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Expert says no enough
companies
An
economically efficient seeds industry in Nigeria may continue to be a mirage
unless a Plant Variety Protection (PVP) law is put in place. This view was deduced
during a three-day training held at National Agricultural Seeds Council (NASC),
Sheda, Abuja.
Food Farm News
gathered that non-promulgation of the law, required to provide protection against
unauthorized varieties release or commercialization, would negatively affect Nigeria’s
prospect of food security.
A
source told our correspondent on condition of anonymity that many big foreign
seeds companies operating in the country were afraid to fully establish in
Nigeria because of non availability of plant varieties release right that gives
protection to intellectual properties and facilitate appropriate royalty
payment, adding that until this and issue of enough funding to NASC are
realized, the seeds industry may not be able to
function optimally.
It
was also gathered that for Nigeria to have an efficient seeds industry, government
must be ready to adequately fund NASC and at the same time equip the sub sector
with effective legal backings that would be used as tools to police the
industry like the recently assented National Seeds Act by President Mohammadu
Buhari and also Plant Breeders’ Right Bill presently at the committee level in
the National Assembly.
The
technical adviser to the Director General (DG) of NASC who anchored the
training, Mr. Folarin Okesola explained that all the fears being expressed by
plant breeders and other varieties owners would soon become a thing of the past as
effort were already geared towards sorting out the plant varieties right at the
National Assembly, adding that a bill in
that regards had passed the second reading at the House of Representatives and
had now been referred to a committee
group for further deliberation towards becoming an act.
He
said the essence of the three-day training was to sensitize and prepare the
mind of plant breeders from the research Institutes, academia, seeds companies
and farmers towards the crop varieties bill that would soon be passed into law.
Meanwhile,
an expert, Mr. Sadi Dansadua has attributed limited functioning seeds companies
and inspection officials to lack of enough availability of improved seeds in
the rural areas, querying why only 75 seed companies out of registered 300 were
functional with barely 50 inspection officers monitoring the whole of the local
governments in the federation.
He continued: “documents obtained from The African Seed
Access Index (TASAI) showed that 156 companies were active in 2017 but the
number increased to 300 in 2019. And a good number of the companies produced
rice and maize seeds.”
He added that Nigeria has the highest number of
seed industries in Africa, yet it has the lowest ratio of impact among the
countries, but noted that it was probably because most of the seeds companies
have small production capacity and that the high number of rice seed companies was
partly due to the government initiative to support rice production in Nigeria.
Prof. Emmanuel Ikaru from the Faculty of Agriculture,
Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), said the seed companies have grown but they
still had a big role to play in the agricultural sector for food security
adding that Nigerian government has failed to support them due to policy summersault.
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