FG, states want 1% interest rate on China’s $4.5bn mechanisation loan
The Federal Government and state
governments have called on China-Africa Machinery Corporation
(CAMACO) to slash its interest rate on its proposed
4.5-billion-dollar farm mechanisation loan to one per cent.
The governments made the request on
Thursday during a meeting of the Technical Implementation Committee
of CAMACO with state Commissioners of Agriculture in Abuja.
News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports
that the meeting was sequel to the 2016 meeting between President
Muhammadu Buhari and Chinese President Jinping in China, where
Jinping promised to grant Nigeria a loan for infrastructural
development.
The loan is to enable China to supply
farm machinery, ranging from tractors and bulldozers, to facilitate
mechanised farming in the country.
Dr Bukar Hassan, the Permanent
Secretary, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, said that
the reduction of the interest rate would encourage state governments
to sign the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), prior to the supply of
the machinery from China.
According to him, the Federal
Government will act as guarantor for states that want to take the
loan.
Hassan, who is the Chairman of the
Technical Implementation Committee, also listed some conditions,
which should be met by the Chinese before the MoU would be signed, as
extension of the tenure for loan repayment to 20 years with five
years moratorium, among others.
The other conditions include setting up
machinery assembly plants in different geo-political zones of the
country and payment of 20 per cent counterpart funds by the 22
participating states.
“We must ensure the quality of the
equipment, its adaptation to our environment, as well as the design
and price of the equipment we want to purchase,’’ he added.
The Coordinator of the CAMACO project,
Dr James Young, said that the project was an agricultural
intervention programme, aimed at supporting food production in
Nigeria.
He said that the loan would be given in
three batches; with 1.5-billion-dollar worth of equipment in the
first phase, two-billion-dollar worth of equipment in the second
phase and one-billion-dollar worth of machinery supply under the
third phase.
Young assured the Federal Government
that a machinery assembly plant would be set up in the country to
train local fabricators and operators of the machines.
He noted that the MoU would also
include an off-take agreement between the CAMACO project and the
Federal Government to buy off food items produced with the machines,
as a way of reducing the burden of the loan on the state governments.
Some of the state Commissioners for
Agriculture from Adamawa, Benue, Enugu and Cross River, however,
underscored the need for Nigeria to be self-sufficient in food
production before exporting food to other countries.
They also urged the Federal Government
to study the MoU well before encouraging states to append their
signatures on it.
Besides, the commissioners solicited
copies of the MoU to enable them to study the document critically in
their various states.
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