The Support
to Agricultural Research for Development of Strategic Crops (SARDC-SC) wheat
compact coordinator for Technology for African Agricultural Transformation
(TAAT), Solomon Assefa has said Nigeria spends 4 billion dollars annually on
the importation of wheat. He said this at the TAAT African international
conference meeting on wheat value chain held in Abuja.
Assefa who said
that the wheat importation into the country leads to poverty disclosed that
efforts were being made by TAAT to help farmers in Africa produce more wheat
with improved technologies saying this would help to save money and create jobs
in Nigeria and Africa as whole.
While
advising policy makers to assist in this project to achieve good yield, he
said: "Our purpose is that by 2025 wheat importation will stop in Africa. We
plan to improve on 100,000 hectares in six states in Nigeria. We need states
that will donate lands for this.”
The West
African Regional Coordinator and Executive Director, Institute for Agricultural
Research (IAR) Prof. Abubakar Ibrahim who noted that one of the major
challenges in farming is poor communication between farmers and scientists
added that despite the available land, Nigeria produces only 10 per cent of her
wheat demand.
Abubakar
said by importing wheat, Nigeria is giving jobs to other countries at the
expense of her own citizens adding that irrigation should be expanded since
wheat can grow under irrigation.
Also, the National Coordinator, Dr. Zakari
Turaki said technologies have been generated to boost wheat production in
Africa and that seed has been a major challenge but pointed out the
availability of market being provided by millers who are off takers.”We are no
longer thinking of providing farmers with inputs but technologies that will
boost agriculture.”
Turaki
compared growing of rice and wheat in Nigeria and said farmers who cultivate
rice could also cultivate wheat on the same land because they grow at different
seasons adding: "We have all that it takes to grow wheat. The success in
rice production should be replicated in wheat.”
TAAT
supports “Feed Africa” by providing the needed, proven agricultural and food
processing technologies and implementation strategies for inclusion within the
Bank’s loans to Regional Member Countries (RMCs).
It has
compacts of nine value chains (rice, cassava, wheat, sorghum/millet, maize, high
iron beans, orange-fleshed sweet potato, small livestock and aquaculture) and
six enabler/cross-cutting (policy, capacity building, ENABLE-TAAT, water
management, and fall armyworm.
13 states cultivate wheat in Nigeria; Kano,
Kaduna , Gombe , Bauchi, Yobe Jigawa,Kastina , Sokoto, Zamfara,Kebbi ,Kaduna,
Bornu and Plateau.
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