The planet is halfway to dangerous levels of global warming, with the
average temperature for 2015 set to eclipse last year’s record, the
United Nations said, just days before the COP21 climate talks began in Paris.
This year’s average temperature will be “approximately” 1 degree
Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) above the 1880-1899 mean for the first
time, the UN’s World Meteorological Organization said on 25 November.
That compares with the 2-degree threshold beyond which scientists say
the effects of climate change risk becoming catastrophic.
The data was released in time to spur envoys from 195 nations into action as they prepare for two weeks of talks on a new climate change deal intended
to limit warming to 2 degrees. More than 130 world leaders gathered at
the UN conference on 30 November to open the negotiations, six years
after a similar attempt failed in Copenhagen.
China, the world’s second-biggest economy, has become a driving force
for a possible deal in the French capital and has promised to cap
emissions by 2030 and to cut carbon intensity by 60-65% from 2005
levels.
In 2014, China added 35GW of new renewable power generating
capacity—greater than all the capacity online today in sub-Saharan
Africa’s 49 nations combined, excluding South Africa and Nigeria—and
attracted $89bn in all types of new clean energy capital, the report
said.
Climate funding has become a theme in Paris. Industrial countries and
the UN are shining a bit more light on how a key pledge to boost
climate-related finance will reach $100bn by 2020.
Three separate announcements set out plans for $2.75bn to flow to
poorer nations. That’s dwarfed by the at least $38bn that six
development agencies pledged in support for the 2020 climate-aid goal,
and those programmes have the potential to leverage billions more from
other groups.
“Given the pledges we’ve received,
reaching the $100bn goal is perfectly within reach,” French Finance
Minister Michel Sapin said. The $100bn is a “floor” that may be looked
at every five years as greenhouse gas targets are reviewed.
The economics of fossil fuels are coming under increased scrutiny as
some investors consider long-term prospects and risks. German lenders
with holdings in conventional power generation are being asked to
justify the investments as companies like Allianz switch funds into
cleaner forms of energy.
Europe’s biggest insurer has said it will reduce its coal investments
and double its spending in renewables from about EUR 2bn ($2.1bn). The
move is a gesture of support to the Paris climate talks and to “send a
signal to our branch and to capital markets,” said Allianz’s chief
investment officer Andreas Gruber in a ZDF television interview.
Allianz’s announcement adds to pressure on German lenders and
investors to examine exposure to coal after Economy and Energy Minister
Sigmar Gabriel said the nation will close all of its lignite plants,
which supply about a quarter of German power. Germany’s biggest banks
including Deutsche Bank, Commerzbank as well state lenders like BayernLB
retain direct and indirect investments in lignite valued at EUR 8.7bn,
the Urgewald climate lobby group said in a report.
“We are now thinking about our position about coal,” Frankfurt-based
Commerzbank spokesman Martin Halusa said in an interview after Allianz
published the report from Urgewald. Commerzbank has about EUR 3bn linked
to lignite, according to Urgewald.
Across the border in France, Caisse des Depots & Consignations,
the country’s largest state-controlled financial institution, said it
plans to divest shares of companies that don’t make efforts to cut
greenhouse-gas emissions. It aims to reduce the average carbon footprint
of its listed-stock portfolio by 20% percent from 2014 to 2020, the
Paris-based company said. The group and its CNP Assurances and Bpifrance
units, which hold shares in 100 French companies listed on the SBF120
index, valued the portfolio at EUR 55bn ($58bn) at the end of last year.
“If the voluntary reduction of emissions by companies held in the
portfolio is insufficient in the medium term, the group will reallocate”
investments, Caisse des Depots chief executive officer Pierre-Rene
Lemas said.
Demand for fossil fuels could wane, according to non-profit think
tank Carbon Tracker. Oil, natural gas and coal producers are risking
$2.2 trillion by investing in projects for which there will be no demand
if the world meets a United Nations target of limiting the rise in
temperature to less than 2 degrees Celsius, the group said.
No new coal mines are needed, oil demand will peak around 2020 and
growth in gas will disappoint industry expectations, Carbon Tracker
Initiative said in a report. The US has the greatest exposure with
$412bn of projects at risk up to 2025, followed by Canada with $220bn,
China $179bn, Russia $147bn and Australia $103bn, according to the think
tank.
The world still needs a lot of coal, gas and oil and carbon-based
fuels will meet three-quarters of energy needs over next 30 years, Exxon
Mobil chief executive officer Rex Tillerson said 7 October in London.
The industry is divided. The head of Eni, one of the world’s biggest
oil and natural-gas explorers, said it’s time to scrap the planet’s
reliance on fossil fuels. The industry wants to be part of the solution
to global warming but needs a consistent set of policies out of the
Paris conference that encourages more climate-friendly fuels, Claudio
Descalzi, chief executive officer at Eni, said during a forum on 23
November in New York.
“We have to change the model, a model we’ve built over the last 200
years, which is based on fossil fuels,” said Descalzi, whose Rome-based
company is the world’s seventh biggest oil producer by market value.
In corporate news, Abengoa’s bonds and stock tumbled to records after
the embattled renewable-energy company said it was seeking preliminary
protection from creditors following the breakdown of talks with a new
investor.
Abengoa, which employs more than 24,000 people worldwide, has been
seeking to reassure investors that it can generate enough cash to
service its debt pile of about EUR 8.9bn of consolidated gross debt.
Green bonds continued to make headlines, with HSBC Holdings issuing its first green bond, raising EUR 500m ($531m).
The senior unsecured debt will pay an annual coupon of 0.625%,
maturing in five years. HSBC France was the issuer. HSBC joins a handful
of commercial banks such as Credit Agricole Corporate & Investment
Bank, DNB and National Australia Bank that have issued climate debt.
“This is HSBC’s debut green bond,” group treasurer Bryan Pascoe said.
“The success of this trade shows the appeal of green bonds beyond the
traditional investor base and shows how the private sector can play an
important role in sustainable finance.”
In the UK, the government shed more light on its renewables policy,
when Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne said spending on
renewable heat subsidies will be capped and expenditure on energy
efficiency measures will be cut in an effort to curb costs to consumers.
The U.K. also scrapped funding of GBP 1bn ($1.5bn) for a competition to spur carbon capture and storage, a blow to efforts to clean up fossil-fuel pollution from factories and power plants.
The cash will no longer be available for so called CCS technology,
which takes emissions blamed for global warming and sequesters them
underground, the Department of Energy and Climate Change said. The two
groups competing for the funds were a partnership between SSE and Royal
Dutch Shell, and another between Alstomand BOC Group.
Nuclear, however, was given a nod. The U.K. plans to build one of the
world’s first small modular nuclear reactors in the 2020s, the Treasury
said. Britain will plough GBP 250m ($378m) into research and
development for the reactors over the next five years, the Treasury
said. A competition for funding will be held “early next year,” it said.
Deals in the past week were dominated by Portuguese and French
companies. EDP Renovaveis said it will sell its stake in a US wind
portfolio with a net capacity of 340MW to a group of investors led by
Axium Infrastructure.
The equivalent enterprise value is $590m based on the transaction
price and the outstanding and expected tax equity liabilities of the
projects, the Madrid-based renewables developer said. The US wind
portfolio has seven wind farms with a total installed capacity of 1GW
and long-term power purchase agreements. The stake sale is part of
EDPR’s “asset rotation program” that generates funds for re-investment
and growth.
Electricite de France, the biggest operator of nuclear plants, plans
to keep spending EUR 2bn ($2.1bn) to EUR 2.5bn per year to build wind
farms, solar parks and hydroelectric dams to almost double its renewable
energy capacity by 2030.
The utility will boost that capacity to more than 50GW from its
current 28GW by adding about 5GW in France and the rest mainly in Latin
America, Asia, the Middle East and Africa, said Jerome Cahuzac, head of
EDF’s renewable energies.
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Monday, 7 December 2015
UDSM on project to understand dynamics of Africa`s fish trade
There is great potential in the fisheries sector to enhance Tanzania's food and nutrition security and help reduce poverty at both the household and national levels.(File photo) |
Tanzania, like many African countries is endowed with very rich fish
resources from the India Ocean, several lakes, rivers, floodplains and
fish farms. Fish from these water bodies generate a range of benefits
including but not limited to food and nutrition security, livelihoods,
exports and ecological resilience.
According to the Food and Agriculture (FAO) the State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture report (2014), the value added by the fisheries sector as a whole in 2011 was estimated at more than US$24 billion, representing 1.26 percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of all African countries.
It is also estimated that the fisheries sector in Africa directly employs 12.3 million people as full-time fishers or full-time and part-time processors. Additionally, the livelihoods of millions more are directly dependent on the fisheries sector.
World Fish Center (2015) reports that Africa’s GDP growth in the recent years has been impressive, although the continent plays an insignificant role in global trade.
It is estimated that Africa's shares in global exports is barely 3 percent. Furthermore, African countries trade more with the rest of the world than they do among themselves.
In 2012, the formal intra-African trade was estimated to be around 11percent of the continent's total, compared to 54 percent in Asia; 32 percent in advanced economies of America, and 66 percent in Europe
There is great potential in the fisheries sector to enhance Tanzania’s food and nutrition security and help reduce poverty at both the household and national levels.
But the trade in fish in Africa is constrained by inadequate market infrastructure such as impassable roads during the rainy seasons and inhibiting policy and institutional frameworks.
The latter has led to a vibrant informal trade system that is thought to be higher than trade through the normal way. There seems to be a lot of fish which crosses the borders to various destinations which are unreported, unrecorded and untaxed.
The poor infrastructure has led to high transport costs, complex trade rules and inadequate market information, all which have prevented Tanzania and Africa as a whole, from optimising the social and economic benefits available from fish trade.
The University of Dar es Salaam, together with eight other universities from across Africa, is part of a game-changing project called “Improving Food Security and Reducing Poverty through Intra-regional Fish Trade in Sub-Saharan Africa” (also referred to as Fish Trade Programme).
The programme undertakes research, generates and share information on the structure, products and value of intra-regional fish trade and its contribution to food security in sub-Saharan Africa.
The other universities taking part in this prestigious project are Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources (Luanar) of Malawi, Cheikh Anta Diop University (Senegal), University of Ibadan (Nigeria), University of Ghana, University of the Western Cape (South Africa), Makerere University (Uganda) and Felix Houphouet-Boigny University (Cote d’Ivoire).
The Universities in Fish Trade Programmeis part of the implementation phase of “Fish Trade for a Better Future”, whose focus is to improve food and nutritional security and reducing poverty in Sub-Saharan Africa by supporting and strengthening the capacities of countries to better integrate intra-regional fish trade into their development and food security agendas.
Fish Trade for a Better Future is an EU-funded project that was established to facilitate the development of fish trade in Africa by focusing on conducting research to generate data that will inform crucial policy decisions.
The project is led by World Fish in partnership with the African Union Inter-Africa Bureau for Animal Resources (AU-IBAR) and NEPAD.
Fish Trade for a Better Future aims to, among other goals, increase the capacities for trade amongst private sector associations, in particular of women fish processors and traders and equip them to make better use of expanding trade opportunities through competitive small and medium scale enterprises.
It also aims to facilitate the adoption and implementation of appropriate policies, procedures and standards by all key players participating in intra-regional fish trade.
“The trade in fish and fish products among African countries in becoming increasingly important for the food security and economic development of countries,” Dr Sloans Chimatiro, Programme Manager for Fish Trade said.
“But there is also an increasing demand by fish processors and traders, together with governments, that Africa changes the way it trades its fish.”
The value of Africa’s fisheries trade was estimated at more than US$24 billion in 2011, representing 1.26 percent of the GDP of all African countries.
It is estimated that the fisheries sector directly employs 12.3 million people as full-time fishers, full-time or part-time processors.
Globally, the fish commodity trade was valued at US$130 billion in 2013.
Students from Dar es Salaam and the other universities will be be commissioned to conduct fish trade corridor analysis but an important element of that will be ensuring that the research they do is relevant to the policy makers.
The students and their supervisors will be mentored by international experts in fisheries, including from World Fish, in order to provide the universities with global technological support and expertise.
They will also be meeting and advocating with policy makers, so that their research and policy recommendations has input from all stakeholders.
Onyango, P. O. of the University of Dar es Salaam says Africa’s GDP growth in the recent past has been impressive, although the continent plays an insignificant role in global trade. It is estimated that Africa's shares in global exports is barely 3 percent.
Furthermore, African countries trade more with the rest of the world than they do among themselves. In 2012, the formal intra-African trade was estimated to be around 11 percent of the continent's total, compared to 54 percent in Asia; 32 percent in advanced economies of America, and 66 percent in Europe (WorldFish Center, 2015).
He further says, Tanzania and Uganda are the main fish exporting countries to the region, while Kenya was an importer. Other export destination countries were DRC, Rwanda and Burundi.
Sun-dried dagaa and smoked tilapia are the leading regional export products. Kenya, Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi and Rwanda remain the highest importers of fish from Lake Victoria.
Little, if any, fish was exported regionally from Kenya. In addition, the main marketing functions performed by the operators included production, processing, grading of fish, packaging, transportation, in addition to buying and selling. Seasonality on the market is exhibited mainly by changes in prices and this is attributed to fluctuations in the supply from the source countries.
In Kenya the study revealed that regional fish trade involved four fish species, namely, tilapia, dagaa, Nile perch, and the happlochromines.
Only semi-processed processed Nile perch fish and its by-products were imported into the Kenyan market. Nile perch traders do not deal in whole fish but by-products such as skin and chips as well as belly flaps, skins and maws.
In Tanzania, Nile perch and dagaa have been the fish most traded (Onyango et al 2006b). The Nile perch is traded in different forms, including fish chest, fish frames, off-cuts, fish maws, fish skin and dried fish/kayabo.
In Uganda, the species traded included Nile perch, tilapia and dagaa. Nile perch was traded smoked, sun-dried and also as by-products. Tilapia was traded fresh, smoked and sun-dried. Mukene was traded in the sun-dried form.
Fish species and products on Uganda’s regional fish trade did not only come from Lake Victoria but also from other lakes, namely Kyoga, Albert, George and Edward.
The sources of fish supply to the regional market were examined. As indicated earlier, Tanzania and Uganda were exporting countries in the region while Kenya was an importer.
In Kenya, Lake Victoria was the main source of fish in the regional trade. However, some fish came from Lakes Kyoga and Albert. Similarly, Nile perch and dagaa came into Kenya from the Tanzanian District of Tarime. Kisumu was a major entry port for fish brought in on large vessels.
Regionally, fish traders consist of both men and women (Heck et al, 2004) with more women observed in Kenya and Uganda (Table 7). Different nationalities are involved in other the countries except in Tanzania, where the nationals handled the trade.
Traders are of middle age across the countries. Regionally, the majority of the traders have attained Primary level of education. Most of the traders are either wholesalers or retailers. Various means of transportation is used with Tanzanian traders using mostly boats while Uganda traders use mainly trucks.
However, Onyango mentioned some of the constraints in regional marketing of fish as: Limited capital to meet the investment and operational requirements of the regional fish trade, such as fish purchase, preservation, sanitation and display facilities.
Poor shelter for trading fish, as most of the markets are open air types, which made the commodities vulnerable to weather conditions such as rain, extreme sunlight and heat; inadequate power as well as ice for preservation purposes; and high levy charges imposed by the various authorities in the regional fish traders.
Supply constraints
Fish scarcity is among the constraints in the regional fish market. Other supply constraints include: High competition for low supply from the different sources and several traders. Today traders follow the fish even from the landing sites.
Price fluctuations and the risks posed; and unpredictable rainy seasons that affected business as well as fish quality.
Technological constraints
Constraints related to fish handling could affect fish quality and cause tremendous losses to traders due to fish spoilage. The major constraints noted are inadequate handling facilities, the difficulty in getting ice blocks for preserving fish and processing facilities.
The constraints are: Spoilage of fish, inadequate handling facilities, lack preserving facilities, lack of display facilities, lack drying facilities, and lack of shelter from rains.
Financial constraints
Accessing credit remains a great constraint to the regional fish traders, limiting their working capital required for the trade. Traders cannot access credit due to among others: Lack of collateral in loan acquisition.
This has therefore meant that traders could access credit facilities from fellow fishers or business people in their villages based on trust.
Some traders who receive loans are unable to pay back as they have encountered losses in fish sales.
Traders fear that fish being a perishable good makes it risky to take a loan. This is because fish can rot if not bought and with no proper storage facilities they might not be able to repay. Traders lack bank accounts.
Transportation constraints
Boats used to transport fish are not reliable. Traders can get capsized in the lake and thereby lose a consignment.
There is no payment for any loss during transport as traders did not insure their goods while transporting them.
There was no transport system devoted to regional fish trade and traders often had to share carriers with passengers and other goods. Some roads not accessible during rainy season
Information constraints
Market information is crucial for traders if they are to make any profit. However, information is not always available when it is needed. Most traders do not have any market information.
The cost situations
Transport is regarded as the highest cost item in regional fish trade. Transport cost varies, depending on the distance to market, quantity of fish and means of transport used. In order to mitigate high transport costs, traders often teamed up and sent one representative with consignments or hired common vehicles.
Package costs included mainly labour for assembling bundles of processed fish and such packaging materials as polythene bags and ropes.
Storage is not considered to be of high cost to the traders as most of the fish is readily disposed of at the destination markets, from where the importers take responsibility for its storage.
Taxes and levies are high from the regional perspective. However, different countries had different levies on fish trade. In Uganda, it was the policy not to tax exports but traders had to pay fish export license fees as well as fish movement permit fees at the landing sites of origin.
Similarly in Kenya, most traders paid a fixed tax level irrespective of the volume of fish traded, which was considered minimal. In Rwanda food items imported are not taxed but DRC traders using Rwanda as transit have to pay for a transit fees.
Fish spoilage losses are incurred by some traders whenever it is not handled, preserved or transported appropriately. Weather, method of preservation and the means of transportation used are the main factors responsible for these losses.
According to the Food and Agriculture (FAO) the State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture report (2014), the value added by the fisheries sector as a whole in 2011 was estimated at more than US$24 billion, representing 1.26 percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of all African countries.
It is also estimated that the fisheries sector in Africa directly employs 12.3 million people as full-time fishers or full-time and part-time processors. Additionally, the livelihoods of millions more are directly dependent on the fisheries sector.
World Fish Center (2015) reports that Africa’s GDP growth in the recent years has been impressive, although the continent plays an insignificant role in global trade.
It is estimated that Africa's shares in global exports is barely 3 percent. Furthermore, African countries trade more with the rest of the world than they do among themselves.
In 2012, the formal intra-African trade was estimated to be around 11percent of the continent's total, compared to 54 percent in Asia; 32 percent in advanced economies of America, and 66 percent in Europe
There is great potential in the fisheries sector to enhance Tanzania’s food and nutrition security and help reduce poverty at both the household and national levels.
But the trade in fish in Africa is constrained by inadequate market infrastructure such as impassable roads during the rainy seasons and inhibiting policy and institutional frameworks.
The latter has led to a vibrant informal trade system that is thought to be higher than trade through the normal way. There seems to be a lot of fish which crosses the borders to various destinations which are unreported, unrecorded and untaxed.
The poor infrastructure has led to high transport costs, complex trade rules and inadequate market information, all which have prevented Tanzania and Africa as a whole, from optimising the social and economic benefits available from fish trade.
The University of Dar es Salaam, together with eight other universities from across Africa, is part of a game-changing project called “Improving Food Security and Reducing Poverty through Intra-regional Fish Trade in Sub-Saharan Africa” (also referred to as Fish Trade Programme).
The programme undertakes research, generates and share information on the structure, products and value of intra-regional fish trade and its contribution to food security in sub-Saharan Africa.
The other universities taking part in this prestigious project are Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources (Luanar) of Malawi, Cheikh Anta Diop University (Senegal), University of Ibadan (Nigeria), University of Ghana, University of the Western Cape (South Africa), Makerere University (Uganda) and Felix Houphouet-Boigny University (Cote d’Ivoire).
The Universities in Fish Trade Programmeis part of the implementation phase of “Fish Trade for a Better Future”, whose focus is to improve food and nutritional security and reducing poverty in Sub-Saharan Africa by supporting and strengthening the capacities of countries to better integrate intra-regional fish trade into their development and food security agendas.
Fish Trade for a Better Future is an EU-funded project that was established to facilitate the development of fish trade in Africa by focusing on conducting research to generate data that will inform crucial policy decisions.
The project is led by World Fish in partnership with the African Union Inter-Africa Bureau for Animal Resources (AU-IBAR) and NEPAD.
Fish Trade for a Better Future aims to, among other goals, increase the capacities for trade amongst private sector associations, in particular of women fish processors and traders and equip them to make better use of expanding trade opportunities through competitive small and medium scale enterprises.
It also aims to facilitate the adoption and implementation of appropriate policies, procedures and standards by all key players participating in intra-regional fish trade.
“The trade in fish and fish products among African countries in becoming increasingly important for the food security and economic development of countries,” Dr Sloans Chimatiro, Programme Manager for Fish Trade said.
“But there is also an increasing demand by fish processors and traders, together with governments, that Africa changes the way it trades its fish.”
The value of Africa’s fisheries trade was estimated at more than US$24 billion in 2011, representing 1.26 percent of the GDP of all African countries.
It is estimated that the fisheries sector directly employs 12.3 million people as full-time fishers, full-time or part-time processors.
Globally, the fish commodity trade was valued at US$130 billion in 2013.
Students from Dar es Salaam and the other universities will be be commissioned to conduct fish trade corridor analysis but an important element of that will be ensuring that the research they do is relevant to the policy makers.
The students and their supervisors will be mentored by international experts in fisheries, including from World Fish, in order to provide the universities with global technological support and expertise.
They will also be meeting and advocating with policy makers, so that their research and policy recommendations has input from all stakeholders.
Onyango, P. O. of the University of Dar es Salaam says Africa’s GDP growth in the recent past has been impressive, although the continent plays an insignificant role in global trade. It is estimated that Africa's shares in global exports is barely 3 percent.
Furthermore, African countries trade more with the rest of the world than they do among themselves. In 2012, the formal intra-African trade was estimated to be around 11 percent of the continent's total, compared to 54 percent in Asia; 32 percent in advanced economies of America, and 66 percent in Europe (WorldFish Center, 2015).
He further says, Tanzania and Uganda are the main fish exporting countries to the region, while Kenya was an importer. Other export destination countries were DRC, Rwanda and Burundi.
Sun-dried dagaa and smoked tilapia are the leading regional export products. Kenya, Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi and Rwanda remain the highest importers of fish from Lake Victoria.
Little, if any, fish was exported regionally from Kenya. In addition, the main marketing functions performed by the operators included production, processing, grading of fish, packaging, transportation, in addition to buying and selling. Seasonality on the market is exhibited mainly by changes in prices and this is attributed to fluctuations in the supply from the source countries.
In Kenya the study revealed that regional fish trade involved four fish species, namely, tilapia, dagaa, Nile perch, and the happlochromines.
Only semi-processed processed Nile perch fish and its by-products were imported into the Kenyan market. Nile perch traders do not deal in whole fish but by-products such as skin and chips as well as belly flaps, skins and maws.
In Tanzania, Nile perch and dagaa have been the fish most traded (Onyango et al 2006b). The Nile perch is traded in different forms, including fish chest, fish frames, off-cuts, fish maws, fish skin and dried fish/kayabo.
In Uganda, the species traded included Nile perch, tilapia and dagaa. Nile perch was traded smoked, sun-dried and also as by-products. Tilapia was traded fresh, smoked and sun-dried. Mukene was traded in the sun-dried form.
Fish species and products on Uganda’s regional fish trade did not only come from Lake Victoria but also from other lakes, namely Kyoga, Albert, George and Edward.
The sources of fish supply to the regional market were examined. As indicated earlier, Tanzania and Uganda were exporting countries in the region while Kenya was an importer.
In Kenya, Lake Victoria was the main source of fish in the regional trade. However, some fish came from Lakes Kyoga and Albert. Similarly, Nile perch and dagaa came into Kenya from the Tanzanian District of Tarime. Kisumu was a major entry port for fish brought in on large vessels.
Regionally, fish traders consist of both men and women (Heck et al, 2004) with more women observed in Kenya and Uganda (Table 7). Different nationalities are involved in other the countries except in Tanzania, where the nationals handled the trade.
Traders are of middle age across the countries. Regionally, the majority of the traders have attained Primary level of education. Most of the traders are either wholesalers or retailers. Various means of transportation is used with Tanzanian traders using mostly boats while Uganda traders use mainly trucks.
However, Onyango mentioned some of the constraints in regional marketing of fish as: Limited capital to meet the investment and operational requirements of the regional fish trade, such as fish purchase, preservation, sanitation and display facilities.
Poor shelter for trading fish, as most of the markets are open air types, which made the commodities vulnerable to weather conditions such as rain, extreme sunlight and heat; inadequate power as well as ice for preservation purposes; and high levy charges imposed by the various authorities in the regional fish traders.
Supply constraints
Fish scarcity is among the constraints in the regional fish market. Other supply constraints include: High competition for low supply from the different sources and several traders. Today traders follow the fish even from the landing sites.
Price fluctuations and the risks posed; and unpredictable rainy seasons that affected business as well as fish quality.
Technological constraints
Constraints related to fish handling could affect fish quality and cause tremendous losses to traders due to fish spoilage. The major constraints noted are inadequate handling facilities, the difficulty in getting ice blocks for preserving fish and processing facilities.
The constraints are: Spoilage of fish, inadequate handling facilities, lack preserving facilities, lack of display facilities, lack drying facilities, and lack of shelter from rains.
Financial constraints
Accessing credit remains a great constraint to the regional fish traders, limiting their working capital required for the trade. Traders cannot access credit due to among others: Lack of collateral in loan acquisition.
This has therefore meant that traders could access credit facilities from fellow fishers or business people in their villages based on trust.
Some traders who receive loans are unable to pay back as they have encountered losses in fish sales.
Traders fear that fish being a perishable good makes it risky to take a loan. This is because fish can rot if not bought and with no proper storage facilities they might not be able to repay. Traders lack bank accounts.
Transportation constraints
Boats used to transport fish are not reliable. Traders can get capsized in the lake and thereby lose a consignment.
There is no payment for any loss during transport as traders did not insure their goods while transporting them.
There was no transport system devoted to regional fish trade and traders often had to share carriers with passengers and other goods. Some roads not accessible during rainy season
Information constraints
Market information is crucial for traders if they are to make any profit. However, information is not always available when it is needed. Most traders do not have any market information.
The cost situations
Transport is regarded as the highest cost item in regional fish trade. Transport cost varies, depending on the distance to market, quantity of fish and means of transport used. In order to mitigate high transport costs, traders often teamed up and sent one representative with consignments or hired common vehicles.
Package costs included mainly labour for assembling bundles of processed fish and such packaging materials as polythene bags and ropes.
Storage is not considered to be of high cost to the traders as most of the fish is readily disposed of at the destination markets, from where the importers take responsibility for its storage.
Taxes and levies are high from the regional perspective. However, different countries had different levies on fish trade. In Uganda, it was the policy not to tax exports but traders had to pay fish export license fees as well as fish movement permit fees at the landing sites of origin.
Similarly in Kenya, most traders paid a fixed tax level irrespective of the volume of fish traded, which was considered minimal. In Rwanda food items imported are not taxed but DRC traders using Rwanda as transit have to pay for a transit fees.
Fish spoilage losses are incurred by some traders whenever it is not handled, preserved or transported appropriately. Weather, method of preservation and the means of transportation used are the main factors responsible for these losses.
African forestry scheme aims to build prosperity by restoring landscape
A seedling of the Melia Volkensii tree is planted in the village of Nyumbani in Kitui, Kenya, one of 14 African countries so far involved in the AFR100 initiative. Photograph: Ben Curtis/AP |
More than a dozen African countries have joined an “unprecedented” $1.6bn (£1bn) initiative to boost development and fight climate change by restoring 100m hectares (247m acres) of forest across the continent over the next 15 years.
The African Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative – known as AFR100 – was launched on Sunday at a Global Landscapes Forum meeting during the Paris climate change conference.
It will be underpinned by a $1bn investment from the World Bank in 14 African countries over the next 15 years and by $600m of private sector investment over the same period.
The initiative will also be supported by Germany’s Federal Ministry for Economic Co-operation and Development, the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (Nepad) and the World Resources Institute.
To date, Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Niger, Uganda, Burundi and Rwanda have between them committed more than 42m hectares of land for forest landscape restoration, an area larger than Zimbabwe or Germany.
Cameroon, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Congo-Brazzaville and Togo have also committed to forthcoming hectare targets as part of the AFR100.
Participants point out that forests and trees contribute to African landscapes by reducing desertification and improving soil fertility, water resources and food security, as well as by increasing biodiversity and the capacity for climate change resilience and mitigation.
They say the initiative will not only help to build on existing climate pledges made by African countries, but will also provide an engine for economic growth and development.
“Restoring our landscapes brings prosperity, security and opportunity,” said Dr Vincent Biruta, Rwanda’s minister of natural resources.
“With forest landscape restoration we’ve seen agricultural yields rise and farmers in our rural communities diversify their livelihoods and improve their well being.”
The commitments made through AFR100 will build on the Bonn challenge – launched four years ago – which aims to revitalize 150m hectares of land by 2020, and the New York Declaration on Forests, which pushes the target up to 350m hectares by 2030.
The new initiative is intended to capitalise on “a strong tradition” of successful forest landscape restoration in Africa: local communities in the Tigray region of Ethiopia have already restored more than 1m hectares, while in Niger, farmers have improved food security for 2.5 million people by increasing the number of on-farm trees across 5m hectares of agricultural land.
Dr Ibrahim Assane Mayaki, the CEO of Nepad and former prime minister of Niger, said that countries such as Malawi, Ethiopia and Mali were already reaping the benefits of restoration, but added: “We need to scale up restoration across the whole continent - more than 700m hectares of land in Africa have potential for restoration.”
Wanjira Mathai, chair of the Green Belt Movement and daughter of the Nobel peace prize laureate Wangari Maathai, said: “The scale of these new restoration commitments is unprecedented.
China's cloned cows: meat on the table or environmental disaster?
Niu Niu, a genetically modified cow, is seen with its calf at the experimentation base of Beijing University of Agriculture. Photograph: Li Wen/Alamy |
A biotech consortium in China has announced that it intends to open a facility near Beijing with the aim of cloning up to a million cows a year to meet the country’s growing demand for beef. The factory won’t stop at cows. It also plans to clone racehorses, pets and even sniffer dogs. But the vast majority of animals it produces will be calves for meat production.
In Beijing I read this news with incredulity and dismay. In 2009, I directed the first documentary about China’s rising consumption of meat and the growing industrialisation of its food sector, including livestock production. In the film, What’s for Dinner?, I explored a nexus of problems related to intensive animal agriculture: environmental pollution, food security, public health (including the use of antibiotics and hormones in feed), climate change and animal welfare.
Since then, I’ve promoted public awareness on these issues, screening the film around China and employing popular social media platforms. We’re attracting more attention from a growing number of people concerned about the environmental and moral implications of eating animal products.
Unfortunately, meat production and consumption in China continue to rocket. The country is already the world’s top producer of meat; on average, each person consumes about 60kg a year (mainly pork, plus chicken and beef). In the US, each person eats almost twice as much meat as someone in China. But since China has four times as many people, overall it consumes about double the meat eaten in the US.
The world’s governments and thousands of civil society representatives are meeting in Paris to confront the challenge of climate change. The Chinese government wishes to be a global leader, greening its energy sources and reducing its greenhouse gas emissions.
Beijing is acutely aware of how unhappy we citizens are to breathe the smog in our cities or smell the foul odours of our polluted rivers. Yet, by expanding exponentially our commitment to intensive animal agriculture, China will increase emissions of methane, carbon dioxide and another potent greenhouse gas, nitrous oxide, which has nearly 300 times the warming power of carbon dioxide.
The project to clone cows is a response to increasing demand for beef and China’s urge to compete with agribusinesses overseas. (In 2014, China produced 11.5% of the world’s beef, nearly 7m tonnes , according to the US Department of Agriculture.) Traditionally, beef wasn’t a staple in local cuisine in most parts of China. In the south of the country, where I grew up, oxen and buffaloes were more valuable alive; they were how rural families sustained their livelihoods.
It is ironic that China should be embracing so wholeheartedly western food habits along with capitalism. For all their scientific novelty, these cloned cows (should they materialise) will probably still end up on industrial-scale factory farms. The facilities are already notorious for the dangers they pose to human health via zoonotic diseases.
Given that cloned animals share the same genes, they have even higher risks of succumbing when diseases strike. China’s pigs were recently subject to global scrutiny for harboring drug-resistant strains of bacteria. This came about because of producers’ overuse of the antibiotics that enable densely packed animals to fend off infections and grow bigger, faster. So extensive is the abuse of antibiotics in Chinese and global animal agriculture that some scientists believe the world may be entering a “post-antibiotic era” in which antibiotics used to treat common human illnesses will have lost their power to cure.
Of course, we might ultimately clone farmed animals that no longer need antibiotics. However, genetically engineered food has met with resistance from the Chinese public in recent years. It is possible to imagine that the beef from these cloned cows will receive even greater hostility (unless the factory manages to hide the source of its animals).
Even if these animals survive disease and public rejection, they will still need to eat, and will still produce waste and climate-warming methane. China, like every other country that has adopted the western-developed, factory-farming model, generates more animal waste than it can handle. Some of it makes its way into our waterways and lakes – half of which are already severely polluted by industrial effluent and chemical fertilizers. And industrial agriculture is now responsible for a larger share of China’s water pollution than industrial factories. If we massively increase our animal production, what will we do with the lagoons of manure? How will we protect our precious potable groundwater, or keep enough of it for us – especially when a beef cow, depending on its stage of growth, consumes up to 27 gallons of water a day.
(Cows raised for beef are the most resource- consuming and greenhouse gas-emitting of all farmed animals.) Parts of China are already water-insecure, and the government is spending billions of dollars to channel fresh water from the south to China’s more industrialized north.
Algae in the water of Lake Taihu has compromised drinking water for millions of people in China’s Jiangsu province. Photograph: Rex/Imaginechina |
If we massively increase our animal production, what will we do with the lagoons of manure? How will we protect our precious potable groundwater, or keep enough of it for us – especially when a beef cow, depending on its stage of growth, consumes up to 27 gallons of water a day. (Cows raised for beef are the most resource- consuming and greenhouse gas-emitting of all farmed animals.) Parts of China are already water-insecure, and the government is spending billions of dollars to channel fresh water from the south to China’s more industrialized north.
The Chinese government is acutely aware of food insecurity (it has a strategic pork reserve in case supplies are constrained). With the world’s largest population, a recently relaxed family planning policy, and an economy that threatens to exhaust our finite natural resources, it is not difficult to envision a future China where farmed animals compete for the little land and even less water remaining.
Our country used to have enough grain to feed itself. Now we have become the world’s largest importer of soybeans – nearly all of which go to feed animals. In 2013-14, imports of soybeans (mainly from the US and Brazil) totalled 70.4m tonnes , almost six times the level of domestic production. Corn imports are rising, too. Does China want to rely even more heavily than it already does on the economic and political stability of foreign countries in order to obtain commodity crops?
Enormous factories such as the one in Tianjin will lead to reduced space and greatly compromised animal welfare for cows. The health of the people who eat them will also be compromised. It will only be a matter of time before more animals are cloned, as long as it makes profit. If they are imperfect, they will be slaughtered or discarded on a scale virtually unprecedented in human history.
It is hard to imagine this commercialisation of science wouldn’t be subject to protests or regulatation by western governments. But China’s helter-skelter commitment to capitalism and its lack of genuine “cultural conservatism” reflects a marginalisation of values that society used to hold dear, such as Confucian harmony, Daoist concerns for nature, and the Buddhist honouring of all life.
China no longer needs to replicate the worst excesses of the west. We have a responsibility to our country, our natural resources, the global climate and our own consciences to stop this madness before it is too late.
How to stop zoonoses spreading – don't keep chickens under the bed
Living among animals is risking the health of poor people in cities. But
banning urban livestock or getting rid of markets can often do more
harm than good
.
As more people leave the countryside for the city in the developing world, many continue to rely on agriculture for a living. At least 800 million people in cities in poor countries practise urban agriculture, from growing vegetables to keeping animals – from chickens to camels – often in close confinement in densely populated areas.
The close proximity of animals and humans can pose health risks. Zoonoses – diseases transmitted between animals and humans – are a health problem that particularly affects the poor in developing countries. New research from the International Livestock Research Institute (Ilri) found that zoonoses and diseases recently emerged from animals (swine flu, bird flu, Sars) make up a quarter of infectious diseases in developing countries, compared with just 0.7% in rich countries.
Researchers, however, warn that a draconian approach to urban livestock and informal markets – where traders are unlicensed and pay no tax, and which lack health and safety rules – can end up doing more harm than good. Outright bans on livestock in urban areas or informal markets is not the answer, they say.
"Getting rid of informal markets is impossible," says Delia Grace, a food safety specialist with Ilri, who is based in Nairobi but was in London last week. "It forces trading to go underground. In Kampala [Uganda], we found traders who were harassed adopted less good practices, which is no surprise as they have to pay more attention to evading authorities than to hygiene."
Grace rejects the conventional wisdom that supermarkets are necessarily safer than informal markets. Food in traditional markets tends to be cheaper and fresher – the food moves quickly. By contrast, food in supermarkets can sit around in cabinets for four or five days and can be subject to power cuts.
Ilri experts said studies in east Africa, north-east India and Vietnam came to the surprising conclusion that food sold in formal markets (supermarkets), though commonly perceived to be safer, may have lower compliance with standards than informally marketed food.
"This emphasises that food safety policy should be based on evidence
and not perception, and failure to do this may be prejudicial to the
poor, who dominate and rely on informal value chains," Grace says.
She argues that education and training rather than heavy-handed tactics are more effective ways to improve safety in the food chain (from farm to fork). Attempts to improve food and safety through ordering farmers to act is likely to be ineffective, as opposed to bringing onside poor dairy farmers and encouraging them to be "risk managers", as was the case in Kampala.
In Bangladesh, where poor people often keep chickens under the bed in cramped conditions, one appropriate response would be to suggest they be kept in a wicker cage at a distance from the bed, or in a shed close to home. Other simple approaches that have led to improvements in food safety in Kenya and India (milk), and Nigeria (meat) include the use of wide-necked vessels for milk that are easy to clean, tests for food safety that can be applied by consumers and traders (lactometers to check for added water), and peer pressure (the desire to be seen as a good parent).
Ilri experts found that gender was a determining factor in food hygiene. Simply put, women were cleaner than men. A study from Ibadan, the capital of Oyo state in southern Nigeria, found that butchers' associations with more women had better food safety practices and better quality of meat, and there was less gastrointestinal illness among people who ate it.
A study in Dagoretti, a district in Nairobi, found women had more exposure to cryptosporidiosis, a diarrheal disease transmitted from cattle to humans through their involvement in milking activities, feeding and watering cattle, and caring for sick household members. But it also identified farm workers – mostly men – as a group with higher exposure risk.
The message from Ilri is that policymakers should avoid kneejerk responses to health scares – blocking smallholder access to markets and favouring industrialisation. "These changes are often based on fear, not facts," say Ilri experts. "Without evidence of risk to human health by informally marketed foods or the best way to manage risks while retaining benefits, the food eaten in poor countries is neither safe nor fair."
As more people leave the countryside for the city in the developing world, many continue to rely on agriculture for a living. At least 800 million people in cities in poor countries practise urban agriculture, from growing vegetables to keeping animals – from chickens to camels – often in close confinement in densely populated areas.
The close proximity of animals and humans can pose health risks. Zoonoses – diseases transmitted between animals and humans – are a health problem that particularly affects the poor in developing countries. New research from the International Livestock Research Institute (Ilri) found that zoonoses and diseases recently emerged from animals (swine flu, bird flu, Sars) make up a quarter of infectious diseases in developing countries, compared with just 0.7% in rich countries.
Researchers, however, warn that a draconian approach to urban livestock and informal markets – where traders are unlicensed and pay no tax, and which lack health and safety rules – can end up doing more harm than good. Outright bans on livestock in urban areas or informal markets is not the answer, they say.
"Getting rid of informal markets is impossible," says Delia Grace, a food safety specialist with Ilri, who is based in Nairobi but was in London last week. "It forces trading to go underground. In Kampala [Uganda], we found traders who were harassed adopted less good practices, which is no surprise as they have to pay more attention to evading authorities than to hygiene."
Grace rejects the conventional wisdom that supermarkets are necessarily safer than informal markets. Food in traditional markets tends to be cheaper and fresher – the food moves quickly. By contrast, food in supermarkets can sit around in cabinets for four or five days and can be subject to power cuts.
Ilri experts said studies in east Africa, north-east India and Vietnam came to the surprising conclusion that food sold in formal markets (supermarkets), though commonly perceived to be safer, may have lower compliance with standards than informally marketed food.
She argues that education and training rather than heavy-handed tactics are more effective ways to improve safety in the food chain (from farm to fork). Attempts to improve food and safety through ordering farmers to act is likely to be ineffective, as opposed to bringing onside poor dairy farmers and encouraging them to be "risk managers", as was the case in Kampala.
In Bangladesh, where poor people often keep chickens under the bed in cramped conditions, one appropriate response would be to suggest they be kept in a wicker cage at a distance from the bed, or in a shed close to home. Other simple approaches that have led to improvements in food safety in Kenya and India (milk), and Nigeria (meat) include the use of wide-necked vessels for milk that are easy to clean, tests for food safety that can be applied by consumers and traders (lactometers to check for added water), and peer pressure (the desire to be seen as a good parent).
Ilri experts found that gender was a determining factor in food hygiene. Simply put, women were cleaner than men. A study from Ibadan, the capital of Oyo state in southern Nigeria, found that butchers' associations with more women had better food safety practices and better quality of meat, and there was less gastrointestinal illness among people who ate it.
A study in Dagoretti, a district in Nairobi, found women had more exposure to cryptosporidiosis, a diarrheal disease transmitted from cattle to humans through their involvement in milking activities, feeding and watering cattle, and caring for sick household members. But it also identified farm workers – mostly men – as a group with higher exposure risk.
The message from Ilri is that policymakers should avoid kneejerk responses to health scares – blocking smallholder access to markets and favouring industrialisation. "These changes are often based on fear, not facts," say Ilri experts. "Without evidence of risk to human health by informally marketed foods or the best way to manage risks while retaining benefits, the food eaten in poor countries is neither safe nor fair."
Sunday, 6 December 2015
Ornua opens Kerrygold packing factory in Nigeria
This Ornua investment is the latest in a series of major global investments aimed at expanding routes to market for Irish dairy produce |
The investment is the latest in a series of major global investments by Ornua as it seeks to expand routes to market for Irish dairy produce.
Irish powdered milk will be exported to Nigeria, Africa's largest economy, and packaged at the facility.
It will be marketed under the Kerrygold brand.
Kerrygold powders are sold in small sachets, pouches or tins, primarily through small distributors.Ornua opened its African headquarters in Port Elizabeth in South Africa in 2013 and currently employs 250 people.
Nigeria is one of the top three importers of powdered milk products in Africa and the largest importer of full-fat milk powder.
The new factory is a joint venture between Ornua and distribution and packing partners, Fareast Mercantile Company Limited (FMCL).
Recent major investments include the development of new and expanded production and innovation facilities in North America, Germany, Spain, the UK, Saudi Arabia, as well as here in Ireland.
Welcoming the opening of the facility Ornua CEO Kevin Lane described the latest facility as "another important step in our growth plans for Africa".
The facility was opened in Lagos by Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine Simon Coveney, who is currently leading a trade mission to Nigeria.
Saturday, 5 December 2015
Minister Coveney Concludes Trade Mission to Africa with €50M of Business Deals for Irish Companies and Lasting Business Partnerships with Significant Future Prospects
Minister for Agriculture, Food and Marine Simon
Coveney TD this evening concluded his weeklong trade mission to West
Africa. Commenting on the trip the Minister said 'with a population
of over 200million, these markets provide a huge opportunity for Irish
business sectors particularly in the areas of agri-food, technology,
education and financial services’.
The Minister concluded his visit in Ghana, celebrating ‘National Farmers Day’ with the National Vice President and the Regional Agriculture Minister for Greater Accra. The Minister stated “I had the unique opportunity of celebrating ‘National Farmers Day’ in Ghana. The theme of this year’s event is aptly named ‘Transform Ghana: Invest in Agriculture’”.
Minister Coveney also met with key political figures in Ghana and Nigeria, including his counterparts in both countries, and has issued invitations to them to visit Ireland next year.
Of the over 40 companies that travelled, a significant number of companies concluded contracts this week with a value of over €50m. A number of key partnerships and business relationships were strengthen during the Trade Mission, which should prove vital for future business opportunities.
In Nigeria, the Minister opened a new packaging and distribution centre for Ornua which will provide a gateway for developing business in West Africa. Ornua already have sales of €130m in 2014 and this facility provides a new route to very potentially lucrative markets. The Minister also launched a new product for another iconic Irish brand Guinness called Guinness ‘Africa Special’. Guinness Nigeria PLC imports Flavour Extract manufactured in St. James’ Gate Dublin, valued at around €60 million per annum.
Congratulating the agencies involved in organising the Trade Mission the Minister said 'this trade mission was a good example of multi agency cooperation between Bord Bia, Enterprise Ireland and the Irish embassy in Nigeria to strengthen our trading interests in emerging markets and use our resources to maximum economic benefit'.
Also during his visit the Minister undertook a number of development related engagements including visiting the UN Humanitarian Response Dispatch Depot with the World Food Program*. Commenting on the work being done here the Minister said 'Ireland is a long term partner of the WFP in the areas of nutrition and agriculture. It has been very worthwhile to meet those involved in running these programs while here.'
In conclusion, the Minister said the Trade Mission has been hugely successful and opened many new opportunities in an exciting and growing market.
The Minister concluded his visit in Ghana, celebrating ‘National Farmers Day’ with the National Vice President and the Regional Agriculture Minister for Greater Accra. The Minister stated “I had the unique opportunity of celebrating ‘National Farmers Day’ in Ghana. The theme of this year’s event is aptly named ‘Transform Ghana: Invest in Agriculture’”.
Minister Coveney also met with key political figures in Ghana and Nigeria, including his counterparts in both countries, and has issued invitations to them to visit Ireland next year.
Of the over 40 companies that travelled, a significant number of companies concluded contracts this week with a value of over €50m. A number of key partnerships and business relationships were strengthen during the Trade Mission, which should prove vital for future business opportunities.
In Nigeria, the Minister opened a new packaging and distribution centre for Ornua which will provide a gateway for developing business in West Africa. Ornua already have sales of €130m in 2014 and this facility provides a new route to very potentially lucrative markets. The Minister also launched a new product for another iconic Irish brand Guinness called Guinness ‘Africa Special’. Guinness Nigeria PLC imports Flavour Extract manufactured in St. James’ Gate Dublin, valued at around €60 million per annum.
Congratulating the agencies involved in organising the Trade Mission the Minister said 'this trade mission was a good example of multi agency cooperation between Bord Bia, Enterprise Ireland and the Irish embassy in Nigeria to strengthen our trading interests in emerging markets and use our resources to maximum economic benefit'.
Also during his visit the Minister undertook a number of development related engagements including visiting the UN Humanitarian Response Dispatch Depot with the World Food Program*. Commenting on the work being done here the Minister said 'Ireland is a long term partner of the WFP in the areas of nutrition and agriculture. It has been very worthwhile to meet those involved in running these programs while here.'
In conclusion, the Minister said the Trade Mission has been hugely successful and opened many new opportunities in an exciting and growing market.
Nigeria, Global Good Sign MoU on Technological Solutions
farmland |
Details of the MoU indicate it will provide the framework for identifying specific challenges in sectors such as agriculture and healthcare, and provide the necessary technological solutions to impact the lives of Nigerians. A statement by the Special Assistant to the Vice-President on Media and Publicity, Mr Laolu Akande, said the Vice-President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo signed for Nigeria while Mr David Keogh, the Director of Global Good Fund, signed on behalf of the Fund.
In the speech of the Vice President delivered by Akande, the Vice-President said the administration “is interested in the idea of using technology, because it is the way forward for those interested in rapid growth in the next decade”. He said there was the need to develop specific technology solutions that would target low level subsistence farmers and small, micro and medium enterprises, with the resultant effect of impacting lives.
While commending the initiative to engage with the Global Good Fund in the effort, the Vice-President charged the partners to ensure that measurable targets are set to achieve tangible results. He stated that the company, working in collaboration with multi-lateral agencies, non-profit organizations and governments, would identify challenges in different value chains and provide technological solutions to these challenges.
Poultry Production in Nigeria To Get A Boost Through Artificial Insemination- Minister
Poultry |
The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, said the ministry would embark on Artificial Insemination (AI) to boost livestock production in the country.
Ogbeh revealed this while receiving a delegation of Irish Government officials on trade mission to Nigeria led by the Irish Minister of Agriculture, Marine and Defence, Mr Sean Coveney.
According to him,the ministry was opened to learning and exchange of ideas with her Irish counterpart to establish fodder centers across the country.
“’We have cattle breeding problems and we need to seriously embark on artificial insemination. We also need to create fodder centres across the country because cattle migration is causing a lot of problem in this country.We need to put up green areas because desertification is encroaching from the North at about 2km per annum, ’’he said.
He assured the delegation of Nigeria’s readiness to do business with Ireland, saying that there are loads of window investments and bilateral trade opportunities in the agricultural sector that can benefit both countries.
FG partnering of farmers on free meal scheme will reduce post-harvest loss – Afri-CASD
free feeding scheme for students |
To enhance the free feeding scheme for students, which
was one of the campaign promises made by President Muhammadu Buhari, the
African Centre for Food, Agriculture and Sustainable Development
(Afri-CASD) has called on the Federal Government to partner local
farmers in the scheme implementation.
The Centre stated that partnering with farmers to drive the initiative would boost food production locally and help reduce the rate of post-harvest losses. Speaking during a briefing in Abuja, Afri-CASD Director of Communications, Mr. Bolaji Akindehinde, said engaging farmers in the scheme would drive positive change in the economy and most importantly motivate farmers to do more. He said farmers at that point would believe more in the Federal Government’s sincerity to diversify the economy and develop the agriculture sector beyond what some have termed lip service.
The Buhari-led administration, as part of its campaign promises, vowed to introduce free meals for school children, as part of measures to promote nutrition and education.
“Can you imagine what will accrue to farmers if the federal or state governments patronize farmers directly through the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development or State Ministry of Agriculture while implementing the free school feeding?
“Such gesture would be welcoming, because farmers won’t continue to be at the mercy of buyers who take advantage of them due to poor sales and storage challenges. When government buys directly from them at reasonable cost, they are fulfilled and they are propelled to plant more. Aside, youths will also be attracted to the sector. So, the partnership is very vital.”
It could be recalled that, as part of the commitments of the federal government, the Vice-President, Yemi Osinbajo, at the 4th Annual Accountants Conference recently held in Abuja, restated that the free feeding scheme was a core project of the federal government, which would in turn yield about 1.14 million jobs and increase food production.
Osinbajo said the scheme would also increase food production by 530,000 metric tonnes per annum and attract fresh investments up to N980bn.
Akin dehinde, who also spoke on factors that discourage youths in agriculture and food increase, identified lack of infrastructure, weak markets, inadequate finance and post-harvest losses, as major banes to the sector. According to him, over 40 percent of farm produce get spoilt after harvest due to lack of storage and processing facilities.
“Electricity is quite important, especially for the running of large farm equipment. There is no gain saying that agriculture in Nigeria has greatly improved due to the advent of technology and other necessary infrastructure.
“In the past, farmers only ventured into subsistence farming to feed their family and at times sell excess harvest in the market, but growth in agricultural output has been on the increase and farmers have started venturing into large scale farming,” he said.
The Centre stated that partnering with farmers to drive the initiative would boost food production locally and help reduce the rate of post-harvest losses. Speaking during a briefing in Abuja, Afri-CASD Director of Communications, Mr. Bolaji Akindehinde, said engaging farmers in the scheme would drive positive change in the economy and most importantly motivate farmers to do more. He said farmers at that point would believe more in the Federal Government’s sincerity to diversify the economy and develop the agriculture sector beyond what some have termed lip service.
The Buhari-led administration, as part of its campaign promises, vowed to introduce free meals for school children, as part of measures to promote nutrition and education.
“Can you imagine what will accrue to farmers if the federal or state governments patronize farmers directly through the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development or State Ministry of Agriculture while implementing the free school feeding?
“Such gesture would be welcoming, because farmers won’t continue to be at the mercy of buyers who take advantage of them due to poor sales and storage challenges. When government buys directly from them at reasonable cost, they are fulfilled and they are propelled to plant more. Aside, youths will also be attracted to the sector. So, the partnership is very vital.”
It could be recalled that, as part of the commitments of the federal government, the Vice-President, Yemi Osinbajo, at the 4th Annual Accountants Conference recently held in Abuja, restated that the free feeding scheme was a core project of the federal government, which would in turn yield about 1.14 million jobs and increase food production.
Osinbajo said the scheme would also increase food production by 530,000 metric tonnes per annum and attract fresh investments up to N980bn.
Akin dehinde, who also spoke on factors that discourage youths in agriculture and food increase, identified lack of infrastructure, weak markets, inadequate finance and post-harvest losses, as major banes to the sector. According to him, over 40 percent of farm produce get spoilt after harvest due to lack of storage and processing facilities.
“Electricity is quite important, especially for the running of large farm equipment. There is no gain saying that agriculture in Nigeria has greatly improved due to the advent of technology and other necessary infrastructure.
“In the past, farmers only ventured into subsistence farming to feed their family and at times sell excess harvest in the market, but growth in agricultural output has been on the increase and farmers have started venturing into large scale farming,” he said.
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