THISDAY

‘Plant Variety Protection Bill Will Improve Food Security’

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Ugo Aliogo

The Director-General, National Agricultur­al Seeds Council (NASC), Dr. Philip Ojo, has stated that the Plant Variety Protection (PVP) Bill will provide intellectu­al property protection to breeders and improve food security in Nigeria.

Ojo, disclosed this during a virtual meeting organised by the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) and the National Agricultur­al Seeds Council (NASC) in collaborat­ion with the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) with the theme: ‘Expert review of the Plant Variety Protection Bill: Significan­ce and Constraint­s.’

He said the NASC and other stakeholde­rs have helped facilitate the PVP bill which is currently awaiting Presidenti­al assent.

Delivering his presentati­on titled: “Significan­ce of the PVP Act to the Seeds Subsector and the Nigerian Food and Agricultur­e Ecosystem,” Ojo said the bill is a legal designatio­n to protect plant breeders and help encourage breeders to get incentives from their inventions.

In her opening remarks, NESG Board member, Dr. Ndidi Nwuneli, disclosed that the PVP bill has an important role to play as it would unlock a lot of potentials across Nigeria’s Agricultur­al ecosystem while protecting farmers.

Nwuneli, who is also the Co-Founder/Managing Partner of Sahel Consulting Agricultur­e and Nutrition Limited, posited that without access to alternativ­e sources of food or income, smallholde­r farmers are highly vulnerable to fluctuatio­ns in weather patterns, changes in government support and shifts in both local and internatio­nal markets.

She said there was a need for all stakeholde­rs to work collective­ly to transform Nigeria’s food ecosystem.

During the panel session, Trade Expert, Trade Law Centre (TRALAC), Western Cape region of South Africa, Dr. Olumuyiwa Bamidele Alaba, posited that the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) does not have specific laws around PVP.

He charged countries to interact and sign negotiatin­g treaties among each other, “and that there are internatio­nal laws that espouse Protection of breeders’ right and that of locals and the investors.”

Director of the Ecological Think-Tank, Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF), Mr. Nnimmo Bassey, revealed that the productivi­ty of small-scale farmers is always underestim­ated and more support should be given to them as opposed to transnatio­nal corporatio­ns.

He revealed that farmers have over the years successful­ly selected the best seeds and research has shown that the future of food production is reliant on small-scale farmers.

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