Daily Trust Sunday

Why Nigeria needs to stop pesticide importatio­n

- By Safina Buhari

Following a recent claim by the Executive Director of the Nigerian Stored Products Research Institute (NSPRI), Prof Olufemi Peters that Nigerian farmers and agro-based companies spend USD400 million annually on pesticides, Daily Trust examines the situation and discusses with experts on possible alternativ­es as to how the country can be selfrelian­t on pesticide formulatio­n to meet up Nigerian farmers’ demand.

Against this backdrop, Prof Olufemi noted that theinstitu­te has developeda safe, effective storage pesticide known as ‘NSPRI-dust’, which could be used to store grains. The grains include maize, sorghum, paddy rice and wheat which could be stored for up to 24 to 48 months, while cowpea (beans) could be stored for up to 36 months.

Although the product is yet to be commercial­ised, it has been already adopted by some institutio­ns, markets and other interested persons.

Professor Mohammed Faguci Ishaku of the Ahmadu Bello University’s Institute for Agricultur­al Research (IAR), Zaria was quoted as saying Nigeria could save up to N16 billion on growing maruca resistant cowpea alone, the cost that would have otherwise been spent on buying pesticides.

He said this at the sensitisat­ion workshop for the Nigerian Seed Industry on geneticall­y modified seeds held at the Nigerian Agricultur­al Seed Council (NASC).

The plant breeder explained that with geneticall­y modified cowpea seeds, every farmer will have a 20% yield advantage over convention­al seeds per hectare, which would translate to N48 billion at the rate of N120, 000 per tonne.

Prof Faguci noted that with this, Nigerian farmers would also be saved from consuming or inhaling toxins from excessive use of chemicals by spraying.

Meanwhile, Prof Ayodele Adebisi of the Federal University of Agricultur­e, Abeokuta in Ogun state pointed out that the only way Nigeria can cut importatio­n of pesticide is by having indigenous companies to manufactur­e pesticides in all the geo-political zones of the country.

He advised that Government engage in capacity building of researcher­s so they can come back and establish local industries that will strengthen Nigeria’s capability of both organic and inorganic pesticide formulatio­ns which would ensure that the country saves foreign exchange that would’ve been otherwise spent on importatio­n.

Prof Adebisilam­ented that no research institute has the mandate for pesticide formulatio­n, but rather the Crop Protection department­s in Universiti­es which he said havegreat synergy with industries but with little significan­t contributi­on to the sector’s developmen­t.

The Professor explained that although neem and cashew extracts are very efficaciou­s in protecting food, the formulatio­ns are not properly packaged in a way that will be available to farmers.

“We need packaging, we need industries that will make them readily in the market for farmers to use,” he said.

He charged the Nigerian government to create a pesticide research institute which would be pivotal in building capacity, useful to farmers and for food security of the country instead of depending on importatio­n from other countries.

Although Nigeria is estimated to have over 100 million neem trees, the country loses an estimated 12.5 billion USD annually by not harnessing the neem oil among several other neem products.

Dr Abdullahi Ahmed Yar’adua, formerly a lecturer at the Hassan Usman Katsina Polytechni­c stated that bio-pesticides made from natural ingredient­s are user and environmen­tally friendly, adding that because of the abundance of neem in the country, harnessing the potential of neem bio-pesticides as a home-based technology would be at little or no cost to farmers.

The expert pointed out that neem is pesticidal in nature and rich in compounds that are effective against several insects, fungi, bacteria, nematodes among others, in addition to control of striga, a noxious weed known locally as ‘wuta-wuta’ in Hausa.

The neem processing plant at Katsina constructe­d by the Obasanjo administra­tion was left to rot away until it was finally sold out to a foreign company with little or no significan­t production till date.

Another Don at the Institute of Agricultur­al Research, Ahmadu Bello University Zaria, Prof Salihu Dadari lamented that Nigerian markets and borders are very porous which allows substandar­d products to make way into the country.

Prof Dadari hinted that the USD400 million allegedly spent on pesticides by farmers and agro-allied industries could be an underestim­ation because people bring all sorts of pesticides in to the country through the border of Niger, Benin Republic, Chad and Cameroun.

“If you enter our market now, you will see all forms of pesticides; insecticid­es, nematicide­s, fungicides, some are of low quality, some are of high quality.The Paraquat chemical for example has carcinogen­ic compounds but you see it all over the country and it has been banned in many countries.”

“You know they have to control insect in cowpea and all the horticultu­ral crops but all these things have side effect many people have kidney problem, many people are diabetic patients and even cancer, all these things are associated with these pesticides,” he said.

He noted that although the alternativ­e could be organic pesticides, such products are still at infancy level and not adequate enough.

Prof Dadari blamed the poor state of Nigerian legal and judicial system for the illegal importatio­n of all sorts of agro-chemicals into the country. He said perpetrato­rs of such act need to be tried and brought to book to serve as deterrent to other erring individual­s.

He charged Government to look inwards and have a functional research framework that would financiall­y support researcher­s to look into the various beneficial herbs suitable for pesticide formulatio­n, adding that through partnershi­ps, the issue of funding of research could be effectivel­y dealt with to ensure continuity of the project.

Again, Prof Dadari stressed on the need for the country to have a functional legal and judicial system, authentica­te the legal procedures and people that are found wanting should be brought to book and punished accordingl­y.

“Nigeria has to re-orientate her law and order, our problem is very big we have to follow law and order of the land but we are not following it. Also the problem with our judiciary system, if you give them money you are gone so they don’t implement the laws of the land,” he said.

Are coming in so anybody can bring anything here sell and make money, most of them are impure while some are polluted and with that the children carry …. People have been seen wrongly they normally inhaled them , by the time you apply them a bite culture, controller eye something so some get excess and this excess you will not know on till after some years and the old is two years most of this product have been banned in some advance country they have stop using them, they are common in Nigeria they are killing them self indirectly, so the issues is that all these diseases we have are associated with these chemicals like this rice we call foreign rice they have been stored with chemicals for 10 years more than 10years because they have to control insects and when they bring them to Nigeria we see our women and men who are ignorant we say I want foreign rice all this things are dangerous to us plus the carryover pesticides in the field.

But the current Customs boss Hameed Ali is trying to bring in some sanity, so he has already arrested some of them and they know he can pursue them up to the court but the issue is that they would be bailed.

So everything we are doing is already polluted with these chemicals. So the figures he gave were even under estimated because in every village you go you see chemicals, some are poor quality, others are

So we cannot develop under false pretext, there has to be law and order. Because of the fragmentat­ion of our legal system, that is why you see this kind of proliferat­ion.

 ??  ?? And they spray on all kinds of crops
And they spray on all kinds of crops

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