FG begins yam export to UK Thursday
Nigeria will on Thursday begin yam
exports to the United Kingdom with 72 tons of yams in three
containers, the Minister of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh said.
He said the matter was tabled at the
Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting on Wednesday as a major
milestone in the export market and diversification process.
According to the minister, the country
would strive to export more yams and other food commodities to other
countries to earn more foreign exchange.
“We had cause to inform the council
that last week we completed arrangements for the first formal export
of Nigerian yams to the United Kingdom.
“I know that we have had reactions
from the Nigerian public.
“Some people have asked if that is of
any importance; others have asked if by exporting yams we are not
going to subject Nigeria to hunger.
“I had to inform council today that
that would certainly not arise.
“You would remember about Match or
April this year some of you asked the same question: is Nigeria going
to face famine? And I said it cannot happen.
“Apart from the crisis in the North
East we definitely are not short of food although prices are high in
some areas; we are working on that.
“Tomorrow we will flag off this
export in three container loads of 72 tons of Nigerian yams.
“Two containers went out in February;
one arrived in New York on June 16.’’
The minister stated that the
information is important because everywhere yam was sold around the
world as African food, consumers called it Ghana yam.
According to him, Nigeria accounts for
61 per cent of total yam output in the world while the rest is shared
between some countries in West Africa and the West Indies.
He said it was an embarrassment not to
find Nigerian yams in foreign markets.
He said that the export was significant
because as Ghana was targeting $4 billion from yams in the next three
or four years Nigeria being the masters in yam business had no
business lagging behind.
Ogbeh said most of the yams produced
locally were lost to wastage because of poor technologies and
preservation.
He, however, said the issue was being
addressed by using solar coolers in markets and producing areas to
keep the commodity at 14 degrees Celsius to last about two or three
years.
Ogbeh said the point was made because
of the FG’s diversification, economic recovery and growth adding
that the country had to export what was needed by other countries to
earn more foreign exchange.
He said labour was the only challenge
the country might face, adding that mechanization was introduced to
solve the problem.
He noted that a new plough was designed
for tractors at the Nigerian Centre for Agriculture Mechanisation,
Ilorin, to make yam heaps.
He said with the mechanization in place
farmers would see yam cultivation and export as an economic
opportunity.
The minister noted that food exports
from the country had indeed gone up.
“Food exports have gone up in the
last one year by 82 per cent; so they will increase.
“We want to make sure that what we
send meets the finest standard in the world market.
“If people chose to use their money
to import irregular, unnecessary items government will look into that
and apply adequate regulations to rationalize importation.
“We are not banning anything, but if
you must import things that are not necessary be prepared to pay the
duty on them.
“After the flag off (inauguration)
tomorrow we will know the kind of volumes that the European market is
looking for.
“We are now testing the market; we
find they are accepting the yams; they rejected them before because
we didn’t handle them well.
“Then in the next comment I will make
to you in about a month or two I will tell you exactly what we
expect, both from the U.S. and UK and possibly other parts of the
world, including China.’’
Ogbe added that good news was the
request for roast cashew nuts by Wallmart, the biggest retail shop in
the U.S., worth about 130,000 tons of processed cashew nuts per
annum valued at $7 billion.
He said Nigerian cashew was hitherto
shipped raw to Vietnam, which processed and exported same to U.S.
According to him, the Federal
Government will in 2017 create six cashew processing factories in
Enugu, Imo, Benue, Kogi, Kwara and Oyo the existing cashew belt.
He said that Nasarawa and Kaduna also
grew cashew in quantum adding that the increase was because of the
focus on non-oil exports.
He said government was also targeting
industrial starch for textile industry and export to China adding
that India was also asking for all sorts of beans for their $100
billion beans market.
He said the possibilities in
agriculture were limitless.
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