Daily Trust

Why Nigeria is yet to achieve food security

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event that draws the attention of the internatio­nal community to commit more resources to achieve zero hunger and malnutriti­on.

The day is celebrated globally on October 16th to mark the founding of the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) of the United Nations in 1945.

In a press conference to mark the day, the Minister of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t, Alhaji Mohammed Sabo Nanono, said “I think we are producing enough now to feed ourselves and I think there is no hunger in Nigeria. If you say some inconvenie­nces, yes. When people talk about hunger in this country, I just laugh because they don’t know hunger. You need to go to other countries to see the hunger in its bare form”.

According to the minister, the problem with some of the grains is even where to sell, adding that “when the borders were closed initially, a lot of people were uneasy but the farmers are smiling because they get better prices for their rice.”

However, experts including the FAO and the local farmers have a contrary view, insisting that the country needs to do more to address hunger and malnutriti­on.

Representa­tive of the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on of the United Nations in Nigeria, Mr Suffyan Koroma, said Nigeria needs to pay close attention to rising cases of malnutriti­on.

He believes Nigeria needs to produce enough healthy food to deal with the rising incidents of malnutriti­on in the country, especially in the northern region, adding that “eradicatin­g hunger is FAO’s top priority.”

Many Nigerians are hungry because they live in poverty

Mr. Toyin Ajibade, a food security expert has said many Nigerians are hungry because many of them are living in poverty and can hardly afford to buy food items in the market. He said many Nigerians live in extreme poverty.

Ajibade cited last year’s report by the World Poverty Clock that Nigeria has overtaken India as the country with the most extreme poor people in the world.

He quoted the report as saying that around 86.9 million Nigerians now live in extreme poverty, ‘‘which represents nearly 50% of its estimated 180 million population’’. The figure has since increased.

Mr Ajibade noted that though it is always difficult to measure accurately the level of poverty in any society, all indicators and practical observatio­n of Nigerians indicate that many Nigerians are living in poverty.

Alhaji Kabiru Ibrahim, the National President of All Farmers Associatio­n of Nigeria (AFAN), had during a recent interview with journalist­s, reminded the nation that food security is more than just having food, saying that for a nation to claim that it has achieved food security, the citizens are supposed to eat what they want and the food should have the right nutritiona­l value.

“There are many factors that will help in achieving this. One is the purchasing power, the purchasing power of many Nigerians is very poor. I am not sure we are there yet,’’ he said.

Also, the leader of the country’s potato farmers, Chief Dan Okafor, believes that the country must do more in the area of agricultur­al financing to achieve more food production, saying majority of the people are hungry.

A cross session of Nigerians, who spoke with Daily Trust on the World Food Day, decried the rising cost of food items in the country, which according to them is causing hunger.

Mr. Sunday Idahor, a resident of Dutse-Alhaji, said ‘‘it is now difficult for people to eat three meals per day’’, adding that some families in his neighbourh­ood sometime go to sleep without food.

Mrs Khadijat Aremu pleaded with the government to find immediate solution to what she called high prices of food commoditie­s.

‘’Believe me; many people are living in hunger. Those in government may believe it or reject it, the fact is that people are hungry and something must be done to address that,’’ she said.

Nigeria’s efforts to food sufficienc­y

In the last few years, the government came up with several programmes, which they said were geared towards achieving self-sufficienc­y in most of the grains and dairy and vegetable (tomato) which the country spends huge foreign reserves on.

Some of the programmes are; the CBN’s Anchor Borrower Policy for selected grain farmers to obtain loan for farm inputs, the concerted efforts to reduce the bank interest loan to less than 10 per cent and the national fertiliser policy which pegs the price of a bag of fertiliser at N5,500 across the country.

While significan­t achievemen­ts were recorded in grains like rice, maize, sorghum and millet, the country is nowhere in wheat.

level

Production demand

vs national

For rice, there are conflictin­g figures of production whereas the US Department of Agricultur­e, World Markets and Trade report puts the production level at 3.7 million tonnes of rice annually, some government officials put the figures at 15 million tonnes.

But the National President of Rice Farmers Associatio­n of Nigeria (RIFAN) Alhaji Aminu Goronyo said the consumptio­n level is 7.9 million metric tonnes and the production level has increased to 5.8 million metric tonnes. This means there is short fall of about two million metric tonnes.

On the other hand, the Maize Associatio­n of Nigeria (MAAN) said, with the government interventi­on through the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme, maize yields increased from eight million metric tonnes in 2015 to 20 million metric tonnes in the 2018/2019 wet season.

However, the national demand, according to the statistics from the Federal Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t is about 15 million metric tonnes annually.

But experts say until that production momentum is sustained, a growing population poses more challenge for the demand of maize, which has many value chain uses.

For the tuber crops like cassava (production level was 58,775 metric tonnes in 2018) and yam (about 38,000 metric tonnes).

Other crops doing badly

According to the National Agricultur­al Extension and Research Liaison Services (NAERLS), the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, 2018 Agricultur­e Performanc­e Survey (2018 Wet Season in Nigeria) showed that crops like millets; the total product in 2018 was 1, 879 metric tonnes. Also in the report, Sorghum production was on the decline from the total estimated production area of 5,048 hectares to less than 5,000 with output also declining by 4.5%.

Others like groundnut, wheat have also been on the decline. For wheat, the national demand is 4.1 million metric tonnes, but the country currently produces less than 600,000 metric tonnes and market issues are further widening the gap between production and demand, Daily Trust gathered.

Dairy sector in crisis

“With a cattle population of 20,231,598 for a national human population of nearly 200 million, Nigeria needs to do more in the area of policy to improve in the cattle sector, which has served as a major source of animal protein for the citizenry,” NAERLS 2018 Agricultur­al Performanc­e Survey reported.

Dr Celetine Ayok, a milk production expert and Alhaji MD Abubakar, MD/ CEO L&Z Integrated Farms, Kano, at a dairy confab in Abuja, a few months ago, said Nigeria was yet to have a policy that would enable the industry thrive in order to achieve selfsuffic­iency in milk production.

impediment­s to

Major

selfsuffic­iency

The President of the All Farmers Associatio­n of Nigeria, Alhaji Ibrahim Kabiru, said there are many hurdles along the road to self-sufficienc­y in food production in the country.

He identified illegal importatio­n and access to credit facilities as the main reasons farmers cannot produce enough to satisfy the country’s food requiremen­ts.

In an exclusive interview with Daily Trust, the farmers’ leader also said most government interventi­ons usually end up with ‘political farmers’ instead of the real farmers, adding that there is no way such can guarantee self- sufficienc­y in food production.

Also speaking, a food security expert, Mr. Toyin Ajibade, identified insecurity as one of the major obstacles hindering the country’s efforts at attaining food security.

He identified Zamfara, Katsina, Borno, Niger, Benue and some other northern states as some of the agrarian states that are facing security challenges.

In some of these states, he said bandits not only steal farm produce but either kidnap the farmers on farm

 ??  ?? A grains market in Katsina State
A grains market in Katsina State

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