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FADAMA 111 PROJECT ADDITIONAL FINANCING

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The Nigerian Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS)

Wednesday 23 September 2015

Stakeholders in Oyo State Eulogize AgroNigeria Stance on Agricultural Revolution

Group photograph of participants at the AgroNigeria Town Hall Meeting held at Mini-Hall, UI Hotels, University of Ibadan, Ibadan Oyo State
Group photograph of participants at the AgroNigeria Town Hall Meeting held at Mini-Hall, UI Hotels, University of Ibadan, Ibadan Oyo State

Firing the first salvo, the Editor In Chief, AgroNigeria who doubles as the Director General, Nigeria Agricultural Award (NAA), Barr Richard-Mark Mbaram castigated the handlers of Export Expansion Grant (EEG) for ripping investors of their hard earned capital over the incentive on Agro-industrialization program.

According to him, companies that invested in export oriented activities in order to take advantage of the initiatives, later discovered that the whole thing was a scam and that the project has been turned to corruption haven by greedy Nigerians.

The stockpiled EEG which has remained so for years without being paid to beneficiaries, in his view, had denied many opportunities to leverage on benefits that the programme would have offered.

Promising to relay stakeholders’ view of any misdeeds to appropriate quarters, the CEO said this is the time to permanently kill corruption in the agric sector and that the medium has therefore provided a platform for farmers and stakeholders alike to lean, on so as to collectively salvage the sector.

Towing the line of the first speaker, the representative of the Dean faculty of Agriculture, Professor Rasheed Adewoyin hailed AgroNigeria magazine for leading a campaign to bring agriculture back to its glorious past.

Clamoring for a well-organized market system as obtainable in Kenya and other Africa countries where farmers and not middle men dictates the market trend, Adewoyin said the fact that many agric produce especially those not processed do not carry price tag, does not mean that it should experience serious price-down fall like we are presently witnessing.

On food sufficiency, he observed that many countries in Africa, Nigeria inclusive do not take their food security policy seriously which could spell doom as time goes on.”With the influx of the teeming youth  taking into farming activities like cropping, fishery and even poultry production, effort should be made to make it more attractive for them by easing the risks and challenges associated with it” he added.

Describing FADAMA as a community-driven development programme, the Oyo State Coordinator of FADAMA, Nathaniel Olayinka advocated for continuous increase of capital being allocated to the laudable programmes which were conceived to help grow farmers future and equally open up their rural communities to ease conveyance of agricultural harvests and produce with social amenities support that goes with it.

On revamping of crop processing zone and ramping-up of staple crops production, he said; “States in Nigeria should concentrate on production of crops where it has comparative advantages. For instance, cassava is now a market-driven commodity in South-west in which off takers are abound to take advantage of its by-products for industrial use. In this regards, government should strive to open more doors for investors, credit and grant givers to come in, just like the World Bank $200million credit granted Nigeria a while ago,” he added.

An agricultural activist and the Executive Vice President, Pro-Green Award, Comrade David Kayode Ehindero condemned lack of human face that has over the year characterized successive government’s agricultural policy. He bemoaned seeming silence of farmers and stakeholders in the sector which in his opinion has continually made bureaucrats and their political collaborators have a field day thereby denying farmers and stakeholders in the agricultural value chain their deserved benefits as players in the sector.

“Stakeholders in the sector should keep talking. Time for paper agriculture has passed and now is time for practical agriculture. Take the Bank of Agriculture (BOA) as a case study; if you approach them for a loan, they will deny you only to give same to one oil magnate who for them would bring good returns, just because they do not believe in agriculture. Most a times too, they would reel out stringent conditions which ordinarily cannot be met by poor farmers thereby rendering such financial assistance elusive; imagine what could a graduate offer as collateral,” he argued.

Still on public service bureaucrats, Ehindero cautioned them from their habitual act of developing reports to convince donor agencies with cooked up statistics, such era he said is fast ebbing out and that perpetrators of such evil in the set up should get ready to be mauled down by emerging forces in the sector.

While urging the present administration to consolidate on ATA programmes like GES, youth entrepreneurship empowerment, equipment hiring service, he charged the government to as a matter of urgency, treat migratory fulani herdsmen as an integral part of agriculture and a pastoralists as it were, this for him would go a long away in giving them a sense of belonging and incessant clashes with farmers across the country would be a thing of past.
The CEO FAGNA Consult, Ajadi Bolade, urged government to look into the issue of off-takers so as to discourage drudgery being experienced ceaselessly by players in the sector. He said that if truly government is responsible and responsive NALDA, DFFRI scheme of the old should be prototyped so that land can be procured and cleared for our crop of youth willing to practice any agricultural vocation of their choices.
Lending his own voice, an agricultural graduate operating under the auspices of Graduate Youths in Agriculture, Ayo Oladare charged the Nigeria Government to take a cue from India where they package and make fortunes from herb production.

He opined that Nigeria has not carried out enough research to tackle the menace of seasonal perishable produce which has led to drastic profit reduction. To him, bottom to top approach strategy which could enhance adequate feed-back should be adopted by the government while technocrats in the agricultural sector like former Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina should drive it.

Another participant, Ifeoluwa Opasina was of the view that the school farms of old should be brought back in order to not only create awareness but also inculcate the culture of farm cultivation in the minds of the new generation of farmers. He also said that farm settlement scheme of the old should be re-introduced.

Like the Ajumose Vegetable Model Farms where government empowered farmers with inputs, Abimbola Dauda said it could be replicated throughout South West, so that common vegetables like tomato, onion and other veggies can be grown there rather than solely relying on vegetables from north which would have lost its quality and palatability before getting down south. “A case in point was during the “Tuta Absoluta” breakout when Tomato got temporarily scarce and elusive. Short supply-induced price sky rocketing suddenly took a centre stage and consumers down here paid dearly for it” said Dauda.

In capturing more farmers via the GES, Dr. George Sheguna CEO, Aquatech advised government to re-jig the program while NEMA and other agencies should be pro-active in their dealings so as to minimize seasonal disasters that plagued our crops thereby threatening food productivity and food security policy thrust of the sector.

For Adekoya Adetomi, dearth of extension agents normally deployed from the ADPs to rural farmers was disturbing. Considering their relevance in transferring technologies and new initiatives, she said, “The extension officers should be provided with good take home with incentives in order to sustain the current trend. Nigerian farmers no longer feel the impact of extension officers in their rural areas and we are all pretending as if everything is alright”

Policy formulation to support the use of natural crop improvers on our farms could also reduce over dependence on inorganic fertilizer while value added produce like breadfruit can be promoted as indigenous food for local consumption and for exportation.

LCCI Agro Sector Decries Inconsistent Policy on Agriculture

Wale-Oyekoya (2)
Mr Wale Oyekoya
The Chairman, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Agro and Non Oil Sector, Mr Wale Oyekoya,has advised the Federal Government to stop its inconsistent policies on agriculture.

He gave the advice in an interview with newsmen recently in Lagos while reacting to the likelihood of government reversing the restriction of buying foreign exchange to import certain food items like rice, fish and wheat, among others.

According to him, the restriction is already causing price hike on the affected food items.

“This is one of the government policies that the organised private sector is talking about; some of the policies are not sustainable.Government formulates a policy and barely one year it is already contemplating to change it.

“I believe that government should carry stakeholders along when formulating agriculture and other policies that affect everybody, especially food security in the country.

“The right thing is for government to have given importers up to three years to bring in some critical food items and at the same time encourage the local production of such items,’’ the chairman said.

Oyekoya remarked that it had been difficult for investors to set up full agro processing factories because of the government inconsistent policies.

He noted that potential investors were afraid of the high risk of investing in a nation that is not consistent with its economic and agricultural policies.

Oyekoya said that agriculture stakeholders were eagerly awaiting the appointment of an agriculture minister to know the next policy direction for the sector.

World Bank to Support Lagos Farmers

farmers
Lagos farmers

The World Bank is to help Lagos farmers increase agricultural productivity and enhance market access.
The  State Project  Coordinator, Commercial Agriculture Development Project (CADP), Mr  Kehinde Ogunyinka  who  spoke  yesterday in Lagos before the award of certificates to participants at its women and youth empowerment  training,  said  55 persons will  be  sponsored  by  the World  Bank  to start  their  businesses in areas such as rice cultivation, poultry farming and others.

He  said 55 persons, which   include  women and youths were chosen  from  125  persons  who were interested  in participating  in the  training  programme.

The Bank, according  to the report,  would  support  the  farmers  in three value  chains  to create  agro-business  ventures  that  will  be  better managed as a step toward boosting livelihoods.

According to him, the World Bank through CADP has helped to lay the groundwork for vitalization, offering technical expertise, bringing international best practices and engaging stakeholders on building a shared vision to renew agro business development.

To achieve this, Ogunyinka said the bank and the State government are determined to improve every element of the value chain, from cultivation, harvesting, to packaging and logistics, to marketing.

The bird flu reapperance

Image result for images of chicken
Chicken

The bird flu reapperance yesterday at Ikorodu area, Lagos state shows that our farmers are not doing enough as regards ensuring the cleanliness of their poultry sites thereby not conforming to many of the awareness being created through several trainings and sensitization programmes of the government since the source of this zoonotic is majorly dirt which constant cleaning of the poultry environment can checkmate.

Farmers should be more conscious about reality of liability towards proper care to their birds rather than probably assuming government taking responsibility in terms of compensation. I hope other states should be alerted for containment.

Monday 21 September 2015

Wake up and sell more coffee


coffee farmers

ON A hillside about an hour’s drive north of Nairobi, Kenya’s capital, is a visible demonstration of the difference between the miserable reality of smallholder farming in Africa and what it could be. On one side of the steep terraces stand verdant bushes, their stems heavy with plump coffee beans. A few feet away are sickly ones, their sparse leaves spotted with disease and streaked with yellow because of a lack of fertilizer.

Millicent Wanjiku Kuria, a middle-aged widow, beams under an orange headcloth. Cash from coffee has already allowed her to buy more land and a cutting machine that prepares fodder for a dairy cow that lows softly in its thatched shed. Her bumper crops are largely a result of better farming techniques such as applying the right amount of fertiliser (two bags, not one) and pruning back old stems on her trees.

Simple changes such as these can increase output by 50% per tree. Her income has increased by even more than this, because bigger berries from healthy trees sell at twice the price of their scrawnier brethren, says Arthur Nganga of TechnoServe, a non-profit group that is training Mrs Kuria and thousands of other smallholders in Kenya, Ethiopia and South Sudan. This year’s crop will pay for a pickup, she says, so she no longer has to hitch rides on a motorcycle.

It should be possible to grow much more in Africa. The continent has about half of the world’s uncultivated arable land and plenty of people to work it. It is true that erratic rainfall adds to the risks of farming on large parts of the savannah, but switching to drought-tolerant varieties of plants or even to entirely different ones—cassava or sorghum instead of maize, for instance—can mitigate much of this problem. Indeed Africa has in the past given glimpses of its vast potential. Five decades ago it was one of the world’s great crop-exporters. Ghana grew most of the world’s cocoa, Nigeria was the biggest exporter of palm oil and peanuts, and Africa grew a quarter of all the coffee people slurped.  

Since then it has shifted from being a net exporter of food to an importer. Sub-Saharan Africa’s share of agricultural exports has slipped to a quarter of its previous level; indeed, the entire region has been overtaken by a single country: Thailand (see chart). This is largely because Africa’s crop yields have improved at only half the pace of those elsewhere and are now, on average, a third to a half of those in the rich world. Farmers in Malawi harvest just 1.3 tonnes of maize per hectare compared with 10 tonnes in Iowa.

economist
There are several reasons for the stagnation in African agricultural productivity but poor policies have played a large role. In many countries state-owned monopolies for the main export crops were established either before independence or soon after.

 The prices paid to farmers were generally squeezed to create profits that were meant to be invested in other, sexier, industries. Such policies failed to spark an industrial revolution but succeeded in making farmers poorer.

 In Ghana, for instance, the colonial administration and first independent government taxed cocoa exports so heavily that farmers stopped planting new trees. By the 1980s cocoa production had collapsed by two-thirds.

In the 1990s many of these policy mistakes were compounded when, urged on Western donors and aid experts, many African countries dismantled their agricultural monopolies without giving time for markets to develop or putting in place institutions to link farmers to them. This was good for commercial farmers in places such as South Africa, where output soared, but cut off remote smallholders. Farmers in Zambia, for instance, now pay twice as much for fertiliser as those in America.

Yet this Cinderella sector is now being seen as an opportunity rather than a “development problem”, says Mamadou Biteye, who heads the African operations of the Rockefeller Foundation, a charity. Money from organisations such as Rockefeller, the Gates Foundation and do-gooding companies such as Nestlé is pouring into supporting small farmers.

The first benefit is improved productivity. Farmers have been shown how to increase crop yields sharply simply by changing their techniques or switching to better plant varieties. A second is in improving farmers’ access to markets. Progress here is being speeded along by technology. In Nigeria the government has stopped distributing subsidised fertiliser and seeds through middlemen who generally pocketed the subsidies: it reckons that only 11% of farmers actually got the handouts that were earmarked for them. Instead it now directly issues more than 14m farmers with electronic vouchers via mobile phones.

economist
Or take Kenya Nut, a privately owned nut processor. It is using technology from the Connected Farmer Alliance to send text messages to farmers giving them the market price of their produce, so they are not ripped off by the first buyer to show up with a lorry.

After years of underperforming, Africa’s smallholders have a lot of catching up to do. The World Bank estimates that food production and processing in Africa could generate $1 trillion a year by 2030, up from some $300 billion today. Yet many remain sceptical that Africa’s small farmers will achieve their potential. To some, the rewards on offer seem too good to be true, like the $50 on the pavement that the economist in the joke walks past because “If it were real, someone would already have picked it up.”

Yet the success of projects such as those run by TechnoServe and Olam (a commodity trader that helps farmers grow more cashews, sesame seeds and cocoa in Nigeria) suggest that there may well be $700 billion on the pavement—or rather, in Africa’s fields. Instead of subsidising steel and other big industries, African nations should wake up and sell more coffee—not to mention cocoa, nuts and maize.

Nigeria’s N630bn annual food import bill worries Emefiele

Image result for image of the CBN governor nigeria
Emefiele,

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mr. Godwin  Emefiele, has reiterated his concern over the country’s position as a net importer of agricultural produce with import above N630 billion.
The country imports food products such as wheat, rice, flour, fish, tomato paste, textile and sugar in large quantities annually.

Emefiele, stated this in a keynote address presented at a training workshop on innovative agricultural insurance products held in Lagos Thursday. The forum was to activate the insurance pillar of the Nigeria Incentive-based Risk Sharing System for Agricultural Lending (NIRSAL).

He pointed out that Nigeria is currently confronted with a wide range of development challenges, especially with the dwindling global crude oil prices and the nation’s dependence on it as its major source of revenue. To this end, he stressed the need to diversify the mono-cultural tendencies of the Nigerian economy by developing other sectors of the economy especially agriculture.

He recalled that before the oil boom, the Nigerian economy was mainly sustained by agriculture.  In the 1960s the agricultural sector contributed up to 60 per cent of the total Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and was the most important in terms of contribution to domestic production, employment and foreign exchange earnings.

The country was then known to be exporters of cocoa beans, gum Arabic, groundnuts, cotton, palm oil and many other agricultural commodities.

“But now, we import most of the agricultural commodities that we can produce because of the neglect of the sector in addition to rural migration to cities in search of white collar jobs.  The agricultural sector provides up to 70 per cent of employment in Nigeria and accounts for about 42 per cent of the country’s GDP.

“In Nigeria today, rural farmers contribute to about 70 per cent of the food produced which they do mainly by subsistence farming. These farmers with their small land holdings of 1 to 3 hectares are producing sub-optimally due to lack of adequate inputs, insufficient exposure to good agronomic practices and limited access to finance and credit.

“It is due to this subsistent level of farming that farmers do not see the importance of insuring their farming activities. Currently, Nigeria’s formal financial system is lending about four per cent of all formal credit to the agricultural sector compared to three years ago when only about one per cent of all credit went to agriculture. Lending is still low because of the lingering perception by banks that agriculture is highly risky,” the governor who was represented at the workshop by the acting Managing Director, NIRSAL, Mr. Edwin Nzelu, said.

According to him, the development and expansion of the agricultural insurance sub-sector would go a long way in mitigating against natural disasters and eventually encouraging banks to lend to agriculture.

He added that agricultural insurance had been proven to be instrumental in transferring risks and stabilising farmers’ income, noting that in Nigeria, it remains one of the less developed line of business.

“Therefore, there is need for insurance companies in collaboration with relevant stakeholders to develop innovative products that will carter for the needs of farmers in their provision of agricultural insurance.

“Over the years, only the Nigeria Agricultural Insurance Corporation (NAIC) was licensed to underwrite Agriculture insurance in the country, until two years ago when NAICOM liberalised the insurance subsector for conventional insurers to underwrite.

“I urge Private insurance companies to take advantage of this opportunity and consider extending insurance cover to the agricultural sector to create a competitive market which will eventually increase insurance penetration to rural areas,” he said.

Nigeria to produce bioethanol from cassava.

Image result for image of cassava ethanol
Cassava

The Nigerian Cassava Growers’ Association (NCGA) has partnered with the Emerging Africa Infrastructure Fund (EAIF), an international private infrastructure financier, to set up a bioethanol plant, according to the News Agency of Nigeria.

National president of NCGA Segun Adewumi says the plant, which is to use cassava as feedstock, will also serve as a bioenergy and power generation plant for ten states of the West African federal republic.

‘NCGA is planning to establish ethanol factories across the nation that will produce millions of litres of ethanol in a year. We are focusing on ten states and the requirement is that we will get 6,000 hectares of cassava farm in each of the states,’ Adewumi says.

The land to be purchased will be demarcated into blocks of ten acres and allocated farmers, who will sell their cassava to the ethanol plant.

Adewumi says the project is being spearheaded by the E-Debit Corporation, a consultant company, to facilitate developmental programmes and connect financial institutions to manufacturers and farmers.

Impact of Fertilizer Quality Control System in Nigeria


man spraying fertiliser pesticides
fertilizer quality control system in Nigeria

In a bid to ensure fertilizer quality control system in Nigeria, the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), has join forces with the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD), to put in place policies that will ensure better agricultural yields through quality control.

Speaking at the launch of the AGRA-supported project with the theme “Establishment and Implementation of Fertilizer Quality Control System in Nigeria”, the Permanent Secretary of the FMARD, Arc Sonny Echono, represented by the Director, Farm Input Support Service Department of the Ministry, Akinbolawa Osho, said “fertilizer is a crucial input in crop production, and its importance in crop productivity, and food security of the country cannot be over emphasized”.

He also disclosed that the legal and regulatory framework for fertilizer quality control would enable the Federal Government Inspectors to undertake periodic quality control at fertilizer production plants, ports of discharge, and market outlets.

The Permanent Secretary disclosed that fertilizer samples would be drawn by inspection officials for laboratory analysis. He said that government has identified some violations in the sub-sector which include plant nutrient deficiencies, misbranding, adulteration, short weight of bags, bagging quality, operating without certificate of registration or with expired certificate of registration.

Echono, however, condemned the activities of some unscrupulous players who have been ripping farmers off the benefit accruable from their investment in fertilizer. He maintained that the obligation of the government under the policy statement is to ensure and enforce quality control of fertilizer through the establishment of a market-friendly, legal regulatory framework that is adopted and legislated by the ministry.

He said, “the legal and regulatory framework for fertilizer quality control will provide the Federal Government Inspectors the power to undertake periodic quality control at the fertilizer production plants, fertilizer samples to be drawn by inspection officials for laboratory analysis, payment of inspection fees, and guidelines for proper labeling,” among others.

Meanwhile, Echono assured that a draft Fertilizer Bill sent by the Ministry to the National Assembly had passed the first reading and it is expected to be passed into law soonest. He maintained that the present administration’s drive in the agriculture sector of the economy is geared towards employment generation, food security, and poverty reduction.

Earlier in her welcome address, the Deputy Director, Quality Control, FMARD, who is also the Project Manager, Chinyere Akudinobi, stated that the project was aimed at developing and implementing a functional fertilizer regulatory system in the country which she said would address the problems of fertiliser quality in Nigeria. Making a presentation on the project, Akudinobi noted that while fertilizer consumption was estimated at about 790,000 metric tonnes annually, 280,000 metric tonnes was blended locally while the rest was imported.

Saturday 19 September 2015

Stakeholders Urge FG to maintain Public-Private Initiatives

Stakeholders on yam production have called upon the Federal Government to support the setting up of public-private initiative to facilitate an emerging tissue culture based yam seed in the country.

This was contained in communiqué arising from a Yam Seed Production workshop held at the University of Ibadan, Oyo state and made available to the newsmen recently.

The three-page communiqué was signed by the Deputy Vice Chancellor (Academics), University of Ibadan, Prof. Gbemisola Oke, and the workshop facilitator, Dr Morufat Balogun, Geneticist in the Department of Crop Protection and Environmental Biology.

The yam stakeholders noted that there was limited availability of yam seeds from Temporary Immersion Bioreactors, adding that scarcity of planting materials is a major constraint to yam production in Nigeria.

“In order to allay fear or reservations towards acceptability of tissue culture produced seed yam among other farmers as well as the general populace, there should be advocacy for acceptability of the technology through different media.’’, it said.

The communiqué stated that stakeholders had observed that there was need to use TIBs to speed up the production of planting materials also known as clean seed yam.

According to the communiqué, yam is an important food crop in Nigeria and the country is the world’s largest producer.

“Having identified possible market glut that might result from rapid propagation technologies, the workshop opined that NRCRI and National Stored Product Research Institute (NSPRI) should develop and advocate for improved harvesting, post-harvest handling and storage’’
The workshop also called on the Federal government to as a matter of priority; revitalize the yam export market in line with the alternative revenue drive of the present administration.

It equally canvassed for youth training and development, using National Youth Corps members in other to overcome inadequate skill and low farmers’ level of education on the novel seed production system.

This, the communiqué added, would reduce rural-urban drift and expansion of farmland in seed yam production.

“As part of strategies to reduce cost and fatigue associated with yam production, gender responsibility should be identified, so that there will be more interest in farming’’, it added.

The stakeholders also recognised irregular electricity and availability of materials and reagents as threats to sustainable adoption of the technology.

To this end, it urged researchers to seek alternative, environment-friendly and cheaper sources of power and reagents.

“In addition, there should be specialization for different levels of production chain to accommodate high, medium and low skilled labour’’, the communiqué stressed.

It also called for increased automation in the technology to reduce possibility of human error which could cause huge losses and also identified lack of sustainable availability of funds to maintain the technology after set-up as a main threat to its use.

The workshop recommended that the government should put in place policies to support farmers’ cooperatives while also removing bottlenecks in assessing the existing agriculture loans.

“The workshop recognised farmers as being disadvantaged by lack of price regulation and low bargaining power and recommends the creation of yam marketing board, which will, among others, regulate the price of yam, and incorporate government interventions’’, it added.

Fabricated Tools Will Boost Agric Says NCAM

Farm machineries
mechanization

The Federal Government has been urged to make use of the fabricated agricultural machines produced by indigenous engineers at the National Centre for Agriculture and Mechanisation (NCAM), Ilorin, to boost agriculture in Nigeria.

According to the Acting Director of NCAM, Yomi Kasali, many countries with bilateral relationships with Nigeria had since adopted some of the tools manufactured at the centre with tremendous improvement on their Agric yields.

Kasali, at the opening ceremony of the Marketing and Processing Demonstration Training hosted by NCAM, said the era when agriculture thrived under hand tools should be a thing of the past in Nigeria if the nation would attain self-sufficiency in food production.

The programme was organised by the Federal Government and involved six states of the federation namely Anambra, Benue, Ebonyi, Niger, Ogun and Taraba. It was packaged to reduce poverty among Nigerians and to stimulate the much needed economic growth.

For the NCAM boss, “It is a pity that most projects in Nigeria are not sustained, but we hope this will be held on a sustainable basis. We learnt it was packaged to favor the nation’s agric policy under a value change system with zeal for marketability. After all, what is the value of produce without a market for it?”
Kasali described the available human and material resources at the institute as “the very best” for the proposition by the government to ensure prompt marketing of agric products in the country.

According to him, “NCAM is not new to organizing this type of training programmes for donor-assisted projects. For five years, the centre organised training/workshops and provided technical back stopping for the processing and market expansion component of Root and Tuber Expansion Programme (RTEP).”

Among others, NCAM had fabricated machines such as cassava lifter, (hand-operated), tractor drawn tuber harvester, improved cassava peeling tool and cassava washing machine, motorized cassava grater, manual-operated tuber dicer, cassava mash sifter, multi-purpose mill and hydraulic press for cassava.

Kasali while praising the Federal Government policies on cassava growth and consumption said the same system should be adopted for the growth of rice as “locally produced rice has more nutritional values than imported ones.”

He added, “Cassava and rice which are among the most important staple crops in Nigeria are the crops whose value chain developments are being considered in this training. The importance of these two crops in food security and generation of income for the farmer and the nation needs no emphasis.

“The recent Federal Government policy on 10 percent inclusion of High Quality Cassava Flour (HQCF) in confectionery baking is expected to stimulate huge investment in the cassava sector, including the major activities in the cassava value chain, especially the downstream.”