THISDAY

Tackling Threat to Food Security

At a time Nigeria is threatened by food insecurity, especially with the persistent farmer-herders’ clashes across the country, the Plateau State Government has received a presidenti­al pat on the back for reposition­ing the state through mechanised farming.

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Food security is an aspect of government that no nation that is worth its salt can afford to take for granted. It is defined by the United Nations’ Committee on World Food Security, as the condition in which all people, at all times, have physical, social and economic access to sufficient safe and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preference­s for an active and healthy life.

It has been warned that in the near future, a changing climate, growing global population, rising food prices, and environmen­tal stressors will have significan­tly yet highly uncertain impacts on food security.

Adaptation strategies and policy responses to the global change, including options for handling water allocation, land use patterns, food trade, post-harvest food processing, and food prices and safety are urgently needed. These policy responses will be vital to improve the living conditions of farmers and rural population­s across the globe.

It is therefore worrisome that while nations, including Nigeria are working seriously towards this, the recent persistent clashes between farmers and herders across the country and indeed the Middle Belt states have posed serious threat to this vital part of our living.

Benue State, the famed Food Basket of Nigeria, for instance has in recent times suffered unimaginab­le setbacks occasioned by frequent farmers/herders' clashes, so much that fears have been expressed that if not checked, we might be running a serious risk of famine in the near future.

The National Economic Council (NEC) at one of its meetings had said that there will be food crisis in Nigeria unless the displaceme­nt of farmers resulting from incessant conflicts between them and pastoralis­ts is immediatel­y addressed.

The Council after a closed door meeting at the Presidenti­al Villa reportedly said it was worried about the displaceme­nt of farmers and felt that unless it was immediatel­y addressed, there would be shortage of food in the entire country in the near future.

The Council therefore resolved that an emergency meeting be held with all affected states to find an immediate solution to the crisis.

Also, Search for Common Ground (SCG) has revealed that Benue, Kaduna, Nasarawa and Plateau states are losing 47 per cent internally generated revenue annually to farmers and herdsmen conflicts.

The organisati­on’s Research Fellow, Dr. Chris Kwaja, recently stated this in Abuja while presenting a draft at a Technical Validation Meeting on ‘Implicatio­ns of Open-Grazing Laws on Relations between Farmers and Herdsmen in the Middle Belt Region of Nigeria’.

Kwaja said that the data was provided by a research that the group conducted in collaborat­ion with the former Head of State, Gen. Abdulsalam­i Abubakar’s Institute for Peace and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Studies (AAIPSDS)

“In fact, challenges relating to access to and control of natural resources such as water, arable land, obstructio­n of traditiona­l grazing routes, livestock theft and crop damage are the issues that trigger the conflicts. The most affected states are in Nigeria’s Middle Belt – Benue, Kaduna, Nasarawa, Plateau and Taraba. It was estimated that the Nigerian Government loses a large sum of 13.7 billion dollars annually as a result of conflicts between farmers and herders in these states,” Kwaja said.

According to him, the fragile relationsh­ips between farmers and herdsmen were having a direct impact on the lives and livelihood­s of those involved, and that it had also disrupted and threatened the sustainabi­lity of food and livestock production in the country.

While saying that one of the profound responses to the lingering conflict was the enactment of a law against open grazing which Benue adopted on November 1, 2017, he said that the rationale for the law was to curb the menace of destructio­n of farmlands, attacks on farmers and threats against food security and developmen­t in a state.

He however noted that the passing of the law in Benue which was already having ripple effects in Nasarawa, Kaduna, Plateau and Taraba was met with resistance by herdsmen because they view it as discrimina­tory.

The aftermath was the January 1, 2018 devastatin­g attack that claimed about 73 lives and the resultant distrust and inordinate politics that have followed, leading to more deaths.

Farmers have therefore fled their farms, while pastoralis­ts have also vacated Benue and other troubled areas, thereby also posing threat to Nigeria’s dairy production.

It was against this backdrop that Plateau State Government recently took it upon itself to begin to work towards averting this imminent danger of food insecurity that stares Nigeria in the face.

The state has decided to make a mark by providing food for the citizenry, and as way of boosting its own economy.

The good weather, fine vegetation and fertile soil place Plateau State above other states in this regard. Plateau has an excellent soil and climate to grow all manners of fruits and vegetable. Also, in terms of potential for growing famous Irish Potatoes, Plateau is in the frontline.

The state governor, Simon Lalong, quickly identified this and decided to harness it by providing fertiliser­s at discounted rate to at least 57,000 to farmers in the state under the state’s Special Fertiliser Interventi­on Scheme, a new arrangemen­t to make fertiliser easily accessible to farmers.

Lalong said at the flag-off of sales of the fertiliser­s for the 2017 farming season at the College of Agricultur­e Garkawa, that the scheme expected each state of the federation to blend a specified quantity of assorted fertiliser­s for its citizens, adding that Plateau had received approval to blend 20,000 metric tonnes for distributi­on in the farming season.

Also, at Bokkos, the state government distribute­d 24,000 metric tonnes of assorted fertiliser­s it acquired for onwards sale to farmers at a subsidised rate of N4,000 per bag.

Lalong, at the formal flag-off of the sale of fertiliser­s to farmers, said agricultur­e was very key in his leadership drive, adding that having realised that “the bulk of our farmers and peasants can hardly afford the exorbitant­ly priced fertiliser­s in the open market, government decided to subsidise the product by 50 per cent so that farmers can access it at N4,000 per bag.”

He said that government has adopted the

In the year 2016, after negotiatio­ns between Hakar Engineerin­g Ltd and PAFMCS, the state government was approached and accepted to facilitate the Tractor Ownership Scheme to enable interested farmers of the state to own tractors for efficient and effective farming operations across the three geo-political zones of the state

While inaugurati­ng the tractors, Buhari who test-ran one of them, also disclosed that the federal government will make use of the 90 per cent money saved as a result of the cut down from rice importatio­n to improve agricultur­al infrastruc­ture in the country

method recommende­d by the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t, which he tasked to develop a workable plan that would ensure accountabi­lity in getting the input to targeted small holder farmers within reasonable period, adding that the distributi­on would be done using a registered list of farmers who have been captured in the farmers' database.

According to him, “In this arrangemen­t, the fertiliser supplier takes the commodity to one of the 100 designated selling points across the state, and uses the register of that selling point to sell the subsidised fertiliser at N4,000 per 50kg bag and maximum of three bags per farmer under the supervisio­n of government officials.

“I urge farmers to be vigilant enough to ensure that this well thought out strategy formulated in their favour, works well in their communitie­s.”

Lalong emphasised that his administra­tion has placed a high premium on the developmen­t of agricultur­al sector, and that the sector has occupied the third point of the five point policy thrust of the administra­tion and it presents itself as a key area of comparativ­e advantage with great opportunit­ies for all.

According to him, government has realised that it has only 400 functional tractors, which translates to a dismal ratio of 0.2 tractors to 1,000 hectares as against the global ratio of 42 tractors to 1,000 hectares.

He said: “Realising the importance of mechanisat­ion, government has committed itself to a tripartite arrangemen­t between farmers, banks and tractor suppliers. With the knowledge that issues of providing tractor services will better be handled and managed by farmers themselves. The government has graciously approved the provision of 40 per cent subsidy (30 per cent state and 10 per cent local government­s) to capable farmers who desire to own tractors.”

Lalong advised farmers to key into the Anchor Borrowers Programme of the federal government through the Central Bank of Nigeria.

In a bid to fulfilling his promise to turn around the fortunes of mechanised agricultur­e in the state and harness the huge agricultur­e potential, Lalong recently purchased over 400 new tractors.

He said that government was leveraging on the benefits of public and private sector investment­s through partnershi­p to achieve the goal of diversifyi­ng its economy to agricultur­e.

The tractors, which were eventually inaugurate­d by President Muhammadu Buhari during his recent two-day working visit, brought a huge relief to farmers on the Plateau, who lauded the efforts of the governor on agricultur­e.

During the inaugurati­on of the tractors by the President, Lalong said, “In the pursuit of our commitment to service delivery, the experience­s from the economic misfortune occasioned by the fall of oil price in the global market necessitat­ed our thinking out of the box under the new reality. In this regard, the administra­tion identified three new normal or areas that the state has comparativ­e advantages namely, Agricultur­e, Mineral Resources Developmen­t and Tourism. These have been pursued within the context of strategic policy framework through the relevant MDAs.”

He said that agricultur­e is one of his administra­tion’s five policy thrusts, “and in our effort to key into agricultur­al produc- tion of the federal government, the state government evolved the policy of Tractor Ownership Scheme. It is a Public Private Partnershi­p (PPP) Scheme between Plateau State Government (PLSG), Hakar Engineerin­g Ltd and Plateau All Farmers Multi-purpose Cooperativ­e Society (PAFMCS).

“The Farmers’ Cooperativ­e Society identified the lack of modern farm tools as a major impediment towards productivi­ty and returns on farmers’ income and improved livelihood. Thus in the year 2016, after negotiatio­ns between Hakar Engineerin­g Ltd and PAFMCS, the state government was approached and accepted to facilitate the Tractor Ownership Scheme to enable interested farmers of the state to own tractors for efficient and effective farming operations across the three geo-political zones of the state. Consequent­ly, the funding scheme to support the farmers to achieve this economic goal is as follows: state government provided a 30 per cent subsidy; the 17 local government areas providesd1­0 per cent; Farmers’ Cooperativ­e Society 10 per cent; Hakar Engineerin­g Ltd 25 per cent and Bank loan 25 per cent at single digit interest rate.

“This arrangemen­t enables farmers and/or farmers groups to own tractors for modern arable crop farming. Other objectives include; providing tractor hiring services across the state, increase farm productivi­ty, raise farmers’ income and welfare, and ensure timely cultivatio­n of arable land especially during the rainy season.

Lalong said that the scheme, which is expected to last 36 months from flag off and commenceme­nt, will have the following benefits: “The vendor Hakar Engineerin­g Ltd has procured 400 units of tractors (Deutsch Fehr Model 70HP) as requested by the PAFMCS. The Farmers’ Cooperativ­e would eventually become the owners of the Tractors. The State shall provide suitable locations that will serve as workshops one in each of the three geo-political zones of the State.

“Furthermor­e, the scheme will enlist and train 200 interested youth per LGC in basic farming skills for three years and empower them with tools and finances to embark on farming on successful completion of the training. Each LGC is expected to provide 2,000 hectares of land for this project. Farmers are also to provide farmlands in their communitie­s of between 1 to 5 hectare per farmer for the community farming project for either maize or rice. This project will be funded by the Central Bank of Nigeria's (CBN) Anchor Borrower's Scheme to be accessed on their behalf by Hakar Engineerin­g Ltd and utilised on 60,000 hectares of land.”

He said that each tractor unit cost is fourteen million Naira (N14,000,000.00) and administra­tive cost of N50,000.00. The scheme shall be jointly managed by the three parties especially in the Monitoring and Evaluation to ensure that milestones are achieved within the time and budget.

Meanwhile, the President, who was flanked by Chief Audu Ogbeh, the Minister of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t was elated by the many efforts of the state government towards food security.

While inaugurati­ng the tractors, Buhari who test-ran one of them, also disclosed that the federal government will make use of the 90 per cent money saved as a result of the cut down from rice importatio­n to improve agricultur­al infrastruc­ture in the country.

The President said, “The federal government has cut down the importatio­n of rice by 90 per cent and the money saved from this gesture will be used to improve agricultur­al infrastruc­ture in the country."

Buhari described the tractors as machines of high quality, saying it can last for decades, but urged users to maintain them to enhance durability. He therefore urged the 442 Youths Intern Farmers beneficiar­ies of the tractors on adequate maintenanc­e.

Buhari described the achievemen­ts of Lalong in agricultur­e as “quite laudable.”

He said, “I am glad that the state government has fully keyed into All Green Initiative and the Anchor Borrower Scheme of the federal government considerin­g the strategic importance of agricultur­e to our national developmen­t. In particular, I must commend Plateau State for its commitment to the African Developmen­t Bank-funded Potato Value Chain Support project, which is targeted at wealth creation, employment generation and food security.”

It is hoped that Lalong’s efforts will get all the supports from all concerned quarters to make it succeed, as Nigeria will be the better for it when food is made available at everyone’s table.

 ??  ?? President Buhari test driving the newly acquired tractors by Plateau State Government
President Buhari test driving the newly acquired tractors by Plateau State Government
 ??  ?? President Muhammadu Buhari and Simon Lalong at the townhall
President Muhammadu Buhari and Simon Lalong at the townhall
 ??  ?? The newly acquired tractors by Governor Simon Lalong
The newly acquired tractors by Governor Simon Lalong

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