The Guardian (Nigeria)

Firm Begins Programme To Boost Palm Oil Production

- By Innocent Anoruo

AFTER the successful launch of the National Initiative­s for Sustainabl­e and Climate-smart Oil Palm Smallholde­rs (NISCOPS) in West Africa, Solidarida­d is set to commence full implementa­tion of the palm oil interventi­on programme. Solidarida­d’s Senior Climate Specialist (Africa), Dr. Samson Ogallah, who disclosed this to The Guardian, noted that the programme was funded by the government of The Netherland­s.

At a two-day national stakeholde­rs’ forum for NISCOPS in Abuja, participan­ts developed indicators for the work plan that will guide the implementa­tion stage of the programme between 2020 and 2023.

The federal ministries of agricultur­e, environmen­t, as well as commerce and industry are among the stakeholde­rs.

Others are Ministries, Department­s and Agencies (MDAS) from Akwa Ibom, Cross River, Enugu and Akwa Ibom States, where NISCOPS is being implemente­d.

Civil society, research institutes and investors in the oil palm sector were also among the stakeholde­rs that brainstorm­ed to develop the work plan indicators for the implementa­tion of NISCOPS. In its implementa­tion stage, NISCOPS will build capacity of farmers to implement best management practices, intensify and rehabilita­te efforts and ensure sustainabl­e climate-smart practices for increased productivi­ty of palm oil.

The programme will also introduce innovation for improved downstream processing to increase palm oil extraction rate and quality, create competitiv­e oil palm sector through policy and institutio­nal dialogue and influencin­g, improve access to finance, inputs and market for oil palm smallholde­r farmers and Small and Medium-sized Enterprise­s (SMES).

Ogallah said NISCOPS would enable government to support and work with farmers towards a more sustainabl­e, climatesma­rt oil palm production, build capacity of smallholde­rs and organisati­ons to improve performanc­e, support the developmen­t of mechanisms to operate in landscapes prone to deforestat­ion and peat degradatio­n, and contribute to the objectives of Nationally Determined

Contributi­ons (NDC) under the Paris Agreement (PA) and the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGS).

To him, climate-smart agricultur­e will improve yield and income of smallholde­r farmers with less harm to the environmen­t. According to the Programme Manager, Oil Palm, Kenechukwu Onukwube, the global oil palm market, which is put at over $62 billion yearly, underscore­s the commodity’s economic significan­ce and multiple utility. The multiple utility and economic significan­ce of palm oil, both in homes and industries, explains this growth in its global market size, he added, noting that palm oil production has the capacity to lift millions of rural poor out of poverty and contribute to attainment of SDGS.

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