank’s African Emergency Food
Production Facility and will support Nigeria’s efforts to mitigate the impacts
of the war in Ukraine. Food prices have been rising rapidly due to higher
volatility caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, aggravated by the war.
The program also aligns with the Bank’s Ten-Year Strategy as
it promotes climate-resilient agriculture and targets the vulnerable
population, including youth and women.
Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation, is projected to hit
402 million by 2050 from 206 million people in 2020, making it the third-most
populous country globally. The bulk of its rural population, representing 48%
of the populace, produces up to 90% of the national output.
However, inadequate support for the farmers has confined
them to traditional agronomic techniques, resulting in low productivity and
limited opportunities for value addition. In 2020, the harvested cereals area
and yields declined by 2.75 percent and 1.5 percent, respectively.
Lamin Barrow, Director General of the Bank’s Nigeria Country
Department, said the program would prioritize support for five strategic crops:
maize, rice, wheat, soya beans and sorghum, with a particular focus on wheat
value chains.
He said National Agriculture Growth Scheme – Agro Pocket
program is anchored in the National Agriculture Technology and Innovation
Policy (2022-27) which aims to modernize Nigeria’s agriculture sector in line
with changing global food systems and supply chains. The program will
complement Bank-supported operations in the country, particularly the Special
Agricultural Special Zones.
“The Bank will support the Federal Government to put in
place a robust institutional framework, including operationalization of the
National Agriculture Growth Scheme – Agro Pocket program Secretariat as the
administrative vehicle to oversee the implementation of the Agro-Pocket Scheme,
whose precursor is the highly successful e-wallet scheme that was rolled out in
Nigeria between 2012 and 2015,” he said.
The National Agriculture Growth Scheme – Agro Pocket program
would help build the resilience of farming livelihoods, enhance farmers’ access
to improved seeds, and strengthen the capacity of industry stakeholders, Barrow
stressed.
Beth Dunford, the Bank’s Vice President, Agriculture, Human
and Social Development, said: “Cushioning the poor from the effects of higher
food, and energy costs, requires urgent and sustainable policy, such as
increased public expenditure on agriculture.”
The African Development Bank led the mobilization of $538 million for the flagship Special Agro-Industrial Processing Zones program to develop value chains for strategic agriculture commodities in Nigeria and transform rural areas into zones of economic prosperity.
Comments
Post a Comment