Post by Ismail AbdulAzeez on Jul 16, 2013 3:35:57 GMT 1
Down a winding dirt track in this sleepy village in northern Nigeria lies a corn farm which looks much like the dozens that surround it. The difference is, this one is turning a profit.
“I can barely lift my 8-year-old. He’s the fattest in the village,” said Ibrahim Mustapha, 50, drawing laughter from his fellow farmers as he pretends to lift up his chubby son.
The Babban Gona or “Great Farm” project, in northern Kaduna state, is one of a handful where private investment is helping former subsistence farmers like Mustapha make profits for themselves and the companies backing them.
When President Goodluck Jonathan was elected two years ago, he pledged reforms that would transform the lives of tens of millions of farmers who live on less than $2 a day despite occupying some of Africa’s most fertile land.
Oil remains the main source of foreign currency and state revenues, but agriculture is by far the biggest contributor to GDP, making up 40% of Africa’s second largest economy.
With 170mn mouths to feed and a growing food import bill thanks to the disarray in the farming sector, agriculture ministry officials say there’s no time to lose.
If productivity does not improve Nigeria could face a food crisis within a decade, its current account surplus would be wiped out and the credit worthiness of Africa’s second biggest debt issuer would be under threat.
“If we did nothing, it would be a disaster,” Agriculture Minister Akinwumi Adesina told Reuters in the capital. “We don’t eat oil, we don’t drink it ... We cannot sustain the amount of money we use to import food,” Adesina said, a Nigerian flag hanging behind his office chair.
In some cases, the imports substitute for things Nigerians are growing but can’t get to market or lack the means to process.
The country is the second largest grower of citrus fruit in the world after China and yet it spends $200mn a year on imported fruit juice while its own produce rots, Adesina said.
It also produces 1.5mn tonnes of tomatoes annually of which 45% perish, while consumers spend $360mn on tomato paste imported from countries such as Italy and China.
To succeed, Adesina’s reforms will need to reverse the inadvertent damage done to the sector by Africa’s earliest and biggest oil and gas boom, which crowded out other commodities.
In the 1960s, Nigeria was the biggest exporter of peanuts in the world and had 27% of the palm oil trade. It remains one of the world’s top cocoa growers, but production and bean quality have declined since their heyday in the 1970s.
While an elite allied to a series of military dictatorships grew rich on the spoils of the energy sector, millions of mostly subsistence farmers were given little or no help at all.
The result: Nigeria is now the world’s second largest importer of rice and the biggest buyer of US wheat, while much of its own fertile land lies fallow. A booming population has sent its food import bill rocketing to around $11bn a year - equivalent to more than a third of the federal budget.
Agriculture also offers the best chance to cut unemployment, which is 23% and youth unemployment double that, national statistics suggest.
“Poverty is the source of a lot of the insecurity problems we have. A hungry man is an angry man,” Adesina said.
The minister plans to create 3.5mn new jobs in agriculture and boost food production by 20mn tonnes by 2015, the year of the next national election.
To achieve this, he wants to boost access to microfinance for farmers and draw in $10bn of foreign investment into farming and food processing.
He has received tentative praise for early successes from foreign diplomats, bankers and aid agencies, but big agro-business projects have yet to take off.
Adesina took a corrupt fertiliser subsidy out of politicians’ hands and now farmers are texted subsidy vouchers directly to their mobile phones so they can recoup from fertiliser sellers, a policy used in Kenya’s farming reforms.
Seventy percent of farmers now receive subsidised fertiliser and seeds, compared with 11% under the corrupt programme previously run by state governments, Adesina said.
Production of rice, cassava, wheat, sorghum, and corn are rising and cocoa, Nigeria’s most important export crop, looks set to go up by more than a third this season.
In 2012, agriculture exports rose by 128bn naira ($788mn) and food imports fell by 850bn, Adesina says.
Foreign investors such as food giant Cargill, seed company Syngenta, brewer SABMiller and Africa’s richest man Aliko Dangote are planning to build everything from fertiliser plants to food processing factories.
Yet rice imports still soak up $7mn a day, while poor infrastructure and policy flip-flopping have in the past seen farming potential wasted. Farmers needs infrastructure to get goods to market—and rural Nigeria’s is as woeful as it gets.
Nigerian billionaire Dangote has pledged to spend $35mn on a tomato paste plant in the northern city of Kano and $45mn in Cross River state to process pineapple juice.
Adesina says he has received $8bn in commitments but such promises are often not kept in Nigeria. Cargill and SABMiller told Reuters they are only “considering” investing.
“I would estimate that no more than one dollar of investment actually occurs for every $100 of announced commitments,” said Fola Fagbule, an Africa-focused investment banker in Lagos.
A central bank initiative has issued guarantees on around 25bn naira of agriculture loans since it began in July last year, lifting lending to the sector to around 4% of total loans, from 1.5% at end-2009, the bank says.
The World Bank is putting in $100mn into agriculture, while British and US aid projects pump in tens of millions.
This barely scratches the $10bn Adesina says the sector needs by 2015. Smallholders say banks still don’t lend to them, while the scheme doles out cheap money to big firms.
“We’ve heard it all before and I have never seen it get better,” says Alhaji, a farmer wrestling with two scrawny long-horned cows dragging a rusty plough through a field. “I have 15 children and ... we barely get enough food to feed ourselves,” he said.
A few success stories nonetheless give cause for optimism.
Farmer Mustapha says he made $1,350 per hectare from his harvest after paying back private firm Doreo Partners, which runs the Babban Gona project, compared to previous years where he might earn $200 per hectare.
“Now I want to grow my farm, I have so much space I never used. Now I will send my children to school,” he said, while behind him mostly unused farmland stretched to the horizon.
Doreo is working with 600 farmers. It has ambitious plans to boost this to 500,000 by 2020, and 5mn by 2030.
“I know it sounds ambitious but it’s been done elsewhere and Nigeria has so much easy-to-reach potential,” said Kola Masha, the company’s head.
Masha is attempting to emulate giant food cooperatives like CHS in the US or India’s dairy franchise Amul, who make huge profits while helping millions of smallholder farmers.
He gives farmers high-quality fertiliser, seeds, equipment and expertise on credit to massively increase their yields, while negotiating with firms like Nestle to buy the produce at higher prices than the farmers could get themselves.
Farmers working with Masha, he said, are using 40 times more fertiliser than neighbours who could never afford that amount.
“It’s early days but I’m more optimistic than I’ve ever been,” he said.
Source:
“I can barely lift my 8-year-old. He’s the fattest in the village,” said Ibrahim Mustapha, 50, drawing laughter from his fellow farmers as he pretends to lift up his chubby son.
The Babban Gona or “Great Farm” project, in northern Kaduna state, is one of a handful where private investment is helping former subsistence farmers like Mustapha make profits for themselves and the companies backing them.
When President Goodluck Jonathan was elected two years ago, he pledged reforms that would transform the lives of tens of millions of farmers who live on less than $2 a day despite occupying some of Africa’s most fertile land.
Oil remains the main source of foreign currency and state revenues, but agriculture is by far the biggest contributor to GDP, making up 40% of Africa’s second largest economy.
With 170mn mouths to feed and a growing food import bill thanks to the disarray in the farming sector, agriculture ministry officials say there’s no time to lose.
If productivity does not improve Nigeria could face a food crisis within a decade, its current account surplus would be wiped out and the credit worthiness of Africa’s second biggest debt issuer would be under threat.
“If we did nothing, it would be a disaster,” Agriculture Minister Akinwumi Adesina told Reuters in the capital. “We don’t eat oil, we don’t drink it ... We cannot sustain the amount of money we use to import food,” Adesina said, a Nigerian flag hanging behind his office chair.
In some cases, the imports substitute for things Nigerians are growing but can’t get to market or lack the means to process.
The country is the second largest grower of citrus fruit in the world after China and yet it spends $200mn a year on imported fruit juice while its own produce rots, Adesina said.
It also produces 1.5mn tonnes of tomatoes annually of which 45% perish, while consumers spend $360mn on tomato paste imported from countries such as Italy and China.
To succeed, Adesina’s reforms will need to reverse the inadvertent damage done to the sector by Africa’s earliest and biggest oil and gas boom, which crowded out other commodities.
In the 1960s, Nigeria was the biggest exporter of peanuts in the world and had 27% of the palm oil trade. It remains one of the world’s top cocoa growers, but production and bean quality have declined since their heyday in the 1970s.
While an elite allied to a series of military dictatorships grew rich on the spoils of the energy sector, millions of mostly subsistence farmers were given little or no help at all.
The result: Nigeria is now the world’s second largest importer of rice and the biggest buyer of US wheat, while much of its own fertile land lies fallow. A booming population has sent its food import bill rocketing to around $11bn a year - equivalent to more than a third of the federal budget.
Agriculture also offers the best chance to cut unemployment, which is 23% and youth unemployment double that, national statistics suggest.
“Poverty is the source of a lot of the insecurity problems we have. A hungry man is an angry man,” Adesina said.
The minister plans to create 3.5mn new jobs in agriculture and boost food production by 20mn tonnes by 2015, the year of the next national election.
To achieve this, he wants to boost access to microfinance for farmers and draw in $10bn of foreign investment into farming and food processing.
He has received tentative praise for early successes from foreign diplomats, bankers and aid agencies, but big agro-business projects have yet to take off.
Adesina took a corrupt fertiliser subsidy out of politicians’ hands and now farmers are texted subsidy vouchers directly to their mobile phones so they can recoup from fertiliser sellers, a policy used in Kenya’s farming reforms.
Seventy percent of farmers now receive subsidised fertiliser and seeds, compared with 11% under the corrupt programme previously run by state governments, Adesina said.
Production of rice, cassava, wheat, sorghum, and corn are rising and cocoa, Nigeria’s most important export crop, looks set to go up by more than a third this season.
In 2012, agriculture exports rose by 128bn naira ($788mn) and food imports fell by 850bn, Adesina says.
Foreign investors such as food giant Cargill, seed company Syngenta, brewer SABMiller and Africa’s richest man Aliko Dangote are planning to build everything from fertiliser plants to food processing factories.
Yet rice imports still soak up $7mn a day, while poor infrastructure and policy flip-flopping have in the past seen farming potential wasted. Farmers needs infrastructure to get goods to market—and rural Nigeria’s is as woeful as it gets.
Nigerian billionaire Dangote has pledged to spend $35mn on a tomato paste plant in the northern city of Kano and $45mn in Cross River state to process pineapple juice.
Adesina says he has received $8bn in commitments but such promises are often not kept in Nigeria. Cargill and SABMiller told Reuters they are only “considering” investing.
“I would estimate that no more than one dollar of investment actually occurs for every $100 of announced commitments,” said Fola Fagbule, an Africa-focused investment banker in Lagos.
A central bank initiative has issued guarantees on around 25bn naira of agriculture loans since it began in July last year, lifting lending to the sector to around 4% of total loans, from 1.5% at end-2009, the bank says.
The World Bank is putting in $100mn into agriculture, while British and US aid projects pump in tens of millions.
This barely scratches the $10bn Adesina says the sector needs by 2015. Smallholders say banks still don’t lend to them, while the scheme doles out cheap money to big firms.
“We’ve heard it all before and I have never seen it get better,” says Alhaji, a farmer wrestling with two scrawny long-horned cows dragging a rusty plough through a field. “I have 15 children and ... we barely get enough food to feed ourselves,” he said.
A few success stories nonetheless give cause for optimism.
Farmer Mustapha says he made $1,350 per hectare from his harvest after paying back private firm Doreo Partners, which runs the Babban Gona project, compared to previous years where he might earn $200 per hectare.
“Now I want to grow my farm, I have so much space I never used. Now I will send my children to school,” he said, while behind him mostly unused farmland stretched to the horizon.
Doreo is working with 600 farmers. It has ambitious plans to boost this to 500,000 by 2020, and 5mn by 2030.
“I know it sounds ambitious but it’s been done elsewhere and Nigeria has so much easy-to-reach potential,” said Kola Masha, the company’s head.
Masha is attempting to emulate giant food cooperatives like CHS in the US or India’s dairy franchise Amul, who make huge profits while helping millions of smallholder farmers.
He gives farmers high-quality fertiliser, seeds, equipment and expertise on credit to massively increase their yields, while negotiating with firms like Nestle to buy the produce at higher prices than the farmers could get themselves.
Farmers working with Masha, he said, are using 40 times more fertiliser than neighbours who could never afford that amount.
“It’s early days but I’m more optimistic than I’ve ever been,” he said.
Source: