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In Nigeria, Agriculture Is 'the New Oil' By Olusegun Obasanjo - Politics - Nairaland

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In Nigeria, Agriculture Is 'the New Oil' By Olusegun Obasanjo by Nobody: 9:07am On Mar 22, 2015
By Olusegun Obasanjo — Mr. Obasanjo
was President of Nigeria from 1999 to
2007


When Nigeria announced recently that it had become Africa’s biggest economy, you could be forgiven for thinking that oil was the only reason. After all, Nigeria is the
biggest oil producer in Africa. What many people didn’t realize was the growing role of agriculture in boosting Nigeria’s economy – and the lives of its large rural population.

I’ve seen close-up how hard it can be to succeed in agriculture – not only when I was president but also during the 35 years that I have been a farmer myself. So I’m proud that Nigeria is emerging as a leader in
agricultural transformation in Africa.
However, Nigeria needs to spend much more on agriculture than its current commitment of only 1.6 per cent of the national budget. But the Agricultural Programme is already proving its potential to produce a dramatic turnaround that sets
an example for other African countries, as we show in the Africa Progress Report 2014, Grain, Fish, Money – Financing Africa’s Green and Blue Revolutions.

The Programme aims to put an end to Nigeria’s “agriculture paradox”. Nigeria was able to feed itself in the 1960s. But then oil was discovered. The country began to depend on oil to drive growth and development. Yet Nigeria has abundant resources – 84 million hectares of arable
land, two of Africa’s largest rivers and a large, youthful workforce.

The Programme aims to unlock that
potential, aiming to boost food production by 20 million tonnes, create 3.5 million jobs in agriculture and food-related industries,
and make Nigeria self-sufficient in rice by 2015.

The four pillars identified to achieve these goals illustrate what agriculture needs not just in Nigeria but across the continent: better infrastructure to improve market
access; income insurance for weather-related crop failure; a privately managed fertilizer subsidy scheme for poor farmers; and an increase in import tariffs to promote self- reliance through import substitution.

Several initiatives were introduced to ensure success: the Growth Enhancement Support Scheme, aimed at improving access to
fertilizers and seeds; the Nigeria Incentive- based Risk-Sharing System for Agricultural Lending to address access to finance and
insurance; and Staple Crops Processing Zones to enable farmers to enter higher value-added markets. This complements or
updates the previous initiatives.
The strategy along with previous efforts is already producing striking results. Annual rice production has risen from 2.2 million tonnes five years ago to 3.1 million tonnes,
and the private sector has responded by developing 14 new industrial-scale rice mills.

Cereal production is undergoing
transformation as Nigeria begins to cut its imports of wheat flour, replacing it with high-quality, homegrown cassava flour as
the main ingredient in bread. Sugar imports are also being reduced with the increased processing of cassava into a starch that can be used in sweeteners.

If Nigeria commits more resources to agriculture and continues to improve institutional and legal frameworks, it will be in a position not only to feed itself but to
export food – and to mark a path for the rest of Africa. As Akinwumi Adesina, Nigeria’s agriculture minister, said last year, “In Nigeria, we’re making agriculture the new
oil.” It is possible if the efforts are sustained.

That crucial ambition couldn’t be timelier.
Nigeria, which already has more people
than any other country in Africa, is expected
to become the world’s third most populous
by 2050, overtaking the United States. That
is both good and bad news. Across the
continent, demand for food is soaring,
especially in rapidly growing cities. Job
creation and wealth generation to meet the
burgeoning demography can make it all
good news.

As the Africa Progress Report 2014
demonstrates, these are conditions not just
for a booming agricultural sector, but also
for a big drop in poverty. And that is
desperately needed in Nigeria, where more
than 100 million people live below the
poverty line.

African economies have been growing fast
in the past decade, but few of the benefits
are reaching the poor, especially when the
growth is fuelled by oil and mineral export,
which tend to create few jobs. Agricultural
growth can change that, because it reduces
poverty twice as fast as growth in other
sectors.

Agriculture, in other words, can be even
more than “the new oil”. One day the oil
will run out – but Sub-Saharan Africa will
always have its fertile land, its rivers, its
youthful workforce and its huge domestic
market. Investing now can turn that potential into prosperity.


Source: www.forbes.com/sites/realspin/2014/05/14/in-nigeria-agriculture-is-the-new-oil/
Re: In Nigeria, Agriculture Is 'the New Oil' By Olusegun Obasanjo by lagosph: 10:01am On Mar 22, 2015
Was this really written by OBJ.? Has he been finally touched by the transformation agenda?

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