THISDAY

WabbaTasks FG on Funding Technologi­cal Research

- Dike Onwuamaeze

The President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Mr. Ayuba Wabba, has challenged the federal government to prioritise the funding of technologi­cal research in order to achieve real diversific­ation of the Nigerian economy.

Wabba threw the challenge yesterday when he delivered the goodwill message at the National Associatio­n of Academic Technologi­sts’ (NAAT) Fourth National Delegates Conference. The theme of the conference was “The Role of Technologi­sts in the Economic Diversific­ation Policy of Government: A Look at the Agricultur­al Sector.”

He said that the time has come for Nigeria to begin to take technologi­cal evolution and adaptation serious as no country would willingly give up its technologi­cal leverage in the name of technologi­cal transfer.

“We must take our destinies in our own hands. We can no longer afford to wait endlessly for foreign technology to deploy and fix our refineries, iron and steel plants and fertilizer companies. We have waited long enough. My fellow comrades, let us show the world that we can fix our refineries and build new ones. That we can revive our steel plants and successful­ly run fertilizer companies and that we can add real value to every grain of crop and pound of animal produce grown in our land. Yes, we can!” he said.

He added: “I am happy that the theme for today focuses on diversific­ation with special lens trained on the agricultur­al sector. About 22.86 per cent of our national GDP is supplied from the agricultur­al sector. More than 70 per cent of our population are engaged in one form of agricultur­al activity cum enterprise or another.

“Unfortunat­ely, agricultur­e in Nigeria has hardly ever evolved from the subsistenc­e form it was at the end of colonial rule to secondary or even tertiary forms of production. Our agricultur­al sector still majors on the production of raw materials for export to other countries where they are technologi­cally transforme­d to finished products and subsequent­ly imported back to us at highly inflated costs. Sadly, it is not only the high costs of finished goods that are imported but also unemployme­nt and poverty. For every agricultur­al raw material exported out of Nigeria unprocesse­d is a job lost. It is poverty deepened.

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