A trader sorts a basket of tomatoes at the Yankaba vegetables market in northern Nigerian city of Kano |
It's a situation that mirrors the giant oil
industry, where Nigeria has abundant resources but has lacked the capacity,
will or ability to exploit it, forcing a reliance on imports.
But Africa's richest man Aliko
Dangote is hoping to change tomato production with a giant factory that will
boost domestic output, create jobs — and even, indirectly, fight Boko Haram.
For the past five years, the Dangote
Group conglomerate he heads has been working to build a US$20-million (RM88.5
million) tomato processing plant outside the northern city of Kano.
The city and state of the same name
has been blighted by poverty and unemployment, seen as key drivers to radicalization
fuelling the Islamist insurgency in the wider north since 2009.
But it's hoped the giant factory the
size of 10 football pitches, set alongside 17,000 hectares (acres) of irrigated
fields, will help by tapping a potential agricultural goldmine.
The country's agriculture ministry
puts annual current demand for tomato puree at 900,000 tonnes.
When the Dangote factory opens from
next month it will provide 430,000 tonnes of paste that is used widely in
Nigerian dishes from jollof rice to fiery soups.
“Nigeria is such a huge market for
tomato paste that we will find quite challenging to satisfy,” the factory's
general manager, Abdulkarim Kaita, told AFP.
“Already local tomato paste
packaging companies have placed orders with us which we will have to work hard
to satisfy.
“We are set to begin operations. We
are only waiting for the tomatoes which are ripening in the fields.”
Supply boost
Nigeria grows some 1.5 million
tonnes of tomatoes every year, making it the 14th biggest producer in the
world.
But it's forced to rely on imports
of tomato puree, mostly from China, because of a lack of processing plants.
Dangote's factory, built by
Switzerland-based Syngenta, will directly employ 120 people and 50,000 farmers
have been engaged to grow the tomatoes required for the process of making
concentrate.
The Central Bank of Nigeria has
provided technical assistance such as soft loans for seeds and fertiliser. The
factory will then buy the produce at competitive rates, said Kaita.
Currently, about half of the local
tomato crop rots because of a lack of storage facilities, poor pricing and
access to markets, which has prompted many farmers to stop cultivation, said
the CBN.
The improved seed varieties to
increase yields, access to chemicals, more up-to-date farming techniques and a
ready market for the produce is designed to entice farmers back.
“Once we start production the
factory will be providing employment to farmers and (the) tomato paste
packaging industry, traders, haulage operators and many others to support the
tomato value chain,” said production manager Ashwin Patil.
Plans to increase production — and
acquire an idle tomato paste factory in neighbouring Kaduna state — are in the
pipeline, he added.For farmers such as Yusuf Ado
Kadawa, it's a lifeline.
“We really incur heavy losses from
our yield, which rots away due to lack of (a) ready market for our tomatoes,
which is a perishable produce. But now we have a market close to us,” he said.
Challenges
President Muhammadu Buhari is keen
to diversify Nigeria's economy away from an over-reliance on oil as revenues
have been severely depleted by the global slump in crude prices.
Former agriculture minister Akinwumi
Adesina, now head of the African Development Bank, in 2013 described the sector
as “the new oil.”
Some 30 per cent of Nigeria's
estimated 170 million people are employed in agriculture, mostly at a
subsistence level, although moves have been made to commercialize production.
Erratic power supply, which Nigeria
has been grappling with for more than two decades, and lack of import controls
remain the factory's main challenges.
The factory will have to rely on
diesel-hungry generators for electricity, adding to production costs and
reducing competitiveness with cheaper imports.
Both issues contributed to the
collapse of hundreds of factories in Dangote's home state of Kano in the past
two decades, including his textile and wheat flour factories.
But the vice-president of Nigeria's
manufacturers union, Ali Madugu, said the future still looked bright.
“Once the government can place
restrictions on the import of Chinese tomato pastes... the sky's the limit for
the Dangote tomato paste because the market is there for them to exploit,” he
added. — AFP
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