Nigeria’s Oyo State wants relations with IITA stepped up to boost agriculture
Nigeria’s Oyo State wants relations
with the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA)
stepped up as the state plans to diversify its economy with a greater
focus on agriculture to boost incomes, generate wealth, and create
job opportunities for young men and women.
The request for closer collaborations
with IITA is coming at a time when oil revenues to the country are
plummeting and trading at below $50 dollar per barrel.
Like every other state in Nigeria, the
shortfall in oil revenues coupled with increasing youth unemployment
has raised the clamour for agriculture as an option to solve the
socioeconomic puzzle.
Senator Abiola Ajimobi , Oyo State
Governor, said on Tuesday that the prevailing economic reality has
put to test the widely held narrative that agriculture is a poverty
fighter and a generator of wealth and employment.
Consequently, he called on agricultural
experts from IITA to provide answers to the puzzle by proffering
solutions that will unlock the agricultural potential of Oyo State.
” What we want from IITA is a game
changer. What we can do and can impact the lives of our people?… We
need IITA to assist us,” he said during a meeting in Ibadan with a
delegation from IITA led by the Deputy Director General of
Partnerships and Capacity Development, Dr Kenton Dashiell.
Located in the South Western Nigeria,
about two hours from Nigeria’s commercial capital— Lagos; Oyo
state is endowed with rich arable land and a diversity of
agroecological climate comprising Rainforest and Savannah. This
climate variation supports both tree crops and cash crops such as
cassava, maize, soybean, rice etc. The agricultural land also
supports livestock and fisheries.
Despite the endowment, Ajimobi said he
had not seen much of this translated to wealth for the people of Oyo
State and requested IITA to develop a blueprint that would take the
state out of the doldrums.
Dr Dashiell in response renewed the
commitment of IITA to support the state government. He underscored
the need for Oyo state to invest in research to address the low
productivity question, and to massively engage young men and women in
agriculture.
Dr Dashiell said that the government
could adapt the IITA Youth Agripreneur model to engage young men and
women, and reminded the Governor of his earlier promise to support
the construction of an Agribusiness training center in IITA that
could serve as a training ground for not only the youth of Oyo state
but also Nigeria as a whole.
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