Today is a remarkable day in the
history of our great nation, a day of celebration and solidarity with our dear
farmers who supply our food, which is the foundation for human life. In
furtherance of our rejuvenation and redefinition of Agriculture, and your
earnest partnership in this revolution, I am exceptionally delighted to receive
you all today.
Our nation is blessed with abundant
agricultural resources, but for too long we have depended on crude oil and
neglected agriculture. This situation created poverty and suffering in our
rural communities.
When I appointed Dr. Akinwumi Adesina as the
Minister of Agriculture, I charged him to turn agriculture around. My vision
was clear - turn agriculture away from being a sector for managing poverty to
one for creating wealth. We now see agriculture as a business, not as a
development program. We now focus on developing the agricultural value chains,
from the farm to processing and value addition. And we now focus on the private
sector driving the agricultural sector with investments.
We have transformed the face of
agriculture. Our country is producing more food than ever before. Our national
food production has expanded by 21 million metric tons within the past three
years. Our food import bill declined from N1.1 trillion in 2009 to N634 billion
in 2013 and continues to decline. This is progress and we must continue to move
forward.
We ended the corruption of forty years in the
fertilizer sector. Our farmers now receive their fertilizers through the
electronic wallet system using their mobile phones. Within the past three
years, over 14.5 million farmers have been reached through the GES program. Our
farmers that previously begged for fertilizers or are given fertilizers in bowls
now receive 2-3 bags of subsidized fertilizers. We have restored dignity and
hope back to our farmers. There is much to celebrate in this sector.
The number of seed companies has
increased from 11 to 134 within the past three years, allowing farmers to be
reached with high quality seeds. I am proud of the Nigerian seed companies, who
together have now increased the volume of seeds available to farmers from
4,252Metric tons in 2011 to over 149,484metric tons today. This again is
progress and we must continue to move forward.
Our fertilizer sector is booming with N900
Billion naira ($5 billion dollars) of new investments that will make our nation
self-sufficient in fertilizers and turn us into a net exporter of fertilizers.
As this happens, the price of fertilizers will decline, and farmers will be
able to afford more fertilizers to boost their food production. I celebrate the
private sector investors who are boosting our fertilizer sector. Again, this is
progress and we must continue to move forward.
With N900 Billion ($5 billion) of
new investments in the fertilizer sector, Nigeria will soon become
self-sufficient in fertilizer production, and turn into a net exporter of
fertilizer. As this happens, the price of fertilizers will decline, and farmers
will be able to afford more fertilizers to boost their food production. I
celebrate the private sector investors who are boosting our fertilizer sector.
This is progress and we must continue to move forward.
Rice farmers across the country have
a new lease of life, due to the transformation taking place in the sector. Over
6 million rice farmers have received improved rice seed varieties, boosting
domestic rice production by an additional 7 million metric tons. The rice
revolution is taking place across the country, from Kebbi, Kano, Kaduna,
Katsina, Zamfara, Sokoto, Bauchi, Gombe, Niger, Kogi, Ogun, Ekiti, Ebonyi,
Rivers, Anambra, Delta, Edo to Bayelsa State.
High quality Nigerian rice is now
competing favourable with imported rice in the markets. Our rice millers have
taken advantage of these new opportunities, and the number of integrated rice
mills has expanded from 1 (one) at the beginning of this administration, to 24
today. And they are all here today. I celebrate you all. I eat Nigerian rice
and can tell you it is better than imported rice.Nigeria our dear country will
not be held hostage by rice importers. There will be no sacred cows under my
watch. All those owing Nigeria on rice import duties must pay.
I am also excited for our sorghum
farmers, whose lives have changed as they now get better markets and higher
prices from private companies processing sorghum into high energy foods,
breakfast cereals and malt drinks.
Our maize farmers are also part of
this revolution. With our support, they produced 10 million metric tons of
maize in the past three years. What a feat! From the vast maize belts of the
northwest, north central Nigeria, to the maize fields in the southwest and
southeast of Nigeria, a new dawn has arrived. Today, there is surplus maize in
Nigeria, thanks to your gallant efforts.
The cassava sector has also been
transformed. We have provided farmers with 130 million stems of high yielding
cassava varieties. As a result, our cassava production rose from 45million
metric tons in 2010 to 55million metric tons. Today, cassava flour is partially
substituting for imported wheat for making bread. I am proud of the thousands
of master bakers of Nigeria who have been trained and have taken on the
challenge to produce cassava bread through the N1.6 billion fund we provided to
support their businesses. The Nigerian flour milling industry has now embraced
the cassava flour policy.
Today, composite cassava-wheat flour
by the Flours Mills of Nigeria and Honeywell Group has gone commercial at the
industry level with the recent launch of 10% cassava composite flour.
Congratulations. We have helped to establish over 5,500 hectares of fully
mechanized cassava farms in 22 States of the Nation. We have provided N6 billion to support the establishment of 6
large scale of cassava flour processing factories in Ogun, Ondo, Delta, Abia,
Cross Rivers and Nassarawa States. I am proud of our cassava farmers.
Our cotton farmers are seeing a
dramatic change in their fortunes as our support provided thousands of farmers
with improved cotton seeds. We have revived 22 cotton ginneries. We have
launched a new program to revive the textile and garments industry. We are
turning cotton into white gold for farmers. I celebrate our cotton
farmers.
Our cocoa farmers are also
witnessing a boom, as we are distributing to them 45.5 million seedlings of
high yielding cocoa varieties, all free of charge.
Today, from the L and Z commercial
farms in Kano fresh dairy milk is now being produced and supplied to major
supermarkets across the country. Thousands of Fulani cattle herders can now
supply their milk to private dairy companies. We will continue to support our
livestock herders with improvement in grazing facilities, watering points,
establishment of ranches, stock routes and provision of veterinary services. We
will continue to work hard to end cattle rustling and rebuild trust and
cooperation between farmers and herders. I am proud of our livestock farmers,
as I am proud of our farmers. We must unite and celebrate together.
I am also happy today to see the positive
changes happening in the fisheries sector. For the first time, fish farmers -
from artisanal fishermen to aquaculture producers - are being provided across
the country with subsidized fish farming inputs, including fishing nets, subsidized
fishing boats and outboard engines, fish feed and other inputs. For the first
time in our nation’s history, Nigeria acquired a deep sea marine vessel that
will allow us to better harness the vastness of marine resources in our deep
seas. From the small fishermen all across Bayelsa, Rivers, Cross Rivers, Edo
and Akwa-Ibom in the South-South, to the
boisterous fishing communities in Argungu Emirate in Kebbi and Sokoto states,
Kano and Niger states, let me assure you of my full support to transform the
fish sector of Nigeria. To further spur the traditional fishing competition in
Argungu and promote fishing eco-tourism, I hereby direct the Federal Ministry
of Agriculture to provide, henceforth, annual financial support for the Argungu
festival.
Nigeria’s oil palm story is changing. We are
providing 9 million sprouted nuts of high yielding oil palm seedlings for
farmers, all across the south-east, south-west, south-south and north-central
parts of our country.Over N45 billion in private sector investments in new oil
palm plantations are on-going. We expect 70,000 hectares of new plantations to
allow Nigeria to become self-sufficient in palm oil production by 2016. I am
excited that today, Okomu, Presco, PZ-Wilmar and medium size oil palm estate
operators such as Wilbahi are taking the lead in revamping our vast oil palm
plantations. We will continue to support the revamping of our oil palm industry
and support the private sector to build new refineries to process crude palm
oil produced in Nigeria.
The future of the agriculture sector
will depend on creating opportunities for our youth. That is why I launched the
Youth Employment in Agriculture Program (YEAP), to develop a new generation of
750,000 young commercial farmers and agribusiness leaders for Nigeria. We are
also catching our youth early to change their mind-set on agriculture, through
the Schools in Agriculture Program.We are making agriculture more attractive.
That is why I approved the provision of N50 billion to support the establishment
of 1,200 Agricultural Equipment Hiring Enterprises across the country. Our goal
is to take the hoes and cutlasses into the museums and replace them with
tractors and mechanized equipment.
I am very pleased that Nollywood is
waking up to see agriculture as a business. I urge our film producers, actors
and actresses to help project the positive image of agriculture as a business.
That way our youths will see agriculture as profitable and dignifying.
I salute the private sector
agribusiness leaders, who are working to boost agro-processing and value
addition to all the produce in the agricultural sector. We must add value to
everything we produce and create wealth all across the agricultural value
chains.
I celebrate the efforts of the
financial institutions, from banks to micro-finance institutions that have now
began to lend more to farmers and agribusinesses. Our Development Partners have
seen the turnaround in the agriculture sector and are actively supporting the
sector. Over N900 Billion ($ 5 billion) of private investments have come into
the sector in the last three years.
Great farmers of Nigeria, today is
your day to be celebrated. Thank you for feeding Nigeria. Despite the
devaluation of the Naira, food prices have been stable, and inflation is
declining, due to your great efforts in producing more food. You can do even
more, and turn Nigeria into a net exporter of food. That is why government is
rapidly expanding irrigation facilities all across the country.
For the first time ever, the Federal
Government launched a National Dry Season Farming Program in 2012. This has
changed the fortunes of farmers, especially all across the northern states of
Nigeria. Farmers now produce food all year round. Not only is food production
rising rapidly, thousands of jobs are being created for the youth who now have
quality jobs. Agriculture is now the lifeline for Nigeria. As crude oil prices
decline, we must create new wealth from the richness of our soils, the vastness
of our rivers and the abundance of our cheap labor. We will produce more, and
we will industrialize the agricultural sector.
Let me commend the Minister of
Agriculture and his team for their hard work, creativity, innovations and
business-like approach, which have totally changed the face of agriculture in
Nigeria. I am proud of you, our farmers are proud of you and the nation is
proud of you.
Great farmers of Nigeria, you can
rely on me as the Farmers’ President. Be assured of my support at all times. To
further boost your efforts to produce more food for our nation, I am pleased to
announce here today the release of N26 billion naira towards the 2015 dry
season farming programme.
I am here today as your President.
With your support I hope to be here next year as your President and then I will
do even more for you. Great farmers! Great Nation. I thank you all.
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