CARI hosts financiers in agric. sector to a breakfast meeting
The Competitive African Rice
Initiative (CARI) yesterday held a breakfast meeting for financiers
working in the agricultural sector to provide funding for smallholder
rice farmers.
Dr Stefan Kachelriess-Matthess, CARI’s
Programme Director, said in Abuja that the meeting presented an
avenue to discuss ways of promoting CARI perspectives and objectives
on access to finance.
“Our mandate at CARI is to facilitate
access to finance for our smallholder farmers and that is what
informed today’s gathering.
“We have been doing this but we
decided to take it more strongly now so as to see how actors across
the rice value chain could have a better way to finance or promote
access to finance.
“This is the first meeting we are
having this year and it is like a trial meeting.
“We want to hold this breakfast
meeting quarterly, so as to enable stakeholders to gather, discuss
and update themselves on how to access to finance.
“This will, however, go a long way to
address some of the challenges facing farmers in terms of access to
finance so as to boost their production and livelihoods,” he said.
Kachelriess-Matthess said that CARI was
a regional programme involving Nigeria, Ghana, Burkina Faso and
Tanzania, and executed under the aegis German Development Cooperation
(GIZ).
“CARI is launched by the Federal
Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development of Germany and
supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
“CARI seeks to significantly improve
the livelihoods of smallholder rice farmers in Nigeria, Ghana,
Burkina Faso and Tanzania by increasing the competitiveness of
domestic rice production and processing to meet the increasing
demand.
“The principal aim is to address
coordination failures; create better linkages among rice value chain
actors and as a result, increase the expected economic returns of all
stakeholders.
“The programme started in October
2013 and runs until June 2018, with a perspective for a following
phase until June 2021,” he added.
Speaking, Mr Farouk Kurawa, Assistant
General Manager, Agricultural Value Chain Development and Services
(NIRSAL), said that several programmes were currently executed for
smallholder farmers through his office.
He, however, advised farmers,
especially smallholders, to make use of this window so as to expand
their production and boost the nation’s revenue.
Also speaking, Dr Mudashir Olaitan,
Director, Development Finance Department, Central Bank of Nigeria
(CBN), said that the bank had initiated many initiatives which cut
across the value chain.
“We are looking at smallholder
farmers as well as the medium and large scale farmers. But we are
focusing more attention on smallholder farmers because they form 70
per cent of the total farmer population in the country.
“I am sure that you can testify that
the Federal Government has done so well in the Anchor Borrowers’
Programme, which was particularly targeted at rice farmers; the
scheme has significantly increased rice production in the country,’’
he said.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)
reports that the attendees of the breakfast meeting include directors
of CBN, Jaiz Bank Plc., Union Bank Plc. and First City Monument Bank
(FCMB)
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