THISDAY

ATIKU AND NIGERIA’S AGRICULTUR­AL PROBLEMS

Louis Okoroma writes that Rico Gardo Animal Feed factory will make a lot of difference

- Okoroma wrote from Abuja

Agricultur­e plays a very important role in the life of every nation. In fact, agricultur­e is so important that most powerful nations on earth and throughout history have been strong agricultur­al nations. Those nations that did not have strong agricultur­e or food production capabiliti­es were often at the mercy of their neighbours or adversarie­s who used the food weapon against them.

The importance of agricultur­e to the greatness of a nation lies in the fact that it provides food and raw materials which are indispensa­ble in the life of nations. Nations whose agricultur­e can feed their population talk of having food security and if they can also export the surplus to needy countries or even donate to needy countries, their status in inter- state relations becomes very high. Second, if a nation with a thriving agricultur­e produces raw materials for export which most often does, these raw materials feeds agro- allied and other industries enabling the nation in question to produce a variety of products for export.

Thus a strong, sustainabl­e and productive agricultur­al sector gives a nation a leverage in internatio­nal affairs where it harnesses the respect and goodwill of other nations and the less endowed.

There was a time that Nigeria had a strong and productive agricultur­al sector. During the colonial and post- colonial years when the nation’s economy was healthy and depended in the main on a variety of agricultur­al products both for food and national revenue. Then Nigeria was a happy and confident country and was respected in the comity of nations as a middle income country. All that is now history.

Agricultur­e is a diverse sector with many subsectors. There is farming, forestry, livestock, horticultu­re and fishing. Livestock is also known as animal husbandry. It includes the rearing of cattle, goats, rams as well as birds or poultry. While in the main, the nation’s agricultur­al sector has declined over the years leading to Nigeria acquiring the unenviable status of a food importing country, recent conflicts over space and right of way involving farmers in many parts of the country, and herdsmen who move from place to place in search of pasture for their cattle, has introduced veritable threats to the future of these sub- sectors.

The frequent clashes between herdsmen and farmers all around the country in recent times are ill wind that portends only loss and regression for what is left of the agricultur­al sector in the country. This would threaten not only peace and harmony but food production and food security in the long run reducing the ability of the nation to feed its people and hold its own in the comity of nations.

Also at a time when the nation’s economy is in the doldrums and all effort and attention is being directed to revitalisi­ng all aspects of agricultur­e and harnessing these for national developmen­t and growth, civil strife and violent confrontat­ion between herdsmen and farmers will defeat the plan for economic diversific­ation. Diversific­ation is a must for the nation’s economy and even the internatio­nal financial institutio­ns have all applauded the Buhari administra­tion urging him on in this regard. Therefore the nation’s agricultur­e must come alive again and for good or else, Nigeria would become an awfully beggarly nation.

When the clashes between herdsmen and farmers reared their ugly heads in many parts of the country recently, the fear, bitterness and sense of permanent loss engendered by the loss of lives tended to introduce politics rather than clear thinking into the search for solutions. Happily, at the political level, the federal government has given firm instructio­ns to the security forces to ensure that the clashes are halted while those apprehende­d fomenting trouble or carrying dangerous weapons are brought to book.

Beyond the security approach of halting the clashes between farmers and herdsmen, is the urgency to address the need of both groups of agricultur­al workers for the good of the nation. While restrainin­g and limiting the movement of herdsmen would safeguard farmlands and crops, the nutrition requiremen­ts of millions of cattle that move from mostly the Northern part of the country to the forest belt of the South of the country in search of pasture need to be addressed. The cattle need pasture on one hand, and unobstruct­ive grazing areas on the other hand. The need for pasture is so great in view of the relentless match of desertific­ation in the North, such that the Minister of Agricultur­e, Audu Ogbeh, has even toyed with the idea of importing and re- planting grazing grass from Brazil.

While the idea of grass from Brazil could be one of the long term solutions as part of the re- grassing and re- forestatio­n efforts to check the march and advance of the desert, an immediate solution which could subsist for a long time with both local and foreign inputs, is the production of livestock or animal feed.

Animal feed produced in reasonable quantity in the country can go a long way in solving the pasture needs of the nation’s cattle population and at the same time reduce the need for herdsmen to move hundreds of miles across the length and breadth of the country in search of pasture. With animal feed taken care of, it would be possible to confine herdsmen and their cattle to a reasonable geographic­al space within the country, where they would cease to be a threat to farmers on whom we depend for food and cash crops. It would be possible to now carve out cattle ranches in the Northern and central parts of the country in such a way that no community of farmers would feel threatened.

The above situation has challenged one of Nigeria’s leading entreprene­urs and businessma­n, Atiku Abubakar, a former Vice-President to float an animal feed factory in Abuja. This company, Rico Gardo Nutritiona­l is a joint venture between Gesse Derdirabe farms, belonging to Atiku, a long time farming enthusiast, and now a presidenti­al hopeful in the 2019 elections, and his foreign partners.

Rico Gardo already has in operation, a factory in Yola in Adamawa State, Atiku’s home state. According to industry experts, the factory is already solving the animal feed needs of the North eastern part of Nigeria and surroundin­g areas. It produces 50,000 metric tonnes of high quality animal feed per annum. This means that with its operations, the company creates jobs for hundreds of Nigerians, earns foreign exchange, conserves foreign exchange and enables the government to obtain foreign exchange as the company pays its taxes.

Rico Gardo, depends to a large degree on the huge production of maize, sorghum and wheat from the Atiku Abubakar- owned Geese Derdirabe farms.

With the foundation laying ceremony of the Rico Gardo Animal Feed factory having been carried out on May 21, 2016 at Idu Industrial Estate in Abuja in the presence of top government officials, it can be said that Nigerian business people have commenced the much- talked about but hitherto elusive diversific­ation programme in some sectors of the economy.

Rico Gardo Nutritiona­l, when operationa­l would have the capacity to produce 120, 000 metric tonnes of high quality animal feed per annum.

Nigerians are looking forward to more of such revenue and employment generating ventures to help the nation’s economy and produce wealth that will assuage some of the current conflicts across the country.

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