My name is Prof. Mustapha Falaki, currently the Executive
Director, Institute for Agricultural Research (IAR) Ahmadu Bello, Zaria.
How do you intend to
use this award dawn on you to drive best agricultural practices in Nigeria?
Well this is a high honor conferred on me by the
Agricultural Society of Nigeria, and
those of us that are in research are bind to double our effort towards
producing more research based technologies for the benefit of our resourced
poor farmers. My Institute has mandate for several crops and I can say we have
been releasing several varieties of groundnut and sorghum. Recently the ones we
have released have even crossed the border to neighbouring countries like
Niger, Mali where they are using the same varieties we have released. I think
this is great for us as what we are releasing as improved varieties to our
farmers are being used in other ecologies of the West Africa sub region
countries. We are going to double our effort in this regards. We have gone a
long way in our bio-technology programme, we intend very soon to be producing
sugar cane seedlings so as to be able to feed the sugar factories like Dangote
that is having over twenty thousand hectares in Jigawa, Sokoto and other
states. But through bio-technology, we will be using our laboratory in
collaboration with the National Sugar Development Council as we want to provide
them enough seedlings to produce more sugar cane to be able to provide
processed sugar for Nigerians.
I know IAR is very
strategic in the effort it has been providing, but how has these technologies
transferred to farmers. What are the paradigm shifts you have been able to
achieve to ensure transfer of these technologies to farmers?
I can tell you my institute is very close to National
Agricultural Research Liaison Extension Services. As a coordinating research
institute, we are in charge of seven North Western states of the country. We
are making every effort to extend all agricultural based technologies to all
our states, and not only that, we are also sourcing technologies from our other
sister research institutes that are collaborating to extend our technologies
through our farming system.
Can you throw more
light into the separation of cropping scheme and REFILS against next year?
Actually we are the only one that has been conducting them
jointly but other research institutes have been doing them separately. We
thought we should start having them separately because the cropping scheme is
usually delaying the REFIL meeting. We have decided to have the Refil earlier
next year. The reason why the cropping scheme is delaying the REFIL is because
as of now, we have not harvested and processed our data. That is why we are
going to have REFIL in January and cropping scheme later because of election
maybe March for cropping scheme.www,.foodfarmnews.com
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