Chief Audu Ogbeh |
As he inaugurates committee to restructure Bank
of Agric, Chief Audu Ogbeh said although agriculture was up against diverse obstacles in
2016, the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development has expressed
determination to ride out the storm in 2017 by embarking on many ambitious
projects.
This viewpoint was made known by the Minister, Chief Audu Ogbeh at the inauguration of the national council on privatization steering committee on the restructuring and re-capitalization of the Bank of Agriculture and the Project Delivery Team. “The aim is to make sure that we embark on these major projects. So, agriculture continues to be an all-year-round activity. And we too can continue to provide fresh food.”
This viewpoint was made known by the Minister, Chief Audu Ogbeh at the inauguration of the national council on privatization steering committee on the restructuring and re-capitalization of the Bank of Agriculture and the Project Delivery Team. “The aim is to make sure that we embark on these major projects. So, agriculture continues to be an all-year-round activity. And we too can continue to provide fresh food.”
“In the interim, our biggest achievement last year has been
that we were able to put the Nigerian rice on dining tables for Christmas and
Nigerians are now discovering that their own rice is actually better than what
they have been eating from outside. We believe that, by the end of this year,
it should no longer be necessary for us to have to ban rice. It would be an
automatic selection by Nigerians.”
“I thank the Governor of Central Bank for his intervention
in the anchor borrowers’ scheme, the Minister added. “Without that, this year,
I am not sure we would have had much to boast about in agriculture, especially
in the production of grains, in which sector, I think, we can beat our chest
and say we gave Nigerians rice for Christmas. Good rice too, and superior rice,
compared to some of the stuffs coming in from outside.”
Talking to the CBN Governor, Chief Ogbeh said: “I want to
encourage you to continue to do so until the Bank of Agriculture (BOA) is
strong enough to take on the responsibility at affordable interest rates, and
yet meeting its banking obligations.” Announcing the restricting of BOA, Chief
Ogbeh hinted at restructuring, reduction of interest rates, lending at single
digits and building an agric bank that would automatically double, not only as
an agric bank, but also as some kind of community bank, found in all villages
and farming communities.”
He stressed that “there are new efforts we are making
towards fertilizer production and supply, bringing in the youth and on mechanization, more tractors, more harvesters, to ease the burden on
agriculture, so it can become a hobby for many, instead of the drudgery. He
called on the public to “note the essence of the FGN’s decision to embark on
this strategic step in the BOA revamp process. First, the vice president and
chairman of NCP recently approved the proposed restructuring and recapitalization strategy to revitalize the operations of BoA.”
According to Chief Ogbeh, “this approach is aimed at revitalizing the operations of the Bank of Agriculture to make it more
responsive to its mandate of serving as a veritable platform for providing
loans to MSMEs, rural farmers and cooperatives, agro-allied industries among
others. This will enable them to meet the huge demand for agricultural produce
for local consumption and exports.”
He added that “it is expected to integrate into the evolving
commodity exchange programme that is currently undergoing a revamp process.
This approach was preferred by the FGN as a per-privatization strategy to pave
way for injection of financial and other requisite resources into the bank,
also to future privatization as approved as approved in 2013 by the national
council on privatization.”
Tracing the history of the Bank of Agriculture, the Minister
pointed out that “it is noteworthy that, in its over 20 years of existence, the
BOA has faced a myriad of challenges, which include poor funding, poor
stakeholder buy-in, particularly by FGN agencies, and erosion of stakeholder
funds, especially with bad debts. People have borrowed money from this bank in
the past and many have either failed or refused to pay.”
“We do appreciate the difficulties farmers have faced in the
past, some of which we have taken steps at the level of the ministry and the
Central Bank to correct. Among these are low yields on farms and very poor
knowledge of agriculture the way it should be practiced today. We are proud to
announce that since we introduced a new fertilizer formula here instead of the
flat NPK 15-15-15, which people thought was a magic formula for growth in
agriculture our new soil map and crop-specific fertilizers have resulted in
yields which have amazed even the farmers themselves, up in some areas, from
two tons per hectare, to five, seven and a half. And in one state, farmers
recorded ten tons of rice per hectare.”
“With such yields, and the favorable prices we are getting
now, no farmer has any excuse not to pay back his or her loan. And no bank has any
excuse not to loan money to farmers. We appreciate banks’ reluctance on the
basis that farmers don’t pay because farmers themselves don’t yield much. But
we shall add more to these. New arrangements are being made for fertilizer,
with further improvement and lower prices, and more machineries being procured
to help farmers improve their operations, especially the younger ones coming
in. It is therefore inspiring to note that the FGN has charged the steering
committee under the vice president’s chairmanship with the mandate to midwife
the laudable initiative to be implemented within a record time. It is
noteworthy that the body will be technically supported by the PDT, which is
also made up of experienced personnel, drafted from key stakeholder agencies of
government.”
No comments:
Post a Comment