The 8,000-hectare Rice Out-Growers’ Scheme of Dangote Group was launched recently in Hadejia, Jigawa State, while the inaugural distribution of its rice seedlings to farmers was performed by the Group’s President, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, The Punch reports.


The scheme is part of the Group’s collaborative efforts with government at all levels to reduce Nigeria’s food imports, and has the potential to provide 10,000 direct and indirect jobs, according to a press release issued by the Group’s media office.

It said the rice project being executed by the Dangote Rice Limited would be replicated in six other states of the federation.

The project, according to the release, was the fallout of a Memorandum of Understanding signed between Dangote Group and the Federal Government, on one hand, and the Jigawa State Government on the other.

Dangote lamented that the Nigerian agricultural commodities and food imports bill had averaged over N1tn in the past two years, with items such as sugar, wheat, rice and fish accounting for 93 per cent of the huge amount.

He described the situation as unacceptable, adding that this informed his decision to go into agriculture.

According to him, under the Dangote Rice Out-Growers Scheme, farmers will be given training and other necessary inputs with guaranteed buy-back at agreed prices.

The Minister of State for Agriculture, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, was quoted as saying that the Federal Government was ready to support the scheme and make it a success.

The Jigawa State governor, Alhaji Badaru Abubakar, thanked Dangote Rice Limited for choosing the state as a pilot for the project and pledged the readiness of his administration to provide the needed support.

The governor said he had no doubt that the project would succeed in turning around the economy of the state, noting that the company’s exploits in other sectors such as cement, sugar, and lately, oil and gas, was an indication that Jigawa was particularly suited to host the Dangote rice scheme.