FG to establish staple crop processing zones –Lokpobiri
The Federal Government plans to tackle
post-harvest losses put at nine billion dollars annually through
multiple approaches, including setting up of staple crops processing
zones.
Sen. Heineken Lokpobiri, Minister of
State for Agriculture, made the disclosure on Thursday in Abuja, at a
stakeholders’ conference organised by Akassa Development Foundation
(ADF).
Akassa is a community in Bayelsa in the
southernmost part of Nigeria.
The theme of the stakeholders’
conference is: “ Sustainable Development and Security in the Niger
Delta beyond Oil.’’
The minister, represented by Eniye
Amloakederem, Senior Technical Adviser on Agric-business, listed the
approaches to include-storage, development of cold chains, improving
infrastructure, improving product handling, among others.
He said that staple crops processing
zones would be set up in “ areas of high food production.’’
According to the minister, the
government will utilise “ fiscal and infrastructure incentives’’
to attract private food manufacturing companies to add value to
agricultural produce.
Lokpobiri said that all the investments
were structured around smallholder farmers, to ensure inclusion of
models that would create wealth and boost development.
He challenged the people of the Niger
Delta region to engage in agriculture as the region has the largest
wetland with arable land for agriculture.
He said that the area is also suitable
for commercial production of varieties of crops, including rice,
cassava, yam, okro, ogbonno, cocoyam, maize, pepper, plantain, among
others.
He commended the ADF for sustaining
community development in Akassa.
Mr Nsima Ekere, Managing Director,
Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), who spoke at the event,
stressed the need to embrace agriculture as a tool to tackle hunger
and insecurity in the Niger Delta.
He said that agriculture, in which the
people of the Niger Delta have founded their core preoccupation,
“presents the strongest and most rewarding options to fighting
poverty and facilitating sustainable development.’’
He said that agriculture “worked
great wonders in countries such as Mexico, India and China,’’
adding that Bayelsa alone has the capacity to feed the nation.
“ A World Bank study shows that
Bayelsa is capable of producing enough rice to feed Nigeria and the
rest of Africa.
“ How can we exploit these
opportunities to fight poverty, which is at the core of continual
agitation in the land?
“ It is vital to note that tackling
and defeating poverty is essential to the urgent need to boost
security in the region or in any society,’’ Ekere said.
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