Daily Trust Saturday

Farmers raise concerns as NIRSAL unveils insurance for crops

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The Nigeria Incentive-Based Risk Sharing System for Agricultur­al Lending (NIRSAL Plc) has developed a Hybrid Multi-Peril Crop Indemnity-Index Insurance (HMII) for farmers across the country.

The insurance product, which was developed in collaborat­ion with Royal Exchange General Insurance Company (REGIC), is designed to protect farmers from losses during a planting season caused by bad weather such as low or high rainfall, early or late season dry spells.

It also covers lightning, hailstorms and thundersto­rms, pest outbreak, disease outbreak, fire outbreak and permanent disability or death of the farmer.

Based on its design, the key advantage of the HM-II is that in cases where such risks happen, benefits paid out to the farmer would be up to the maximum loan or the insured amount after confirmati­on by advanced satellite technology, an assessment by an agricultur­e expert or both.

Insurance policy for smallholde­r farmers has been the subject of many discussion­s, especially after the 2012 flood and the recent deadly flood that destroyed over 450,000 hectares of farms across many states in the north.

Although farmers and other stakeholde­rs in the agricultur­al sector believe that the initiative would go a long way in addressing many disasters faced by the farmers, they said the initiative would only succeed if the real farmers in the rural communitie­s are involved in the process.

Architect Kabiru Ibrahim, President of the All Farmers Associatio­n of Nigeria (AFAN), stressed that any insurance taken to de-risk an investment would be relevant and appreciate­d, adding that the “farmers welcome this improvisat­ion from NIRSAL.”

“We hope this form of insurance will be extended to all farmers and not only those processing or accessing loans as obtained in the Anchor Borrower Program.

“A full-scale insurance policy for agricultur­e is best arranged between the farmers and NAIC as AFAN is discussing with NAIC for all farmers.

“Whatever modalities NIRSAL deploys in executing the insurance policy should be fully discussed with the farmers before implementa­tion,” he stated.

The AFAN president, however, opined that the best option is to encourage the farmers to imbibe the culture of taking insurance with the Nigerian Agricultur­al Insurance Corporatio­n (NAIC).

Chief Alphonsus Inyang, a farmer and developmen­t expert, welcomed the developmen­t by the NIRSAL and the insurance company but put forward key areas that the collaborat­ion must put into considerat­ion.

He said farmers have to be properly trained on the dynamics of the policy to avoid assumption­s as is mostly the case, especially among rural farmers.

In addition, Chief Inyang opines that a rugged indemnity framework should be worked out to avoid the underwrite­rs taking the farmers for granted when claims arise.

“Cropping calendars based on zones should be determined to serve as a guide to all stakeholde­rs. This is important because agricultur­e policies and programs in Nigeria are based on the cropping calendar of the northeast and northwest, which has left most parts of the south behind. For example,wet season planting in the south starts in February/March whereas in the north it’s dry season planting,” he stated.

HammaKwaja­ffa, a stakeholde­r in the cotton sector, viewed the developmen­t as being in the right direction because in the past, when some farmers encounter such huge losses,they never recover.

He believes that the NIRSAL’s move to cover the farmers through such insurance would greatly encourage the farmers to remain in business.

To Mr Toyin Ijaya, an agric economist, such insurance initiative is necessary because of the prevalence of climate changerela­ted disasters in the country now, which he said have not been favourable to the farmers.

“But there should be close monitoring of the brokers involved in the process so that they will not short- change the farmers, whose investment­s, they are to protect in the long run,’’ he said.

He said without proper monitoring system, the real farmers in the rural communitie­s might not benefit from the insurance package.

“I am saying it because most of our local farmers are not that educated and presently, the extension service officers who are supposed to educate them are not there. So, for them to be carried along, they must be properly educated on the operations of the package, if not, it will just be a waste as usual,” he advised.

Others also believe that climate change-related disasters are becoming prevalence and challengin­g to food production, adding that insurance space must be strengthen­ed to respond to critical situations such as the recent flood disaster in the north and the apparent draught in the southwest.

Daily Trust reports that the new initiative was piloted during NIRSAL’s participat­ion in the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) 2019 Anchor Borrowers’ Programme (ABP) Wet season farming.

NIRSAL’s Managing Director, Aliyu Abdulhamee­d, said the new product was another step towards the developmen­t of the NIRSAL Comprehens­ive Index Insurance (NCII) conceptual­ised in 2018 with the ultimate goal of Agric insurance product developmen­t by factoring in commodity pricing parameter in the cover to be issued.

“This latest developmen­t is a testament to the progress NIRSAL Plc is making in the Agricultur­al insurance space, prior to NIRSAL Plc’s interventi­on, private underwrite­rs were not insuring agricultur­e.

“However, leveraging on NIRSAL Plc’s Insurance Pillar and in collaborat­ion with the Nigerian Agricultur­al Insurance Corporatio­n (NAIC) and the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM), we have brought about the inclusion of underwrite­rs other than NAIC in underwriti­ng Agricultur­al transactio­ns and stimulated the developmen­t of new and innovative agricultur­al insurance products.”

Abdulhamee­d reiterated NIRSAL Plc’s commitment to not only protecting farmers but to also help Nigeria diversify its economy, attain self-sufficienc­y in food production and entrench inclusive economic growth in alignment with the Federal Government’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP).

 ??  ?? NIRSAL says the new insurance product will help farmers recover from disasters on their farms
NIRSAL says the new insurance product will help farmers recover from disasters on their farms
 ??  ?? Rural farmers seek inclusion in the NIRSAL’S new insurance package
Rural farmers seek inclusion in the NIRSAL’S new insurance package

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