Apart from the pain many farmers go through in land clearing
and cultivations for crops planting, the end results of the labour, most times,
do not justify the means as production cost would have eroded the profit margin
expected to be made, thereby making the occupation very unattractive to many,
especially the youths.
The introduction is understandable when one compares the
tonnage a farmer in Nigeria can get per hectare of land (two to three tons) to
what his counterpart in India, Brazil and America gets in terms of grains and
in whatever agricultural produce ( at 15 to 16tons).
The high cost of agricultural inputs coupled with low impact
of extension services and poor agronomic practices resulting in low harvest are
things of concern in this particular piece that we strongly believe could be an
area the government should seriously look into as a way to give support to the
farmer towards cost of production mitigation to help for agriculture
commercialization and competitiveness.
We are very much aware of government-supplied fertilizer
which have not been well-received by most farmers who claimed they could not
access it, but ended up buying agro inputs of seeds, fertilizers and chemical
at very exorbitant rates. These are in
addition to the challenges of fakery that had engulfed the sectors, which of
course the recently enacted acts signed President Mohammadu Buhari for both
fertilizer and seeds industry are meant to overtly checkmate as fund are
adequately released for effective monitoring and implementation.
No doubt, a lot must have been spent by the time a land is
cleared and cultivated through paid human labour coupled with purchase of seeds
and fertilizer application to get maximum yield and harvest only to be
confronted by the falling prices of produce, as it happened with maize price
dropping from N150, 000 to N65, 000 per 100kg at a point. The same applies to
cowpea, millet, rice melon, sorghum, soya-bean, onions etc.
The state governments’ not funding extension services has a
great negative impact in terms of technologies transfer and best agronomics
practice and poor management of the farms which impact negatively on cost of
production in terms of low harvest.
But how has government been able to mitigate this cost of
production in the midst of dilapidated infrastructure like rural feeder roads
and the rest, like electricity availability and security for both farmers and
the farms from being destroyed or crops eaten up by herdsmen cow without any compensation.
In developed countries, apart from superior conventional
ways of farming that make their produce more competitive in the markets, the
government is very responsive by mopping up the excess when there is glut in
order to encourage farmers, this we totally lack in this our clime.
We highlighted all these to draw the attention of government
at all strata to the need to provide sufficient support that would make
production very competitive for farmers, considering the unabated increase in
population and the need for food production to feed ourselves round the years.
There is need for a programme that will directly target the
farmers through structured associations that can be held accountable for all
the government interventions, and this is more of the reason why the authority
must be very concerned about the existence and operation of some of these
associations like All farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN) and Federation of
Commodity Associations of Nigeria (FACAN) domiciled in the Ministry of Industry,
Trade and Investment (FMITI).
Although we will like to commend the new Minister of
Agriculture, Alhaji Sabo Nanono for promising to positively affect the lives of
farmers through working with the apex farmers’ association, we will advocate
that the farmers be well documented scientifically with areas of farms and
locations in order to detect fake ones among them.
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