FG requires N2.98bn to curb armyworm infestation of farms
The Federal Government says it requires
N2.98 billion to curb the armyworm infestation of farmlands across
the country.
Mr Mike Kanu, the Deputy Director,
Horticulture, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development,
said this in Abuja at a meeting with Commissioners for Agriculture
from the 36 states on Thursday.
He warned that the country might
experience food shortage if the menace was not adequately managed.
He noted that the national maize output
was currently 10.5 million tonnes, while the demand was 15.5 million
tonnes; reflecting a national demand gap of five million tonnes.
Kanu said that the country would engage
in massive importation of maize if the armyworm infestation was not
curbed on time.
He suggested the use and spraying of
organic and inorganic chemicals to stamp out the pest infestation.
“The major host for this caterpillar
is maize but it also affects cotton, tomato, groundnut and ginger,’’
he said.
In his speech, the Minister of
Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, said that the
achievement of self sufficiency in maize production would continue to
be a mirage with the pest infestation.
Ogbeh said that the spread of the maize
disease had negatively affected the poultry industry, which largely
depended on maize for the production of feeds.
The minister said that the aim of the
meeting was to brainstorm on ways of finding sustainable solutions to
the armyworm infestation which had ravaged maize farms in the states.
“It is the state government that owns
lands; so we need to tackle this problem to boost agricultural
production,’’ he said.
Ogbeh, however, said that the United
Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) had pledged to
support the country in its fight against the armyworm infestation.
Some state Commissioners for
Agriculture, who spoke at the event, confirmed the armyworm
infestation in some farms in their states.
They underscored the need to establish
chemical distribution and sale centres in different states to enable
farmers to have easy access to pesticides.
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