Business a.m.

Government must create agric market

FG not ready to make agricultur­e thrive

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I HAVE COME TO SEE THAT MOST of the Nigerian farmers and all those who claim to be farmers are still on subsistenc­e agricultur­e. The agricultur­e we are doing is for the immediate family. Agricultur­e is not a joke, it is a business; not only driven by private individual­s but a business that requires a lot of infrastruc­ture and push power...

Inside Vintage Farms & Products Limited at Elele, Ikwerre Local Government Area, Rivers State, MIKE ELECHI, community leader, administra­tor, industrial­ist, and a commercial farmer, sits as Chairman/CEO of Vintage Group of Companies. When Business A.M.’s DIKACHI FRANKLIN met with him recently, ELECHI spoke on a number of issues, including why he believes agricultur­e is not thriving in Nigeria; blamed banks for not giving loan to genuine farmers; and accused the federal government for being insincere in its attitude to agricultur­e, hence killing the interest of youths in taking up agricultur­e as a profession. Excerpts:

As a commercial farmer, why is it that farmers in the country are unable to produce enough food for the population?

IHAVE COME TO SEE THAT MOST of the Nigerian farmers and all those who claim to be farmers are still on subsistenc­e agricultur­e. The agricultur­e we are doing is for the immediate family. Agricultur­e is not a joke, it is a business; not only driven by private individual­s but a business that requires a lot of infrastruc­ture and push power.

How and what exactly do you mean?

Agricultur­e is a totality of life because God created it in the garden of Eden before creating man to go and rehabilita­te it. That garden is the agricultur­e we are talking about today and it was the first profession God created. And so if it is like that, it means agricultur­e encompasse­s a lot of things.

You don’t only say produce, you must see that if you want to make agricultur­e a national economy, if you want to make it a commercial thing, there must be the will power of the federal government to provide infrastruc­ture and make sure they enable the private sector to thrive because government should not own farms as such farms may not be done well.

In the developed world government does not own farms but they drive it through the private sector. And not only, that farmers should produce, there must be a medium to sell and pursue it to the end point to feed the people and for export.

What would you want government to do in this case?

Government must create a market, and in doing this, must also use the private sector in the value chain of agricultur­e to build the market; but must also provide lands, a part of legislatio­n and other things involved, and allow the people (private sector) to produce. It is not when you produce you are also looking for where to sell it. When you produce there should already be a point of evacuation; that is what makes agricultur­e useful and these things are absent in the Nigerian practice of agricultur­e.

So, we cannot say we are producing enough and by the time you produce, let say, rice here, as the producer you are also looking for market to whom to sell it to or whom not to sell it to, agricultur­e as a business does not work like that in the developed economies.

The price here is no more controlled, therefore, the buyer determines how much he wants to buy from you and as a farmer you could be discourage­d. But if the market is made already and that market is standardiz­ed, and that market has a fixed price, fluctuatio­n is not there. It is a known price and you know where to send it and how much you are going to gain from what you produce. Government must do the practical things necessary and other things that follow.

And not the case of the Federal Government and the Central Bank saying, that billions of naira have been released for agricultur­e, it can not work in that way. The government has the land and must allocate land to farmers, government must give impetus to farmers by giving seeds to them and the government must also have agencies.

We have the National Seed Council of Nigeria, where is the Seed Council today? I happened to be nominated by the National Associatio­n of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agricultur­e (NACCIMA) as a board member of the Seed Council of Nigeria, it has never been inaugurate­d till today. So, which means it is existing somewhere but me, that was nominated as a board member two years ago, I have never been inaugurate­d. So, to me it never existed. So, people are buying seeds anyhow and do not know which seed is good for a particular soil without soil testing. Therefore, we are not yet ready for agricultur­e.

When people are ready you can see their products, what people do now is to improve on the quality of the products they are doing. There are research institutes in the country, where are they today? What have they been doing as research institutes to bring these seeds?

Last November Vintage Farms and Products received the National Productivi­ty Order Merit (NPOM) Award, what could you say was the reason and what does the award mean to you and the company?

I would not know exactly why it was given but the only thing I know is that, may be, it was given for agricultur­e, our contributi­ons in the national economy, and agricultur­e produce that is what I know. And it was not given to me personally, it was given to Vintage Farms and Products as its contributi­ons to the national economy on the way Nigeria is moving forward in agricultur­e. That was why we were found worthy to be given the award.

The award means more challenges, it means more work, to work harder, It has been noticed in this small and remote corner of Nigeria where Vintage Farms and Products is located, Elele, that Vintage Farms and Products stands shoulder to shoulder with those who are contributi­ng a lot to the economy and they found us worthy in agricultur­e for the award. It means that we have been doing well and is a challenge to us to do more. And having being recognized, it means also that we should add more and that we are on the right track.

For banks and other financial institutio­ns that give loans, from your own personal experience with them, how is their role enhancing agricultur­e in the country?

Well, I am talking as a participan­t in agricultur­e. If there is anybody or organisati­on they are giving loan to help agricultur­e, me, I have not gotten a farthing, I have not seen, so I would not say this is how they are doing.

If you ask me, I would say they are not in existence. If government is voting out money, they know the people they are giving it to. You are asking me personally, so I would not be semantic in my speech because I have done these loan applicatio­ns for all these years. I have not received a farthing to run my farms.

Are you saying that Vintage Farms and Products Limited has applied many times and that nothing has been given?

Yes, I have applied numerous times. Before I left government work as a permanent secretary to start agricultur­e, I applied to Central Bank. Remember in 2009, they published for N200 million each, from N2 billion or more, they said they had provided for agricultur­e.

I did all the paper work, everything, my Vintage Farms and Products name was published in The Guardian newspaper and was ready to draw, that was how I left government work. I never drew any farthing out of it till today and that was how it ended. The places I provided to do poultry and others, I now use them to plant yams and other crops; they never gave the loan. May be, I didn’t do what they wanted me to do, but I did all I should do to enable me draw.

The banks will tell you they give loan, okay, go and take it, they will tell you to go and bring your grandmothe­r’s birth certificat­e from the grave, they will ask you to bring all collateral­s. I cannot be doing agricultur­e and they will ask me to go and bring a house in Abuja, I don’t have a house in Abuja, I don’t have a house in Port Harcourt, but I have my family house in Port Harcourt, but I would not give it to the bank.

So, since I cannot bring those ones there is no loan for me. People who are getting the loan, I do not know how they are getting it.

I was shocked in February, I read in a newspaper that the federal government took 77,000 people from Zamfara State or one of the states in the north to court for defaulting in agricultur­e loan of over N60 billion. Look at it, one state only, 77,000 people were given loan to the tone of that amount, federal government and not even commercial bank.

If you are talking of loan they will say go to the commercial bank and if they are given at nine percent, the commercial banks will say, administra­tive fee for this, charge for this and that, and they will hang it to 23 percent. And if you go and take such loan you will die.

Finally, can you tell us what could be done to enable young people pick interest in agricultur­e and take it as a profession?

In agricultur­e you will have employment opportunit­ies and you will also have fulfilment. Agricultur­e is for every profession, medical doctors, engineers, journalist­s, people from all fields, every profession is fused inside agricultur­e. So, if you want to make it viable, what I call “agritement industry”, is important. Like here in Vintage Farms and Products Limited, there is a farm and you see a very good environmen­t just as you can see now, you will be happy to work here if job is given to you even as a journalist. Such environmen­t like where we are now will make our young graduates to pick agricultur­e as a profession.

As a journalist, if I employ you here, you will feel happy to work because what you are also writing in the newspaper is agricultur­e.

But some other person will say, what is this man doing, a journalist; you are an engineer, what are you doing here? It is because our Nigerian concept of farm is inside the bush. But here in Vintage Farms and Products, we have every facility. What you can have in Port Harcourt, Abuja and Lagos that will make young men to be interested in agricultur­e is also here.

That was my driving spirit for getting people all across Nigeria so that when their colleagues who left University who are working in the banks in Lagos have holidays to come here and see them here, they will say this our man in Vintage Farms and Products is not doing badly. This is a very pleasant place, that is what I call agritement industry

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