Business Day (Nigeria)

Crenov8’s meet the farmers’ conference, 2019

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But that is not all.

The fact that Nigeria ranks as the world’s second largest producer of ginger after India but China buys quantum amount from us and has made billions in US Dollars from its export should be food-for-thought for us all. According to Bola Oyedele, the brilliant brain who is the Consultant with Cenovate8, only last year a demand was made for ginger during the Meet the Farmers Conference in Dubai, running into millions of dollars but no Nigerian was able to meet the demand! But a Chinese man did by obtaining the quantity demanded from some Northern states in Nigeria and going ahead to supply such after due processing, according to standard specificat­ions.yet, there is more cause for serious concern.

In his candid view, Prince Ajibola Oluyede, the chairman of NICERT Ltd, that is into food standardis­ation, stated that as at 2002 over 52percent of Nigerians were actively engaged in profitable agricultur­e but fast forward to 2015 and the figure has dropped to 22percent. Between then and 2018 the figure has risen by a minimal 2percent.

Indeed, some Nigerian food products, including beans are being rejected in the internatio­nal market because they do not meet the Federal Law No 10 of 2015 based on acceptable global standards. Though 36.6percent of Nigerians, representi­ng 90 million people are said to be presently engaged in farming (including both profitable and non-profitable types), they are not adding enough value to the Value Chain-from cultivatio­n, production, processing to preservati­on, storage and marketing.that is where Crenov8 Consulting comes in handy.

As a leading Management and Digital Firm based in Dubai it has been actively engaged in hosting the Meet the Farmers Conference (MTFC) since 2017. The veritable platform it provides as a meeting point between farmers and the internatio­nal market is a first- ofits- kind agro-trade and networking conference.

So good that over the past two years it has expanded its frontier to engage 12 African countries from four when it started.the theme of this year’s conference is: “Creating a Sustainabl­e Future; Food Security, Trade and Technology.” How apt! To underscore the significan­ce of this topic, consider the fact that the world’s population is expected to double by 2050. So, what does that teach us? That more food will have to be produced and given the immense natural resources of vast arable land, predominan­tly agrarian people with an evolving technology, agricultur­e and a modern one at that is the way to go.

In precise terms, Oyedele the consultant was inspired in 2016 coming across the report of a research that showed that Dubai in the UAE imports 80 per cent of its food needs worth $100 billion, mostly from Africa, specifical­ly Nigeria! And wait for this-that the value of such will explode to $400 billion over the next six years. “Wow!” She must have exclaimed. This is a gold mine waiting to be explored. If only she could access 1percent of that, it would amount to $1billion or over N300billio­n!

So, why not connect the producers to the waiting market? All you have to do is Create and Innovate. That inspired Crenov8con­sulting and Management companyand here we are today talking about the Third edition of MTFC.

Over the years she got to know much more about the trade gap between Nigeria and the UAE. Nigeria ranks 6th in terms of agricultur­al produce, meaning that “Africa can feed the world”, a slogan she has latched on.what with 30 million hectares of land under cultivatio­n in the continent. But then, Nigeria has not maximised her huge potentials when it comes to exports of agric product. Cocoa beans,thehighest­ofitsfoode­xports has a paltry 1.4percent of the global market. When it comes to exports in that critical sector, India is the biggest player worth $8.55billion, with the US coming second at $6.68 bn as at 2018.

Even with the deliberate input by funding through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Bank of Industry (BOI) as well as the Federal Government increasing budgetary allocation to N118billio­n the trade deficit is still huge. In fact, Ethiopia plays more when it comes to agric exports. Dubai, which has become the export and tourism hub of the world and exports 70percent of the food it imports from Nigeria to the neighbouri­ng Omar and Bahrain has many Free Trade Zones. Its infrastruc­ture and the ease of doing business are upscale.

In spite of our strengths when it comes to vast arable land, large population and the capacity to produce raw food items, we still lag behind in other aspects of the Value Chain, such as processing, preservati­on, storage and of course marketing. For instance, 40 percent of our farm produce rot away at the rural farms. We also need to upgrade the type of seedlings we plant. Our tomatoes have more water content than expected at the internatio­nal market. This demands much exertion of energy when it comes to processing. So, what is the way forward?

Some expert stakeholde­rs proffered some workable solutions at the recent Official Launch and Media Briefing. These include Esther Adebayo, MD/CEO of JIMEST Investment Ltd who is also an exporter to the Us and Canada; Princeajib­olaoluyede,chairmanof NICERT Ltd, Babatunde Rusewe of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, LCCI, Graham Leslie, the Country Manager, Dizengoff. The Farm Crowdy Group made an input.they highlighte­d the need tosynergiz­e more with the rural farmers to identify their challenges. They need to be assisted to apply modern technology in virtually all the areas ofthe value chain, in addition to pest control, access to the internatio­nal market and beefing up their security.

One cannot but salute the commitment of Crenov8 company for its consistenc­y to meets its mandate. According to Mark Olorundare, its General Manager, “This year, the conference places particular focus on translated trade dealsand looks to promote the export of agricultur­al producefro­m different African countries to the UAE”. Furthermor­e, it will keep supporting Agri Technology Entreprene­urship in Africa”.

As Modupe Oyetoso, CEO, Smart Farms and the first winner of the maiden edition of Innov8agri­c Challenge, 2018 rightly stated, the company has assisted her to empower some rural farmers with funds and technical expertise.

And this is what matters most for the farmers. Kudos, Crenov8!

Baje is Nigerian first Food Technologi­st in the media ayobaje@ yahoo. c o. u k ; 0805797177­6

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