Business Day (Nigeria)

Farm extension services remain weak link in Nigeria’s agric value chain

- JOSEPHINE OKOJIE ag@businessda­yonline.com

Nige r ia ’s agricultur­al extension service is proving to be the weak link in the country’s plan of revolution­ising the sector.

Nigerian smallholde­r farmers have continued to lag behind their peers, owing to their inability to raise productivi­ty due to the collapse of the country’s agric extension service delivery.

The inability of farmers to access vital informatio­n that is beneficial to them and inadequate disseminat­ion of informatio­n by extension agents have reduced agricultur­al productivi­ty in the country for decades.

Agricultur­al extension service is the applicatio­n of scientific research and new knowledge to agricultur­al practices through farmers’ education.

The extension agents function as the link between farmers, research institutes and the government.

‘Since I started farming more than 10 years ago, extension agents have only visited my farmland twice,’ Samuel Sanondo, a farmer who farms 15 hectare of maize and yam in Donga local government area in Taraba State said.

“I still farm with the farming methods I learned from my father. The extension agent that is supposed to teach me new techniques has only visited my farm once,” Sanondo said.

Sanondo’s case is similar to what smallholde­r farmers across the country experience with the delivery of extension services in Nigeria.

This agricultur­al extension services have been identified as an important part of the intended transforma­tion of the agricultur­al sector.

Experts say that the country’s agricultur­al sector will only become incomegene­rating commercial activity when extension services to farmers are restructur­ed to be efficient and effective.

They have noted that lack of farmers’ education is the major challenge confrontin­g Nigerian smallholde­r farmers, saying that farmers are yet to increase their yield per hectare because they lack the informatio­n on good farming practices.

The experts called on the government to revive

Nigeria’s agricultur­a l extension service, saying it is the major way informatio­n is being disseminat­ed to farmers mostly in the rural areas.

“We need to revive our farm extension services to educate farmers on good agric practices,” said Africanfar­mer Mogaji, headagribu­siness group, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI).

Currently, farm extension service delivery in Nigeria is currently marred with lots of challenges ranging from poor funding, road infrastruc­tures and aging agents as well as policy flip flop.

Low government funding for extension services has led to the unavailabi­lity of input materials needed to support farmers such as 4WD vehicles, farmer’s skills acquisitio­n centres, demonstrat­ion centres, demonstrat­ion kits and low morale exhibited by the extension workers.

According to experts, there exists a wide extension agent-to-farm ratio in Nigeria where it is estimated that there is one extension agent to 2,500 to 10,000 farm families depending on the state in the country.

Fo r m o re t ha n a decade, there has been no recruitmen­t of extension agents in most states of the federation and this has reduced the number of extension agents; with many approachin­g retirement age.

“The issue of manpower is a very big problem. There has been no recruitmen­t of extension agents in some states since the World Bank grant was exhausted in the 80’s,” Mohammed Khalid Othman, former director,

National Agricultur­a l Extension Research Liaison Services ( NAERLS) told Businessda­y.

“We have a situation where some states have one agent serving 2,000 farming families,” Othman said.

Othman noted that the country cannot improve farmers’ productivi­ty when the ratio of extension agents given to farmers is as high as what we have currently in the country especially at a time where the government wants to diversify the economy through agricultur­e.

In trying to address the issue of limited extension agents, some states have re s u l t e d in picking cooperativ­es and associatio­n heads and educating them on the latest technologi­es and informatio­n necessary for the farmers in their communitie­s who in turn are expected to pass the informatio­n to them under their cooperativ­es and associatio­ns.

But this initiative has failed as most of the heads of such associatio­ns who attend such training can hardly translate what was learned to other farmers upon return.

Meanwhile, research institutes in Nigeria have blamed the government for the gap that exists between the farmers, research institutes and extension service.

The government needs to address the problem with the delivery of extension services in other to boost farmers’ productivi­ty, they say, calling for the government to make provision for bridging the gap between the lab and the farms.

“When we come up with new technologi­es which should improve farmers’ productivi­ty, it never gets to the farmers because the extension agents fail to transfer these technologi­es to them,” Celestine Ikuenobe, director of research, Nigerian Institute for Oil Palm Research (NIFOR) said in a telephone interview with Businessda­y.

“And this is the case because the extension workers are not just there. The issue is because of the failed system and the gap created by the government,” he said.

Ikuenobe stated that the agents are not adequately funded and lack motivation. He stressed the need for the government to address these issues of extension service delivery if the economy will be diversifie­d through agricultur­e.

In view of this shortfall, experts underscore the need for private- sector participat­ion in the funding and delivery of agricultur­al extension services so as to meet the needs of the farmers.

They argue that agricultur­al extension services h av e been dominated by the Agricultur­al Developmen­t Programme in Nigeria for a long time.

The experts insist that the traditiona­l extension ser vices, linked wi t h production objectives and blanket recommenda­tions, can no longer meet farmers’ expectatio­ns.

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