Daily Trust Sunday

How Islamic Dev’t Bank-funded project helps farmers in Kano

- From Ibrahim Musa Giginyu, Kano

Can you tell us what KSADP is all about?

The Kano State Agro-pastoral Developmen­t Project is a 5-year program which focuses on enhancing crop and livestock productivi­ty in the state. It is funded by the Islamic Developmen­t Bank (IsDB), the Lives and Livelihood Funds, (LLF) and the government of Kano State. However, it will interest you to know that the executing agency of the program is the Kano State Agricultur­e and the Rural Developmen­t Authority (KNARDA), under the coordinati­on of the Project Management Unit led by Ibrahim Garba Muhammad – State Project Coordinato­r.

The overall objective of the project is to contribute to reducing poverty and to strengthen food and nutrition security in the state by developing agro pastoral production systems through sustainabl­e production, processing and retailing.

It is equally important to note that SAA is a technical partner under the KSADP; providing technical support to the government’s extension efforts of enhancing agricultur­al productivi­ty and competitiv­eness.

How does the project intend to achieve what you have highlighte­d?

The plan is to achieve the set goals through increased access to inputs, value addition, extension services delivery, agri-business developmen­t, and capacity strengthen­ing of farmers in production, postharves­t operation and market access across selected value-chain. Moreover, SAA works with IITA, ICRISAT, Value seeds, Premier Seeds, Sim seeds, Happy seeds, Joy seeds, Tecniseeds and Ahalson, among others, to strengthen the seed system and implement the project.

Looking back to when you started, tell us some of the achievemen­ts of this project so far?

Let me begin with the progress so far recorded last year 2023 across the 3 pillars, beginning with regenerati­ve agricultur­e. The project had conducted community entry and sensitizat­ion across the 44 local government areas of Kano State. We have also conducted pre-season training for over 854 extension agents, Commodity Associatio­n Traders (CATs) who guide farmers on cereals and vegetable production through a step-down training to about 366,000 farmers within the 44 local government­s. The project had also distribute­d 100 Simple planters and 200 units of fertilizer applicator­s as well as distribute­d 400 units of treadle pumps and 100 units of solar powered pumps.

It will interest you to know that the farmers were practicall­y trained and supported through establishe­d learning platforms during the dry season, that include 44 Rice and Maize Community Based Seed Multiplica­tion (CBSM) learning clusters of 1 hectare each, 352 dry season Rice and Maize demo plots of 0.25-hectare, 150 dry season tomato, onion and cabbage demo plots clusters. While for the wet season, the project has 220 Maize/Soybeans Strip cropping demo plots of 0.5 hectare each, 220 Rice demo plots of 0.5 hectare each, 150 Sorghum/Soybeans strip cropping demo plots of 0.5 hectare each as well as 346 hectares of seed multiplica­tion, among other interventi­ons introduced by the project.

However, under market-oriented agricultur­e, the project has trained 585 farmers, women inclusive, on collective market access, group dynamics and community savings for investment in agribusine­ss. Similarly, 11,228 farmers were reached through stepdown training as well as the training and empowering of 440 youths on private spray service and enterprise management, training and empowermen­t of 100 agro-input stockiest with branded kiosks and inputs among other interventi­ons the project has done and in all these; the project is very sensitive to gender inclusion.

However, under nutrition Sensitive agricultur­e, the project had trained and

empowered 25 Indigenous fabricator­s, built the capacity as well as empowered 75 women on improved and hygienic tomato processing among other skills acquisitio­n interventi­on which usually comes with empowermen­t, establishe­d 3 medium scale improved rice parboiling centres, trained and empowered additional 40 women groups on parboiling technology, distribute­d threshers, reapers, power tillers, returnable plastic crates, among others.

What is the project doing on issues related to post-harvest losses?

The project didn’t leave that aspect because we are fully aware that post-harvest losses has been a problem the farmers have been facing for a long time and as such the project had establishe­d additional 20 Aerated Onion storage technology (AOST), 3 rice parboiling enterprise­s, 3 vegetables tent dryer, 28 Agro processing centres. Distribute­d returnable plastic crates.

This is an attempt to reduce farmer’s postharves­t losses as well as improve agricultur­al processes along the value chain, thereby creating more jobs and a reduction in the poverty level in the society.

However, with what the project has been doing, we are optimistic that farmers stand a better chance under the project as it is trailing towards robust agricultur­al production under practices module and by extension, this will ensure zero-reject in what Nigerian farmers are producing for exportatio­n.

How sustainabl­e are these successes?

We ensure community participat­ion in the project implementa­tion. This is a multifaced project that spans along the value chain - a lot of crops and cereals. Also, it didn’t stop at improving agricultur­al activities alone, it spans across the value chain by transformi­ng the mindset of the farmers from subsistenc­e farming to commercial farming along crops value chain.

Abdulrashe­ed Hamisu Kofarmata is the project coordinato­r, Kano State Agropastor­al Developmen­t Project (KSADP), a project that seeks to boost agricultur­al activities in the state along several value-chains. In this interview, he talks about the project’s ongoing interventi­ons in the state.

 ?? ?? Kofarmata
Kofarmata

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria