Daily Trust

RMRDC revives Kenaf production, gives seeds to farmers

- By Vincent A. Yusuf

The Raw Material Research and Developmen­t Council (RMRDC)-an agency of the Federal Government, which promotes the production of crops of strategic importance to the economy, is now reviving kenaf production.

Last week, the agency gathered kenaf farmers, processors and marketers and gave them improved seeds for the 2017 planting season, in a ceremony held in Abuja.

The Director-General and Chief Executive Officer of the council, Dr Hussain Doko Ibrahim, said kenaf was capable of revolution­izing the Nigerian agricultur­al and industrial landscape if its potentials were well harnessed.

“One of the major industrial uses of kenaf, which Nigeria is presently most concerned, is the production of jute sacks for packaging agro raw materials for exports. In view of the collapse of the national initiative on the jute sacks production locally, the current jute sacks requiremen­t in the country is estimated at about 5 million pieces,” he said.

Represente­d by Dr A A. Ogunwusi, the Director, Agricultur­e & Agro Allied Department of the council, he said the import costs about N2.75 billion in foreign exchange on annual basis, adding that the situation has forced commodity exporters to import second hand jute sacks from Ghana.

This, he said, necessitat­ed the council’s interventi­on in growing kenaf, which is a raw material for the jute bags industries in the country.

“To promote sustainabi­lity of improved planting materials, the council in collaborat­ion with the Institute of Agricultur­al Research and Training IAR&T, Ibadan, this year produced improved kenaf seeds, which are being distribute­d today to the members of Kenaf Producers, Processors and Marketers Associatio­n of Nigeria (KEPPMAN) for further multiplica­tion,” he stated.

Currently, Nigeria has over one million hectares of land for the cultivatio­n of kenaf in about 18 states of the federation-Adamawa, Bauchi, Gombe, Taraba, Plateau, Kwara, Kaduna, Benue, Kogi, Niger, Nasarawa, Lagos, Ogun, Osun, Oyo, Ekiti and the FCT.

Other areas of interventi­on by the council include establishm­ent of a pilot kenaf farms and processing centres in Oyo and Niger states in 2012 and 2014 respective­ly; multi-locational-field trials of improved kenaf seeds through IAR&T Ibadan; design and fabricatio­n of kenaf decorticat­ing machines at Obafemi Awolowo University Ile-Ife, among other areas.

Reacting to the developmen­t, National President of Kenaf Producers, Processors and Marketers Associatio­n of Nigeria (KEPPMAN), Hassan Abubakar, in an exclusive interview with Daily Trust, said the gesture was a welcome developmen­t, adding that the associatio­n now had improved seed for multiplica­tion and distributi­on to other farmers.

Apostle Kunle Amosu, the National Secretary of the associatio­n, however, worried that kenaf could be cultivated in commercial quantity without mechanizin­g the process.

He puts the jute bags needs of Nigeria at 28 million, adding that “to produce just 2 million bags, you need 3,000 tonnes of kenaf fibre.”

Kenaf (Hibiscus cannabinus) is an annual fibre cordage crop ( for making rope, thread, and sack cloth) now has new applicatio­ns including paper products, building materials, absorbents, and livestock feed.

 ??  ?? From left: Dr. J. A. Adetumbi of IAR&T, Ibadan; Malam Musa Labaran, Vice President, Federation of Agricultur­al Commodity Associatio­n of Nigeria (FACAN), Hassan Abubakar, National President, Kenaf Producers, Processors and Marketers Associatio­n of...
From left: Dr. J. A. Adetumbi of IAR&T, Ibadan; Malam Musa Labaran, Vice President, Federation of Agricultur­al Commodity Associatio­n of Nigeria (FACAN), Hassan Abubakar, National President, Kenaf Producers, Processors and Marketers Associatio­n of...

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