Gulf News

Nigeria’s young, rich and ambitious farmers

HYDROPONIC­S IS LIKELY TO PLAY A BIG ROLE IN MEETING FOOD REQUIREMEN­TS OF AFRICA’S MOST POPULOUS NATION

-

Come, I’ll show you what a potential billion dollars looks like,” said P.J. Okocha, opening the door of a small, modern house in southern Nigeria to reveal a thousand yam seedlings. “These thousand plants can make three million seeds,” he said, with a broad smile.

At just 34, Peter Okocha Junior — also known as P.J. — is a high achiever.

Okocha cut his teeth in his family’s shipping and logistics business, then decided to forge his own path.

He identified Nigeria’s agricultur­al sector as one of enormous potential where he can make the most impact. Today, he is a pioneer in hydroponic­s.

“I always knew I wanted to invest in agricultur­e but I didn’t know exactly what I wanted to do,” he told journalist­s.

“One day, I saw an agro-researcher on Twitter. I contacted him, and said, ‘Hey bro, let’s change the world together’.”

His pitch hit home. In a few months, their company PS Nutrac was born.

Two years later, tens of thousands of yam plants grow without soil, suspended in water in special greenhouse­s — a cutting-edge agricultur­al technique rarely seen in developing countries.

One afternoon in June, young PS Nutrac employees were training a group of old local farmers on a new organic variety of yam.

Farming communitie­s have been gutted by an exodus of young people for big cities to carve out a living, said Chief Awufe Ademola, who is in his 60s and owns 3.2 hectares of land.

In rows before him, the old farmers sat with curved backs and calloused hands.

“With the average age of the African farmer hovering just above 60 years of age, it’s imperative for the new generation to delve into farming,” said Okocha.

“Nobody wants to do the convention­al standing in the hot sun, and sweating and labour that comes out with that, therefore to combine it with data, technology and automatisa­tion, it makes it more attractive.”

Food challenge

Nigeria, which is home to more than 180 million people, is under pressure to produce more food. By 2050, it is expected to become the third most populous country in the world.

After the discovery of oil in commercial quantities in the 1950s, Nigeria’s prosperous agricultur­al sector suffered a precipitou­s decline as successive leaders and investors switched focus entirely.

Decades have passed and with the collapse of the railway network, agricultur­al goods now have to be transporte­d by truck on crumbling roads.

There are not enough storage sheds; those that exist are mostly not refrigerat­ed; and there are few processing plants.

That means huge amounts of produce go to waste in a country so fertile it can grow everything from avocados to cashews to corn.

For example, about four million tonnes of citrus fruits are produced annually, according to US Department of Agricultur­e figures for 2009.

But up to 60 per cent goes to waste before getting to the final consumers in urban centres.

Meanwhile, Nigeria imports US$315 million (Dh1.15 billion) of orange concentrat­e a year, the bulk of national consumptio­n.

“Opportunit­ies in agricultur­e are beyond the imaginatio­n,” said Buffy Okeke-Ojiudu, the proud owner of a 200-hectare palm oil plantation in the southeast.

“The future billionair­es in Nigeria will be people investing in agricultur­e, tech and renewable energy, which are sectors that can create employment, not like the oil sector,” said the 34-year-old, whose grandfathe­r was Nigeria’s first minister of agricultur­e.

Starting from scratch

Making farming profitable is not easy, though.

The main problem for businesses is access to bank loans, which attract high rates of interest compared to other countries in the region.

“Access to finance is a big issue,” OkekeOjiud­u said, adding that banks ask for large amounts of collateral and charge double-digit interest rates for agricultur­e ventures. So today, the people who are investing in this sector are already wealthy, already connected.”

Okeke-Ojiudu was educated in the United States and England. Seyi Oyenuga also spent most of his life between Chicago and Washington before coming to his father’s homeland.

Three years ago, he swapped life in the constructi­on sector to settle in Oyo, southwest Nigeria, and started a farm.

On the four-hour drive from Okocha’s farm, women pound dried cassava along the road.

Nearly all the farms surroundin­g the sleepy villages have been abandoned.

Farming revival

But a farming revival is taking place at Oyenuga’s Atman Farm, where he is busy repairing tractors to plough the cassava fields.

“We have to use old-generation tractors because people here only know how to operate them,” he said, dressed in a John Deere cap, blue gingham shirt and a keffiyeh around his neck.

Oyenuga learnt everything from scratch, including how to negotiate with local leaders to acquire property deeds, to teach employees the metric system and how to use tractors.

“We learnt the hard way,” he said, speaking under a relentless sun after fixing up the tractors side by side with his staff.

This year, he hopes to plant cassava on 400 hectares — five times the area of his first harvest last year.

It is just the start. Ultimately, he wants to cultivate 2,000 hectares within 10 years.

“It’s really been exciting, I’ve been able to do things that I’ve never imagined or thought were possible,” he added.

 ?? AFP ?? Co-founder Olisaeloka Peter Okocha Jr (right) and chief agronomist Gbolahan Folarin (left) inspect yam seedlings at the PS Nutrac Farm, in Wasinmi, Nigeria.
AFP Co-founder Olisaeloka Peter Okocha Jr (right) and chief agronomist Gbolahan Folarin (left) inspect yam seedlings at the PS Nutrac Farm, in Wasinmi, Nigeria.
 ??  ?? Gbolahan Folarin monitors the pH-levels of water used in the aeroponics system.
Gbolahan Folarin monitors the pH-levels of water used in the aeroponics system.
 ??  ?? Young farmers are tapping technologi­es to address efficiency in food production.
Young farmers are tapping technologi­es to address efficiency in food production.
 ??  ?? Yam seedlings in one of the aeroponics screen houses at PS Nutrac Farm.
Yam seedlings in one of the aeroponics screen houses at PS Nutrac Farm.
 ??  ?? A thermomete­r indicates the temperatur­e in one of the screen houses.
A thermomete­r indicates the temperatur­e in one of the screen houses.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates