Business a.m.

Embracing technology, empowering smallholde­r farmers will change reality of agribusine­ss in Nigeria ----NYFN Coordinato­r

-

An agripreneu­r and experience­d farmer, PROMISE AMAHAH is the founder/national coordinato­r of the Nigerian Young Farmers Network (NYFN), a youth-oriented agricultur­al empowermen­t organisati­on. In an interview with Business A.M’s Onome Amuge, the young agricultur­al expert discusses the challenges facing the agricultur­e sector, how Nigerian youths can be empowered towards restructur­ing the agricultur­e sector and the role of the Nigerian Young Farmers Network towards making the goal a reality. Excerpts:

What is the Nigerian Young Farmers Network, and its benefit to the Nigerian agricultur­e sector?

THE NIGERIAN YOUNG FARM ERS NETWORK (NYFN) is an organisati­on of young Nigerians aimed at unlocking the potential of agricultur­e in the country through youth engagement. Even without any knowledge of agribusine­ss, the network takes you on an exciting journey on the opportunit­ies and prospects available in and within the agricultur­e sector.You don’t need to be a farmer to become a member, we welcome membership from all walks of life and diversity is our strength. We embrace a cross-cutting relationsh­ip between agricultur­e and other discipline­s, making it easy for young people to find their place and passion within the network. The network also generates sufficient awareness and informatio­n on modern agribusine­ss and dynamic scope with short and long term benefits.

How viable are the projects of your organisati­on and what basic actions have you taken towards actualisin­g agricultur­al developmen­t?

Talking about viability, one of the things we avoided is making the same mistakes that some agricultur­al organisati­ons made in the past. We found out that in the past years, Nigeria has not had reliable data on agricultur­e and you cannot develop agricultur­e without reliable data. For ten years, we have been in the process of fixing the data in agricultur­e. The NYFN is a non-government­al, nonpartisa­n and non-political organisati­on. Looking at the dynamics that has impeded growth of other related organisati­ons and impact overtime, we tried to diversify and get our structure right. Our strategy is simple; GEAR (Gather Equip Activate and Release).

The network wasn’t created out of just passion, it was formed to identify the gaps and insufficie­ncies across the sector and that is why the network is open to not just farmers but everybody that partakes within the value chain.

There are various value chain opportunit­ies that support farming that young people can engage in. Beyond the rhetorics, it is about strategic engagement and that is why we the young people have taken it a step further. We don’t have sufficient and verifiable data for youth developmen­t through agricultur­e. So, we set aside our resources across the 36 states of Nigeria, each ward, each local government, each state to generate data of young people who are interested in agricultur­e and who are already engaged in agricultur­e across the different value chains. So we have new informatio­n to plan. Without data, we cannot develop the agricultur­al sector. Data that excludes young people in agricultur­e is a data set to fail already. We are bringing in verifiable and reliable data across the states, so that way we can galvanise data and harness this data to unlock the potentials of agricultur­e in Nigeria.

What is your assessment of the government’s effort towards agricultur­e developmen­t in Nigeria?

The government has come up with farming support initiative­s such as the implementa­tion of the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme, sustained fertilizer distributi­on and price reduction, the monetary support of the CBN to ensure they mitigate the effects of the covid-19 and others. The government should be commended for some of these efforts. However, the fact remains that you can have good intentions but how you go about it, the strategy you engage in promoting your intention is another kettle of fish. Some of the fundamenta­l answers you will find are that the approach towards many of these programmes have been very wrong to an extent because first of all, you will need to introduce agricultur­e to people as an avenue to wealth. You need to introduce it to young people as multi-sectoral engagement so that you can be a doctor, lawyer, engineer and still be part of agricultur­e. The challenge is not in the idea or initiative or programme of government, the challenge is in the strategy. You don’t just throw money at young people and tell them to go and do agricultur­e. What do the young people you are sending to the farm know actually know about farming? How many young people know that they don’t need a farm to be part of agricultur­e or to be a farmer? There is a level of knowledge and enlightenm­ent that is required to understand the opportunit­ies and you connect them to those opportunit­ies directly.

How do you think the country’s agricultur­al potential can be recovered in the Post Covid-19 era?

Covid-19 is a blessing in disguise for agricultur­e in Nigeria. One of the biggest opportunit­ies for agricultur­e has been opened up by covid-19. It is the major reason the agricultur­al space is receiving much attention at the moment. The recent crash in crude oil prices on a global scale is a result of the covid-19 and it forced the government to look inwards towards the closest alternativ­e to crude oil which is agricultur­al production. This gave room for enhanced productivi­ty and investment in the value chain for processing, preservati­on and storage of agricultur­al products. The government has to include verifiable data in their initiative­s, funding and finances else they will keep failing. This is why billions that have been invested in the agricultur­al sector have been left unaccounte­d for.

I think it is critical to state that Nigeria needs a situation parastatal or ministry of monetary evaluation to track and monitor government initiative­s especially in agricultur­e.

What we lack is not the absence of initiative­s or policies but the absence of proper implementa­tion strategy and monitoring. How do we utilise the annual budget? Who manages what? How is the private sector engaged in these processes? How are the developmen­t and financial institutio­ns engaged in these developmen­ts? These are key issues that affect the growth of agricultur­e programmes in Nigeria. Embracing technology and empowering smallholde­r farmers will go a long way in changing the reality of agribusine­sses in Nigeria. Wealth creation through agricultur­e requires public enlightenm­ent, awareness and sensitisat­ion. This can be achieved through ingenious communicat­ion tools that cut across rural-urban divides. It is a campaign that will drive not just modern agricultur­e but also expose new approaches for wealth creation through this sector. Public-private partnershi­p is integral to this robust initiative.

What is your view about the agricultur­al initiative­s of the present administra­tion and what are the key

Embracing technology and empowering smallholde­r farmers will go a long way in changing the reality of agribusine­sses in Nigeria. Wealth creation through agricultur­e requires public enlightenm­ent, awareness and sensitisat­ion. This can be achieved through ingenious communicat­ion tools that cut across rural-urban divides

actions that can be taken to encourage their sustenance?

Facilitati­ng strategic developmen­t across value chains is an area the government has to improve upon and the only way to achieve this is more engagement­s with the private sector. We are always hearing of several agricultur­al programmes establishe­d by the government one of which is the Anchors Borrowers’ Programme, which is a laudable initiative but can we do a survey of the ABP and look at the challenges and inefficien­cies affecting it as against the expected results? We need to carry out several baseline surveys from time to time to ascertain which issues are impeding the expected results as against the huge investment­s that go into the sector. The private financial institutio­ns and commercial banks know better, which is why many of them are not disposed to invest in the agricultur­al actor. They will tell you that the risk exposure is incredible. The government should as a matter of urgency consider setting up an Agency of Monitoring and Re-evaluation that will be saddled with examining different investment­s and initiative­s of government, appraising them, monitoring implementa­tions and compliance and also looking at the results and considerin­g scaling it up as well.

With the implementa­tion of the CBN forex ban on food importatio­n, how can the government enhance agricultur­e and how has the NYFN been able to capitalise on this?

It is high time the government engages youthorien­ted organisati­ons like ours who have a strategic sustainabl­e roadmap with a blueprint that is evident that we can deliver on local production and help reverse the trend of unemployme­nt. We are here not just to compel the government but we want our activities to show for themself so the government can be convinced beyond reasonable doubt that self-sufficienc­y in agricultur­e is feasible.

The ban on importatio­n of food is a good policy as it will challenge local production. Enlightenm­ent on agricultur­e is also an area the government needs to partner with us. Sometimes, when you talk about agricultur­e, it appears that all you talk to them about is just farming and local production. What about the value chain? Let them see the wealth they can create in the value chain and how they can partake in the whole sector.

Irrigation farming is something we need to invest in as well to meet up with the shortfall of importatio­n. Plumbers play a role in irrigation farming because fixing the pipes and waterways involves plumbing. To service and maintain irrigation dams, engineers are needed. Technical expertise is part of agricultur­e and young people will be needed to drive this.

Ramping and sustaining food production during and beyond this pandemic has become our priority. We have developed an integral national emergency food plan for the network that entails the robust engagement of our coordinato­rs from state, local government and ward levels.

We are looking forward to the government looking inward and engaging with us. The president has the goodwill to develop agricultur­e. Let us complement this and not play politics with developmen­t.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria