banana farmer |
The just
concluded 3rd All Africa Horticultural Congress (AAHC) has identified that most
developing countries in the continent have not complied to using Good Agricultural
Practice (GAP) to attract premium prices for fresh fruits and vegetables with
Nigeria losing N198 billion on yearly basis to post harvest problems, just as scientists,
researchers, farmers, policy makers, transporters and other input service
providers from the rest of the world noted that GAP adoption cum efficient
value chains and transportation institutions by most of these nations in Africa
will galvanize fruits and vegetables availability to meeting the increasing
population and rural-urban migration.
The United Nation, Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) has predicted double population increase before 2050.
It will be
recalled in 2012 training organized by National Horticultural Research Institute
(NIHORT) with Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD) that
the former President of Nigeria, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo had advocated for the
use of GAP towards attracting 500
million dollar on daily export of fresh fruits and vegetable to Europe thereby
raising income of small scale farmers and creating more job for school leavers.
Presently,
Nigeria according to Prof O.C Aworh is losing N198 billion only on tomato
yearly due to poor agronomic practices and postharvest challenges, pointed this
amount alone can salvage about three states’ budget if only 20-35% of these losses
are prevented with GAP and efficient linkage to the market as most of the fresh
fruits and vegetables at Shoprite are imported due to better handling
management.
Prof. Aworh
lamented that forty years after the 1975 UN resolution on reduction of food
wastages through postharvest handlings in developing countries, Nigeria has not
complied like Philippine who has reduced this challenge with proactive steps,
stressing the need for infrastructural development in Nigeria with full private
sector participation.
The seasoned
don who identified disconnect between the transportation system and food
production in Nigeria unlike what is obtained during the colonial era thereby emphasized the need for cold parks for fresh produce preservation coupled the
use of trucks like in the United States to move fruits in crates. In US 99% of
all fresh fruits, vegetables and frozen products are moved by trucks but here
the system of transportation damages produce.
Other
stakeholders expressed the need to enhance the service end of horticultural
production towards efficient movement of fresh produce in crates and creation
of cold parks thereby commending the efforts towards checkmating losses through
the bringing together of both the private and public sector under the Global Alliance
for Improved Nutrition (GAIN)
The GAIN
country Director, Dr. Francis Aminu has said that “as a leader in identifying
and delivering solutions to address malnutrition, GAIN has developed the
postharvest loss alliance for nutrition to bring together the multitude of
public and private sector actors to addressing this issue towards collectively
reducing losses and wasting of nutritional food”
Dr. Aminu
added that “Nigeria is one of the ten countries with the highest burden of
malnutrition in the world, and despite its highly productive horticulture
sector, close to 50% of fresh fruit and vegetables are lost or wasted.
Additionally, despite having the largest economy in Africa and robust and
growing agricbusiness private sector, businesses still struggle with the
limited availability of quality technological solutions to capture these
losses. Nigerian government has set an agenda to reduce postharvest loss and
waste through private sector partnerships, as well as further reducing the
country’s malnutrition”
An abstract
book made for AAHC 2016 on urban and peri-urban horticulture in the developing
countries stated that “the unabated migration of rural population to the urban
area in the developing countries has challenged the traditional system of rural
agricultural feeding the urban population. By 2030, the urban population is
expected to be 60 percent. Whereas in 2070 it is expected to be 70.
The teeming
urban population has threatened food and nutrition security demanding priority
remedial measures; hence, the emerging importance and significance of urban and
peri urban agriculture. Presently, horticulture is recognized as a second line
of defense with cereals and legume in the front line of food domain. It is
further recognized that horticulture is the major contributor to nutrition
security and assumes major role in urban and peri urban agriculture attaining
its importance as urban and peri urban horticulture (UPA) as recognized by the
FAO”
Speaking on
the nutrition relevance of horticulture to our increasing population in
Nigeria, Dr. Jide-Taiwo Lawrence, a director at NIHORT and head, subcommittee,
AAHC exhibition, a subsidiary of the event said that horticultural crops are veritable
source of vitamins that give micro nutrients in cheap and natural ways to about
160 million Nigerians saying the products being exhibited speak volume of
things being discussed at the conference.
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