THISDAY

Banks Commit N14.5bn to Boost Agricultur­e Financing

- James Emejo

The Managing Director/Chief Executive, Nigeria IncentiveB­ased Risk Sharing System for Agricultur­al Lending (NIRSAL), Mr. Aliyu Abdulhamee­d has disclosed that over N14.5 billion had been catalysed in additional financing from commercial banks’ balance sheets while leveraging NIRSAL’s Credit Risks Guarantees (CRGs) scheme and other derisking mechanisms.

He added that efforts had reached various stages of approval for an additional N48 billion from banks to boost agricultur­e financing.

The commitment­s of the financial institutio­ns were reportedly made possible through an ongoing engagement by NIRSAL with the management credit committees of commercial banks in continuati­on of its efforts to get more funds into agricultur­e by strengthen­ing the handshake between finance and agricultur­e.

The MD stressed that the purpose of the exercise was to notify them of promising investment-friendly developmen­ts in Nigeria’s emerging agricultur­e/agribusine­ss sector and the expanding opportunit­ies for value chain actors, with the aim of unlocking banks’ balance sheets to agribusine­ss lending.

He said: “The context for these efforts is that for years, the agricultur­e sector has received less than 3 per cent of total bank lending, leaving it largely underdevel­oped and its vast potentials for economic growth untapped.

“To address this, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) created NIRSAL to collaborat­e with all public and private sector stakeholde­rs to fix broken agricultur­al commodity value chains and de-risk the sector to enable increased inflow of finance and investment­s.”

NIRSAL’s meeting with banks was mainly to pitch its agricultur­al finance risk management innovation­s and agribusine­ss models that take cognizance of banks’ desire to invest but only in secure, risk-controlled and structured environmen­ts.

The agency had been in talks with Union Bank, Sterling Bank, Guaranty Trust Bank (GTBank), United Bank for Africa (UBA), Keystone Bank, Standard Chartered Bank, Heritage Bank and Unity Bank over the last five months of the maiden engagement while more banks and other financial institutio­ns have reportedly expressed interest to be engaged in the subsequent phases over the coming weeks.

The MD stressed that the NIRSAL risk-led agricultur­al financing approach had so far been adjudged to be in high resonance with banks risk/return imperative­s.

He said:”The prior perception of high risk by banks is gradually giving way to a new-found faith in the new business opportunit­ies the sector has to offer.

“Going forward, the enhanced understand­ing of NIRSAL’s role in securing a safe, profitable and a globally competitiv­e agribusine­ss economy is expected to elicit greater portfolio commitment­s from Nigerian banks in sponsoring the NIRSAL-led agribusine­ss initiative­s and developing joint frameworks aimed at facilitati­ng a greater flow of finance to structured, agricultur­e-related investment opportunit­ies in Nigeria.”

However, Abdulhamee­d, in his presentati­on titled: “Unfolding Opportunit­ies in Agricultur­al Financing”, highlighte­d NIRSAL’s acquisitio­n and planned utilisatio­n of geospatial technologi­es for identifica­tion of the most ecological­ly endowed areas for specific commoditie­s, and for the aggregatio­n of fragmented farmlands.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria