Delta rice farmer wants govt to provide land for dry season farming
Chief Silvanus Ejezie, Chairman, Rice
Farmers Association of Nigeria (RIFAN), Delta chapter, has called on
the State Government to provide farmlands in the wetland for dry
season farming.
Ejezie made the call in an interview
with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Asaba on Sunday.
He said that the association had
identified some wetland across the state suitable for all-year
farming.
The chairman urged the state government
to procure such areas, clear and allocate them to farmers for the
purpose of all-year farming.
He said that the association had
proposed a release of five hectares of land by every local government
area in the state for the cultivation of rice, in order to boost
production.
Ejezie noted that unlike in the
northern part of the country, there were no dams in the southern
states to encourage all-year farming.
“Our challenge for not going into
all-year farming is because we do not have dams like our counterparts
in the North.
“So, engaging in dry season farming
here is just trial. But if the state government encourages the 25
local government areas to provide land for rice cultivation, Delta
will produce more rice.
“If government helps to clear such
wetland in Ndokwa area and some other parts of the state, it will
support dry season farming and boost rice production.
“By so doing, the cost of farming
will be reduced and we can make more progress,” he said.
Ejezie said that currently, rice
farmers managed to engage in dry season cultivation by irrigating the
farmlands with water from boreholes.
The chairman said that the practice had
remained very challenging and expensive due o the high cost of fuel
to power the pumping machines.
On the CBN’s Anchor Borrowers
Programme (ABP) in the state, he said that the participating farmers
who had already been trained were still hoping and waiting for the
funds to be released.
NAN recalls that the CBN in 2016
commenced the pilot phase of the programme with rice production in
Kebbi state.
The ABP aims at creating economic
linkages between over 600,000 smallholder farmers and reputable
large-scale processors with a view to increasing agricultural output
and significantly improving capacity utilisation of integrated mills.
It is also expected to close the gap
between the levels of local rice production and domestic consumption,
as well as complement the Growth Enhancement Support (GES) Scheme of
the Federal Ministry of Agriculture by graduating GES farmers from
subsistence farming to commercial production.
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