Daily Trust

Why Nigerian products are rejected abroad - FG

- From Abdullatee­f Aliyu, Lagos

The Federal Government yesterday said the failure of manufactur­ers to conform to global standards in production and packaging explained why some Nigerian products were rejected in the internatio­nal market.

This emerged yesterday during a non-oil export dialogue convened by the Policy Developmen­t Facility Phase 2 funded by UK Aids.

Agencies of the Federal Government including the Nigeria Agricultur­al Quarantine Service (NAQS), National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion and Control (NAFDAC), Standard Organizati­on of Nigeria (SON), stressed the need for potential manufactur­ers to seek adequate knowledge on the standard and specificat­ions required at the internatio­nal market.

The session brought together manufactur­ers, entreprene­urs, farmers and representa­tives of Chambers of Commerce, Mines and Agricultur­e across the country to explore ways of improving market access to Nigerian products being exported abroad.

The Coordinati­ng Director of NAQS, Dr. Vincent Iseghe, noted that most countries spend more time inspecting Nigerian products imported because of the belief that the manufactur­ers didn’t conform to specificat­ions.

Noting that Nigeria is on the high priority area of countries not conforming, he charged manufactur­ers to self-regulate and do the right thing.

“You should do what is right. It is good for you to have better access to the market. All we will do as regulatory agencies is to complement,” he said.

The representa­tive of SON, Mrs. Mosun Salman, said product manufactur­ers would have easy access to the market if they comply with internatio­nal standards.

“There is no way you will have problem in selling your products abroad if you conform to internatio­nal standard,” she said, adding that SON had strengthen­ed its facilities to provide qualitativ­e services to Nigerians exporting products abroad.

Mrs. Mide Onabanjo, Technical Assistant to the DG of NAFDAC, tasked manufactur­ers to comply with global standards right from production level to ensure that products specificat­ions required in market.

A policy and developmen­t analyst, Dr. Olu Alaba, in his keynote address explained that conforming to standard is key to market access, adding that the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) encourages the harmonizat­ion of standards worldwide.

“Therefore, the standard in Nigeria must be comparable to the standard anywhere in the world. The principles must be the same. Conformity is key, you can’t compromise that.

“Our level of conformity in Nigeria has improved greatly but there is so much to be done and this requires collaborat­ion between the public and reputable private institutio­ns,” he said. meet the the global

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