Thursday, 1 December 2016

Escaping from the rice trap

Nigeria has a most realistic chance of breaking free from the shackles of foreign rice imports by taking advantage of the current spiralling cost and government policy direction to advance the cause of self-sufficiency in local production. Nigerians have understandably been groaning from the weight of rapidly rising cost of the commodity that went from between N7,000 and N8,000 per 50-kilogramme bag barely two years ago to triple that amount today.

According to figures from the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment during the Olusegun Aganga tenure as minister, Nigeria spent N360 billion on rice imports annually before the government decided to curtail the unbridled imports two years ago. This translates to almost a billion naira a day, too much a price to pay by a country that has the capacity to produce rice, not only for local consumption, but also for export. With such high cost, especially in foreign exchange needs, continuing along this path would have been nothing short of a journey towards perdition.

But faced with the stark reality of an economy currently in dire straits, the government is doing everything within its power to cut down on its huge food import bills, especially that of rice which, over the years, has become a major staple in the country. But will Nigeria escape from the rice trap soon? The Central Bank of Nigeria says, “By the end of 2017, Nigeria will not only meet our national demand, which is between six and seven tonnes per year, but we will exceed it and we will have rice to export to other countries.” Now, the country ranks second, next only to China, on the list of major rice importers, with consumption standing at between 5.5 million metric tonnes and six million metric tonnes annually, going by official figures. But with a ban on imports through the land borders, there is now a huge gap between demand and supply that has driven up prices alarmingly.

Naturally, the challenge now is for local farmers to fill the gap, and reports indicate encouraging responses. Addressing members of the Senate Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development, Audu Ogbeh, the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, told them in October to expect a fall in the prices of rice. “By November when the full-scale harvests start, rice prices will fall,” Ogbeh said. Nigerians are, however, waiting expectantly for the predicted price tumble.

With Christmas – a major Christian festive season, when rice is usually in high demand – around the corner, some states are already making pronouncements to the effect that they can conveniently manage without imported rice. In Ebonyi State, renowned for the cultivation of the popular Abakaliki brand of rice, the Governor, Dave Umahi, has placed a ban on serving of imported rice at public occasions. “The parboiling process of Abakaliki rice makes it durable, unlike the imported rice which does not undergo parboiling,” the governor said recently while trying to promote his state’s homegrown rice.

In neighbouring Anambra, which recently played host to a Federal Government delegation, led by Ogbeh and the Central Bank of Nigeria Governor, Godwin Emefiele, the Commissioner for Agriculture, Afam Mbanefo, stated in Awka, the capital, that the state had attained self-sufficiency in rice production. “Based on the calculation of our expected yield, we are expecting to realise over 336,000 metric tonnes of rice in 2016,” he said, which exceeds the 210,000 metric tonnes target the state had projected for the year.

Activities of rice farmers in Cross River State have also caught the attention of the CBN, which has promised to make credit available for massive rice farming there. The state Governor, Ben Ayade, said it would serve a dual purpose of food production and job creation.

Significantly, big-time players like Coscharis Farms and Dangote Farms Limited, noticing the potential in rice production, have moved in to invest heavily. While Coscharis is limiting its investment to Anambra, Dangote has spread its tentacles to Edo, Jigawa, Kebbi, Kwara and Niger states, where Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, promised a $1 billion worth of investment last year. Both are also promising to build rice mills, with Dangote targeting Kano and Coscharis, Anaku in Anambra State.

The massive interest in rice planting in the country has not come as a surprise. This is a country that had its foundation on agriculture before the discovery of oil and gas. Data from World Bank indicate that the country boasted 77.7 per cent arable land in 2013. Research and availability of rice varieties have also made it possible for rice to be grown across the length and breadth of the country, at any time of the year.

To achieve self-sufficiency, the government has a very important role to play. Apart from guaranteeing access to soft credit, it has to improve infrastructure, especially access roads to ensure that products are easily evacuated from the farms and waste is cut down. Besides, it is equally important to protect the nascent rice farming culture by making sure smugglers are not allowed to flood the market with cheap imported rice.

Already, there have been reports of massive imports by neighbouring countries, targeting the Christmas rush in Nigeria. They are planning to take advantage of the free trade treaty of ECOWAS, which guarantees free movement of locally produced goods among member countries, to bring in imported rice. Apart from hurting the rice farmers and, by extension, the Nigerian economy, allowing smugglers to have their way will deny government huge amounts of revenue in unpaid customs duties. This is certainly not what the country needs at this crucial stage. It is also believed that pressure is being mounted by countries such as Thailand, India and Singapore, the world’s major rice producers, on Nigeria to ease the restriction on imported rice. While the Nigeria Customs Service should ensure that smugglers are shut out, the government also has to resist the pressure.

Although started as part of Goodluck Jonathan’s Agriculture Transformation Agenda, the rice self-sufficiency programme has received a shot in the arm from the Muhammadu Buhari administration. While Jonathan’s target of 2015 for self-sufficiency failed to materialise, it is hoped that, with steadfastness and an enabling environment for prospective investors, Nigeria’s quest for producing enough rice for internal consumption and even for export in 2017 will be achievable.

FG distributes smartphones with agric app to rice farmers

The Federal Government, yesterday, flagged off the distribution of agriculture app smartphones to rice farmers across the country. Smartphones distribution, which was done through the National Cereals Research Institute, NCRI, commenced with the training of 50 rice farmers extension officers on how to use the smartphones to obtain relevant information to boost rice production in the country.
 
The training programme drew participants from six pilot states of Kogi, Nasarawa, Kano, Ebonyi, Kebbi and Niger, where rice is being produced with comparative advantage. Speaking at the event in Lokoja, Kogi State, Acting Executive Director of NCRI, Agboire Samuel, said the gesture was part of the Federal Government’s policy aimed at scaling up rice production in the country to meet both local and export demands.
 
He said apart from serving as e-extension tools for farmers in the area of rice production, the smartphones would also serve as employment opportunity for the beneficiaries given the applications embedded in the gadgets.

Sesame Seed; Investment & Trading

Sesame Seed, also called benniseed is the most sought after vegetable oil in the world as its industrial ingredients can be used for the production of margarine, canned sardine, corned beef, soap making and ink and is well preferred to other vegetable oils because of its lack of odour, chemical composition, colour and taste.

Nigeria is the second largest producer of sesame seed in Africa, and ranking seventh in the World.


SOURCING
 
The major producing areas in order of priority are Nasarawa, Jigawa and Benue States. Other important areas of production are found in Yobe, Kano, Katsina, Kogi, Gombe, Kwara, Niger, Bauchi and Plateau States.


PRODUCTION STATISTICS
 
Nigeria currently produces about 300,000 metric tonnes of Sesame Seed.


USES
 
Sesame seed is a source of highly nutritional oil used for cooking. It is also used to garnish and decorate confectionaries e.g cake, bread, sweet, burger, hot dogs, etc. It is used in the manufacture of pharmaceuticals, soap and cosmetics, production of animal feeds, etc.


PRICING
 
A tonne of sesame seed currently sells for about N300,000.


EXPORT MARKET
 
Major destinations for Nigeria sesame seed are China, Turkey, Japan and India. Other countries like Poland and Netherland also receive Nigerian Sesame in smaller quantities.


EXPORT SEASON
 
The season for Sesame Seeds sales is between November and April of the following year.


HARVESTING PERIOD
 
Harvesting begins in late December and continues through July. Each producing area has only one season. Early crops are harvested between July and August and late crops between November and December.


STORAGE
 
Since sesame is a small flat seed, it is difficult to move much air through it in a storage bin. Therefore, the seeds need to be harvested as dry as possible and stored at 6 percent moisture or less. If the seed is too moist, it can quickly heat up and become rancid.


PROCESSING
 
After harvesting, the seeds are cleaned and hulled. The seeds pass through an air separation stage to remove any foreign particles. About 10 percent of this “cleaned natural seed” moves directly into food use as whole seed to be blended into flour for baked goods.

Next, a combination of water and friction work together as the seeds are passed against the chamber of the hulling machine to separate the hull from the seeds. This dust-free de-hulled seed makes up 30 percent of domestic production and has 99.97 percent purity for the baked goods market.

Once the seeds have been hulled, they are passed through an electronic color-sorting machine that rejects any discolored seeds to ensure perfectly colored sesame seeds. Immature or off-sized seed is removed but saved for oil production.


PACKAGING
 
Jute bag is highly recommended for packaging for export. It allows for aeration and at the same time safely holding the seeds, which are very small in size. The weight per bag varies; they are packed in 45kg, 50kg or 60kg, depending on the market dictate.


INVESTMENT SUMMARY
 
Production
Processing
Export
Storage
Packaging

ARMTI to discuss agriculture at 19th annual lecture

The Agricultural and Rural Management Training Institute will today (Thursday) host its 19th annual lecture at its campus.

The Public Relations Officer, ARMTI, Mr. Mayowa Gidado, gave the topic of the lecture as: ‘Youth in agriculture: Possibilities and opportunities for sustainable agricultural business in Nigeria’.

The guest lecturer is the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of Paul Okpue Farms, Asaba, Delta State, Mr. Paul Okpue; while the acting Director-General, National Directorate of Employment, Mr. Kunle Obayan, is among the discussants.

Gidado said the programme would serve as an avenue for ARMTI to fulfil one of its mandates, which is to contribute to policy development to enhance better management of the agricultural and rural sector in Nigeria.

He added that the programme was expected to attract policymakers, practitioners, academics and other stakeholders to brainstorm on topical issues in the agricultural sector, which has been placed on the front burner this year.

According to him, the lecture series has attracted several notable personalities in the past like Maj.-Gen. Agbazika Innih, Rear Admiral Murtala Nyako, Dr. Bukola Saraki, Dr. Ishrait Husain of the World Bank;  the Country Representative of the Food and Agriculture Organisation, Dr. Louise Setswaelo;  and former President Olusegun Obasanjo, among others.

Gidado stated that this year’s programme would also coincide with two ongoing courses in ARMTI at namely: ‘Everything you ever wanted to know about sweet potato’ and ‘Youth empowerment scheme in agribusiness’ entrepreneurial and management training.

Wednesday, 30 November 2016

Bauchi Targets 200 Percent Increased Yields Through Mechanised Farming

A memorandum of understanding between the Bauchi state government and the government of the Czech Republic is being concluded to provide the state with cheaper agricultural equipment in an effort to make agriculture attractive and transform it to an alternative source of revenue and better employer of labour that gives greater yield than the traditional agricultural method.

Governor of Bauchi state Mohammed Abubakar who stated this at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International, Airport, Abuja shortly after returning from the Czech Republic, said the delegation he led to the Czech Republic from Bauchi state was in that country on the invitation of the minister of agriculture and the deputy minister of foreign affairs of the Czech Republic.

According to a press release signed by the Press Secretary to the governor, Abubakar Al-Sadique, which was made available to THISDAY Weekend, the governor stressed that for agriculture which is one of the major employers of labour in Nigeria to provide the alternative source of revenue the country desperately needs, farming must be “practiced in the scientific way”, where mechanisation will replace traditional methods.

Abubakar lamented that farmers in Bauchi state like other Nigerian farmers rely on traditional farming which consumes lots of human energy and resources but yields far less to the farmers.

“Because we now need to test the soil to determine its suitability for the cultivation of the crops we intend to cultivate to increase our yield per hectre, we must embrace the developments and innovations being brought to agriculture that come with researches in science and technology, which the Czech Republic so seriously engages in. The yield per hectre for maize, for example, in the Czech Republic is about 40 tones while in Nigeria the highest is unfortunately about 5 tones”, the governor whose delegation was taken round modern farms to see how modern agriculture is practiced in the Czech Republic, he said.

Under the memorandum of understanding, the Czech Republic is to support the agricultural sector in the state by providing especially small scale farmers with multi-purpose mini tractors and other farming implements at low costs that Bauchi farmers can easily afford.

At the inception of his administration, Abubakar visited the Czech Republic and thereafter a trade delegation from that country also visited Nigeria during which time he had a meeting with the delegation on investment potentials of the state in the areas of agriculture and tourism.

It was the result of that meeting which informed the agriculture minister and the deputy minister of foreign affairs’ specific invitation of Bauchi state to see how the Czech Republic can help the state boost its agriculture through science and technology and use of modern agricultural implements produced in that country.

Because of the interest the authorities in the Czech Republic have in investing in agricultural development of Bauchi state, accommodation and other logistics were provided to Governor Mohammed Abubakar and members of his delegation.

Researchers Alarmed Over Threat to Nigeria’s Cassava Industry

Nigeria’s rising population, particularly in the cities, coupled with low productivity (yield per hectare) of cassava roots is threatening her cassava industry and could impede the gains made in the sector, putting the country at risk of becoming a net importer of staple crops.

Grown by over 4.5 million people in Nigeria, cassava is a major food crop, contributing to food security and income for millions of people but the productivity of the crop in Nigeria is low–12-13 tons per ha.

“This low productivity cannot support Nigeria in the next 34 years,” according to Dr Claude Fauquet, Director with the Global Cassava Partnership for the 21st Century (GCP 21) while addressing participants at the just concluded workshop with the theme: “Integrated System for an Effective Cassava Production in Africa,” in IITA, Ibadan last month.

“By 2050, Nigeria’s population will rise to 400 million, meaning that we will have more mouths to eat cassava and cassava products such as gari, fufu etc. With the current cassava productivity of 12-13 tons per hectare, cassava cannot sustain this huge population,” Fauquet explained.

Elsewhere in Asia, cassava productivity has hit more than 20 tons per ha and a nation such as Thailand is today a major exporter of cassava products such as starch.

Fauquet said Africa, and Nigeria in particular, has the land, youth and climate to achieve the same feat such as Thailand. “The question is: Why is this not happening?” he remarked.

Besides the rising population, Fauquet noted that urbanisation would trigger the migration of more than 50 percent of Nigeria’s population to cities which would leave a labour vacuum in the rural areas – a situation that would further exacerbate the problem of cassava production in the country.

He however said Nigeria could address the challenges by investing in the research for development of cassava along the value chain. Specifically, he said, investments in improved varieties, weed control, best agronomic practices, and mechanization could change the outlook of cassava. “Other areas that need attention include access to credit, markets and cooperatives,” he added.

Fauquet called on the Nigerian government and donors to invest in research and development to put cassava ahead.

IITA Deputy Director General, Partnerships For Delivery, Dr. Kenton Dashiell, who represented the Director General, Dr. Nteranya Sanginga, said cassava is an important crop for Nigeria and it was important that researchers were thinking about its future.

He commended the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for investing in cassava production along the value chain, and called on the government of Nigeria to consider upscaling some of the proven technologies such as cassava mechanization, weed management, improved seeds at IITA, and best agronomic practices to farmers across the country.

Project Leader for the Cassava Weed Management Project, Dr. Alfred Dixon described cassava as a “poverty fighter,” emphasising that investment in cassava would help Nigeria to tackle the twin problem of hunger and poverty, and youth unemployment.

The workshop in Ibadan attracted participants from the private sector, development partners such as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and IFAD, and farmer organisations.

Ebonyi High Producer of Rice

The Minister of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh has described Ebonyi farmers as the real heroes of President Muhammadu Buhari’s push to diversify the nation’s economy, especially through agriculture in rice production.

The minister also promised that the federal government would rehabilitate the Ettem Amagu Ikwo Dam to encourage dry season rice cultivation in the state.

He explained that under Operation 1,037 of the federal government, a minimum of 10 dams per state and the FCT would be built.

Ogbeh, who was accompanied by the Chairman, Presidential Committee on Rice production, Abubakar Bagudu and Central Bank of Nigeria Governor Godwin Emefiele, commended Umahi for his agricultural policy, particularly in ensuring massive rice production in the state.

The minister called on youths to key into agriculture to diversify the economy and see it as a way out of the present economic recession in the country. He promised to bring agricultural equipment like rice harvesters, threshers, par- boiling drums to Ebonyi State.

“Next year, we shall plant for you 1,500 hectares of cashew nuts; five hundred hectares per the three senatorial districts in your state. We shall also build you two factories here for roasting cashew. By the middle of last week, I had some machines ready for you (Ebonyi State)".

These include threshers and even new par-boiling drums which operate differently from what women are using. When those machines come, youngmen will be thought how to enter a farm and harvest rice for farmers. These young men and farmers will make so much money to the extent that they will become millionaires in the villages. So wealth is here (in farming)”, Ogbeh said.

He also promised that the federal government would rehabilitate the Ettem Amagu Ikwo Dam to encourage dry season rice cultivation in the state, even as he explained that under Operation 1,037 of the federal government, a minimum of 10 dams per state and the FCT would be built.

The Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Rice production and governor of Kebbi State, Bagudu, said what he saw in rice producing states showed that the country had achieved self sufficiency in rice production and should therefore commence plan for rice export. “Success recorded in the last one year is phenomenal. What we have seen, in terms of rice output seems to suggest that the goal of self sufficiency which we hitherto thought will be achieved in 2017, might have already been achieved,” he stated.

Emefiele, in his remark explained that the apex bank’s Anchor Borrowers Programme would commence next year to boost farming and tackle challenges confronting farmers.

Emefiele also pledged the bank’s readiness to participate in the clearing and re-dredging of the Ettem Amagu Dam.

Governor Umahi had while welcoming them in the state, commended President Buhari for reviving agriculture in the country.

He expressed the readiness of the state government to partner the federal government in all season farming. He said, “There are over 30 dams in this state. They are recharged by very near streams. So we want assistance from the Federal Government in the area of irrigation.

We want assistance in the area of money to the farmers. We want assistance in the area of biomass plants. The cost of buying diesel and maintenance is too high; we also need harvesters to assist our farmers.”

The team also visited the state’s modern rice mills in Oso-Edda and Ikwo where they saw live processed rice rolling out of the machines.

Investors commit $4.5bn to Fertiliser Production

Investments in the production of fertiliser in Nigeria by foreign and indigenous investors in the last two years have grown to about $4.5bn (N1.373tn) despite the constraint in accessing the United States dollars, the African Fertiliser and Agribusiness Partnerships has said.


The AFAP, an independent non-profit organisation created by a partnership of African development agencies, disclosed this at the Nigeria Fertiliser Roadmap Stakeholders’ Consultation in Abuja on Monday.

The four-day forum, which ended on Monday, had in attendance senior officials of the Presidency, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Deposit Money Banks, microfinance banks, multinational fertiliser production companies and international finance organisations, among others.

In his welcome address, which was made available to our correspondent, the President/Chief Executive Officer, AFAP, Mr. Jason Scarpone, described the growth in the fertiliser sub-sector of Nigeria’s agricultural value chain as an economic potential that had the capacity to reduce importation of food by the country.

Although he noted that fertiliser utilisation in Nigeria was still inadequate and significantly lower than what was obtainable in Kenya, the AFAP boss, however, stated that “in the midst of these challenges lies opportunities.

He added, “For despite the fall in oil prices, declining foreign exchange reserves and constrained availability of foreign currency in the last two to three years, the fertiliser sub-sector in Nigeria has attracted significant investments of about $4.5bn from the private sector.

“Notable among these investors include but not limited to Notore, Indorama and Dangote. Their respective investments have been the largest ever in the Nigerian agriculture sector.”

Scarpone noted that investments in the agricultural sector in the country remained a beacon of hope for the transformation of millions of rural communities and in stimulating broader economic growth.

“It is against the above background that, with funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, AFAP commissioned a study of the impediments that constrain fertiliser market development in Nigeria with a view to developing strategies to address such constraints,” he added.

AFAP Consultant, Scott Wallace, told journalists that aside reviewing fertiliser impediments identified by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, another objective of the meeting was “to solicit inputs from public and private stakeholders as means towards possible solutions to attend to the impediments.”

Nigeria to Get GM Beans in Commercial Quantity By 2019 – NABDA

The National Biotechnology Development Agency has said genetically modified beans will be available in commercial quantity across Nigerian markets by 2019.

There has been outcry against the genetically modified organisms across the world. The anti-GMO activists say the GM crops and animals would be injurious to human health. But GMO advocates are disputing this, saying it will only ensure food security.

But at the November edition of Open Forum on Agricultural Biotechnology (OFAB) in Abuja, the NABDA Director General, Prof Lucy Ogbadu, said Nigeria would soon witness abundant beans as the GM cowpeas (or beans) would be released into the market in large quantities in two or three years’ time.

He said cowpea, which is currently undergoing field trials, wouldn’t pose health risk to Nigerians.

“Rules are being followed in its production. Our Ethical Committee is working day and night to ensure that no rule is breached. Nigerians should be rest assured that the GM beans and other crops which will be available later in the country would be safe for consumption. In 2-3 years’ time, cowpea should be ready in commercial quantity in the country”, Prof Ogbadu said.

She dismissed “the insinuation” that GM foods are unhealthy; saying over 100 Nobel Laureates had signed a petition to guarantee its safety.

On the alleged production of plastic rice, the NABDA boss said there was no reason why that could be possible.

“We do not believe in the story of plastic rice production. One, producing rice from plastic would be very, very expensive and no business man would venture into it. Two, I have gone around and around and did not see any plastic rice in the markets or anywhere else. All the rice I saw did not look plastic.

“Some people, I believe, are only trying to scare away consumers of rice from certain rice brands,” she said.
According to the Professor of Microbiology, Nigerians should not panic as the plastic rice story was false.

Tuesday, 29 November 2016

BENUE WIDOWS EXCEL IN FARMING THROUGH GROUP SAVINGS.

Justina Ya’apera is a middle-aged widow in Anyiin, Logo LGA in Benue State and proud owner of 40 bags of soya beans, which could fetch her over N400, 000 given the current price of the produce at N12,000 per bag.
She produced the 40 bags from a loan of N10,000 she got through group savings and N20, 000 micro credit from Bank of Agriculture and Gboko Micro Finance Bank in a number of circles, which she has already paid.
The widow is a member of Akanawe women group in Anyiin with 100 members trained and mentored through the federal government and International Fund Agriculture Development (IFAD) Rural Finance Institution-Building Programme (RUFIN), which seeks to reach out to poor rural people.
The programme ensures that the rural poor gain access to financial services and can invest in improving productivity in agriculture and small businesses.
With group savings of N60,000 to N80,000 monthly, a member could get a soft credit to either expand her farm and/or undertake business depending on how much she saves.
Martha Aba’a is another member of the Akanawe (yam farmers’ women association). Her little monthly saving of N500 to N1,000 with the group, along with the micro credits she got through RUFIN linkages, was able to invest in yam production.
Today, “I harvest over 1,000 big tubers of yam from my farm,” she said.
In Ugba, a widow who gave her name as Mrs. Esther is a volunteer under the RUFIN programme. Esther’s job is to help other women to form groups with the aim of imbibing group savings and lending culture.
Her two years of helping women come together resulted in the formation of over 10 women groups, saving from the little they make from their farms and agro-enterprises. These groups lend to themselves depending on how much you save in the group, one could get loan facilities from N5,000 to N50,000.
Another widow, Mrs. Agara while telling her emotional story, recounted how life was miserable for her family before receiving the FG/IFAD capacity building on group formation and saving culture.
The widow has so far mobilised over 100 women into 15 groups in her ward helping them to save their widow’s mite and lending to each other. She told the IFAD supervision team that “I have expanded my soya beans and yam farms, and have now gone into selling cloths too.”
Some of the groups they help to form, like the Nongo Sisters and Kakuli women groups, made up of financially challenged women and widows are taking the lead in changing the economic situation around their families and learning how to empower themselves.
Mrs. Elizabeth Adam of the Nongo Sisters listed the group’s challenges to include more access to financial institutions in order to expand their production base.
As RUFIN winds up next year, the Central Bank (CBN) and International Fund Agriculture Development (IFAD) are already putting in place strategy to sustain rural financial inclusion for the poor smallholder farmers in states willing to key into the programme. NAN.