Foodfarmnewstv

FADAMA 111 PROJECT ADDITIONAL FINANCING

FADAMA 111 PROJECT ADDITIONAL FINANCING
supporting farming as a business with focus on Rice, Cassava, Sorghum and Tomato value chains.

Search This Blog

Total Pageviews

SPONSORED

SPONSORED
Nigerian Institute of Soil Science- NISS

Translate to Other Languages

Latest News




The Nigerian Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS)

Friday 28 August 2015

EU, UK, Others Invest N900b in Nigeria’s Agricultural Sector

Fortified-foods

The Federal Government has said that Nigeria’s key development partners under the New Alliance Cooperative Agreement Framework/Grow Africa initiative are committed to a funding equivalent of 100 billion Naira ($500m) for the country’s Agricultural sector for a three-year period.

It also stated that International and local business establishments were committed to make investments of about 4billion dollars (N800bn) in the agricultural sector.

Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Arc. Sonny Echono, who disclosed this during the validation workshop on the New Alliance Report involving Nigeria, private sector investors and its development partners, said they include the European Union (EU), United Kingdom (UK), Japan, France, Germany and the United States (U.S).

Arc Echono, who was represented by the Director of Special Duties, FMARD, Mrs. Ademola Abiri, stated that the New Alliance was a collaborative approach geared towards developing the Agricultural sector of the economy.

According to the Permanent Secretary, in Nigeria’s New Alliance Agreement, the Government is committed to 13 major policy actions in the areas of seed and fertilizer, Bank of Agriculture, Agriculture insurance, nutrition, land tilting, staple crops processing zones, commodity exchange, enterprise registration and power availability.

He said “Key development partners including the EU, UK, Japan, France, Germany and U.S, are committed to funding equivalent to about $500million (N100billion) for Nigeria’s Agriculture sector in the 2013 to 2016 period. International and local business establishments are committed to make investments of about $4billionn (N800billion) in the Agricultural sector.”

Arc Echono, however said, the Federal Government was hopeful that through the partnership, more investments would come to the sector as the ministry implements the 13 policy actions in order to improve the environment and attract investors.

He further explained that the New Alliance was formed in Nigeria in 2013 when the Federal Government, private sector players and the development partners made signed a memorandum of understanding on key actions to be embarked upon.

This, he said, was in order to improve Agricultural investments and food and nutrition security in line with the principles of the Comprehensive African Agriculture Development Programme.

“Each stakeholder is therefore accountable to other stakeholders for commitments made. The Nigerian governments made policy reform commitments while the private sector made commitments on the level of Agricultural investments in the medium term. Development partners on their part committed to funding levels for the medium term. The civil society is to ensure that the commitments reflect the views of the intended beneficiaries.

“In order to assess progress, an Annual report on the level of implementation of stakeholders’ commitments is produced at the national level and at the continental, African Union level. This report is discussed at the Annual Africa-wide New Alliance Leadership Council Meeting, which normally takes place in June every year” He said.

Arc Echono, noted that the purpose of the workshop was to review the progress made so far under the Alliance in order to produce a final document which would be submitted to the AU commission on August 31, 2015.

No comments:

Post a Comment