We hereby apologize for publishing
Mrs. Grace Kikelomo as a staff of Rural Finance Institution Building Programme
(RUFIN). The name supposed to be Mrs. Fosen Grace Okelola, who spoke with us on an
interview, captioned “our cooperatives economy can be enhanced through proper
regulation” on page 3 of our Dec-January edition of 2015.We appreciate all that
called our attention to this.
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Thursday, 26 February 2015
CRIN@ 50 our achievement- Prof. Malachy Akoroda
As Cocoa
Research Institute of Nigeria (CRIN) clocks fifty years of establishment last
year December, the Executive Director of the Institute, Professor Malachy Akorada
has expressed happiness on the achievement being recorded so far but pointed
that more is still needed to be done with the financial support of the
government and private sector.
In his chat
with Food Farm News in his office,
the Executive Director, CRIN Prof. Akoroda said a lot have been achieved in the
last 50 years through the mandate crops of the Institute especially in the area
of improve technologies to farmers, processors and marketers who have lots of
our products on sales stressed that more support must be given to the Institute
by both the government and Nigerian private sector saying “it is what you
invest that you harvest, and where there is no investment, the harvest is
always small, but my prayer and hope is that Nigeria government, Nigerian
private sector must begin to invest more and more in tree crops so as to
prevent from dependency on outsiders to
produce what we will consume”
CRIN boss emphasized
the need to support the expansion of cocoa in the country with injection of
youths to replace the older farmers saying the increase in the global demand
for chocolate consumption is a good index of measurement which must propel the
increase in production using improved varieties. He stated that “cocoa
worldwide is good commodity for commerce. Why? India is in love with chocolate,
China also, and by year 2020, there will be shortage of cocoa up to one million
metric ton. The numbers of countries that must produce this cocoa includes
Nigeria which is the fourth position in the world rating and this is the reason
why support must be given for its expansion so as to meet the higher demand”
On youth employment, Prof Akoroda
demanded more motivation by way of reduction on cost of production, processing,
transportation and marketing saying ” present owners of cocoa farms are old and
needed replacement. When they retired, to whom do they hand over the work? This should be a
priority issue for government, private sector and farmers themselves. I think I
am convinced that except you have enough facility for young entrepreneur to
enter cocoa industry, there will be a time when old ones will step aside and
there will be nobody to continue the cocoa revolution that has already started”
Speaking on
grafting of new breeds of cocoa with the old ones he said that “we know that
the old farms can be rehabilitated. New cocoa varieties can be grafted into the
old ones. We do not have to cut off the old plantation. When the new one grows
and develop, then you can prone out the old shots so as to allow the new shots
of the new varieties to grow. Doing this will make both the old trees and the
new breeds to be useful”
On his
achievements since 2012 he said that “since we came in 2012 till now, at least
over 15 million planted high breed cocoa materials have been given out to
farmers across the producing states of the federation. We can also say the
improved technologies knowledge on cocoa and other mandate crops have been
transferred through training to beneficiaries in the rural areas through the
train the trainers’ process. If you want to talk about impact, we will say
farmers are now better informed as they have better improved materials and
skill on how to use them.
So if CRIN has been able to give better know how and
better materials, then we will say all that is expected of the Institute has
been delivered. I will not say we have not improved the buildings, increased
the laboratories and the roads are better. I will not say we now have more
water supply, electricity with inverter and solar system. We have more computer
system and our staffs are better aware of the International expectations”
The 39th annual conference of soil science society of Nigeria holds March 9th-13
The 39th annual conference of the Soil Science Society of Nigeria (SSSN) comes up on March 9th-13th at the multipurpose hall, Landmark University, Omu-Aran, Kwara state where members and other stakeholders will be gathering to discuss on the theme “Managing Nigerian soils for food and nutrition security and climate change adaption and mitigation”
The conference will also be used to
mark the 2015 international year for soils as the aim of the 39th
edition according to the National President of SSSN, Prof. Victor Chude is to
provide an enabling platform for soil scientist, stakeholders and policy makers
to discuss contemporary issues as captured in the theme and sub theme.
The topical issues in the sub theme
of the conference includes food and nutrition security in the face of climate
change, Soil genesis, classification and land evaluation, tillage and soil
conservation for enhance soil productivity, Socio-economic implication of soil
conservation and food security, National soil policy and food
security, Livestock
activities and soil fertility, Agro forestry practices, environmental
management and food security, Sustainable nutrient management and agricultural
development, Land, environment and climate change adaptation, land use, farming
systems and agricultural development, Computer application in soil research
(remote sensing, GIS, etc) and Oil chemistry, fertility and soil testing.
Already the association has presented
a paper of memorandum supporting an act to establish the Nigeria Institute of
soil science at the National Assembly as the enactment of this into an
operational law is imperative to food security through adequate soil
management, environmentally friendly fertilizer use and modern agronomics
practices.
The association through his National
President, Prof. Chude has expressed gratitude and appreciation to the Minister
of Agriculture, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, for his unflinching support and also to
both the Senate President and Chairman on agric committee at the upper house
who their sensitivity to soil importance as regards food security has assisted
the movement of the bill to next stage.
Cooperative experts brainstorm on enhancing curriculum for higher colleges.
As the need to
enhance the rural communities financial status is gathering momentum through an
organ of organized cooperatives, experts in the sector development through
micro financing have gathered to put in place an effective curriculum that will
ensure positive knowledge impartation on the small and medium scale
entrepreneurs in the local areas thereby making fund available for their
business in a standardized and regulated process.
The meeting
under the chairmanship of the director of cooperative department, Federal
Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD), Dr. Dickson Okolo held
at the Kaduna Federal College of Cooperative critically brainstorm on the appropriate
curriculum that will be recommended for use in all the three colleges across the
country and other polytechnics as the economics dynamics of using micro
financing to drive a growing economics like ours is inevitable through a
regulated cooperatives.
In his
remark, Dr. Okolo said that the importance of cooperative colleges to developing
economics have been relegated thereby pointing the need to reposition all the
Institutes as a knowledge based tools to drive micro rural financing where
graduating students would have been better equipped to be useful in training
and enhancing small and medium scale enterprises in the rural areas adding that
a more comprehensive and standard curriculum to achieve this must be put in
place.
Dr. Okolo
pointed that research conducted on the colleges revealed that the curriculum
being used for the past years have not been reviewed to meet the economics dynamics
of micro financing to small and medium
enterprise in the rural communities adding the “ the colleges have no autonomy
of themselves to operate effectively and in the face of the economic debase of the
country, there is need to ensure that the positive impact of it trickles down
to our villagers through a well organized micro financing cooperatives that
will enable fund availability to them”
He therefore
crave for proactive contribution to the development of the new curriculum for
the colleges that will address the issue of rural financing and better
repositioning of the Institutes in a way that will attract more students to
take career in rural financing and cooperative development in growing the economy.
Architect T.
O Adekunle from National Board for Technical Education (NBTE) emphasized on the
need for standardization of any process thereby enjoining the stakeholders to
bring constructive contributions that will ensure standard in the practice of
small and medium enterprises in moving our economy forward through a detailed
curriculum for our colleges and polytechnics.
Also in her
speech, the Acting Provost of the college, Hajiya Aisha Ismail Ishaq commended
the proactiveness of the Dr. Okolo in the repositioning of all the entire areas
of cooperative organs in the federation adding that his efforts has been
greatly felt in all the colleges added that the meeting is expected to come up
with a well articulated curriculum that will address the problem of accessing
rural credits in a sustainable way of reducing poverty at the local communities
of Nigeria.
USAID scaling up the production of groundnut and cowpea
United State
Agency for International Development (USAID) in its determination to ensure
future food security in Nigeria has already commenced financing plan to scale
up the production of groundnut and cowpea in five and three pilot states
respectively in the country with ICRISAT
and IITA driving the programme in holistic manner of value addition through
processing and marketing.
The
groundnut scaling up according to the USAID programme is meant for Sokoto,
Kebbi, Kastina, Jigawa, and Kano while cowpea is for Sokoto, Kano and katsina
all in the North West geo political region.
In a meeting
held last month of Tahir Guest Place, Kano where stakeholders brainstorm on
gray areas of production, processing and marketing that could be injected into
the programme for the purpose of better competitive products that will enhance
the economic power of farmers and other people at the value chain of groundnut
and cowpea is to be sponsored USAID.
The
programme will promote the use of improved varieties of groundnut and cowpea
among the farmers with other modern technologies that will enhance standard
quality in a competitive global market just as demonstration techniques will be
adopted to train farmers, processors and marketers in all the participating
states.