Thursday, July 4, 2013

Insight: Nigeria seeks farming revival to break oil curse

 Local News
(Reuters) - Down a rotating dust track in that sleepy community in northern Nigeria lies a corn farm which looks significantly just like the dozens that surround it. The difference is, this one is turning a profit.

"I will barely lift my 8-year-old. He's the fattest in the community," claimed Ibrahim Mustapha, 50, pulling fun from his other farmers as he pretends to lift up his puffy son.

The Babban Gona or "Good Farm" project, in northern Kaduna state, is among a handful where individual investment is supporting former subsistence farmers like Mustapha make gains for themselves and the companies backing them.

When President Goodluck Jonathan was elected two years ago, he pledged reforms that will transform the lives of tens of countless farmers who go on significantly less than $2 per day despite occupying a few of Africa's many fertile land.

Gas stays the key supply of foreign currency and state revenues, but agriculture is undoubtedly the biggest factor to GDP, getting back together 40 % of Africa's 2nd greatest economy.

With 170 million mouths to give and an increasing food import bill thanks to the disarray in the farming market, agriculture ministry officials say there is number time for you to lose.

If production doesn't improve Nigeria can experience a food disaster within a decade, its current bill surplus will be wiped out and the credit value of Africa's 2nd biggest debt issuer will be below threat.

"When we did nothing, it would be a problem," Agriculture Minister Akinwumi Adesina told Reuters in the capital.

"We do not consume gas, we do not consume it ... We can not sustain the quantity of income we use to import food," Adesina claimed, a Nigerian banner hanging behind his company chair.

In some cases, the imports replacement for things Nigerians are growing but can not get to advertise or lack the methods to process.

The country is the second largest farmer of acid fruit in the world after China and yet it uses $200 million annually on imported juice while a unique generate spoils, Adesina said.

Additionally, it generates 1.5 million metric tons (1 metric lot = 1.1023 tons) of tomatoes annually of which 45 % perish, while consumers invest $360 million on tomato substance imported from nations such as Italy and China.

CURING DUTCH DISEASE

To succeed, Adesina's reforms will need to reverse the inadvertent damage performed to the market by Africa's earliest and biggest gas and gasoline growth, which packed out different commodities.

In the 1960s, Nigeria was the biggest exporter of peanuts in the world and had 27 % of the hand gas trade. It remains among the world's prime chocolate growers, but creation and bean quality have dropped since their heyday in the 1970s.

While an elite allied to some military dictatorships grew rich on the spoils of the power market, countless primarily subsistence farmers received little or no help at all.

The effect: Nigeria is currently the world's next largest importer of grain and the biggest customer of U.S. grain, while much of a unique fertile land lies fallow. A flourishing populace has delivered its food import bill rocketing to about $11 thousand annually - comparable to greater than a next of the federal budget

Agriculture also offers the most effective possiblity to reduce unemployment, which bottles an Islamist insurgency in the north and gas theft in the south. Unemployment is 23 % and youth unemployment double that, national data suggest.

"Poverty is the source of lots of the uncertainty problems we have. A hungry person is a furious person," Adesina said.

The minister plans to create 3.5 million new jobs in agriculture and boost food creation by 20 million metric tons by 2015, the season of another national election.

To make this happen, he wants to boost access to microfinance for farmers and pull in $10 thousand of foreign investment into farming and food processing.

He has received tentative praise for early achievements from foreign diplomats, bankers and help agencies, but big agro-business tasks have yet to take off.

Adesina took a damaged fertilizer subsidy out of politicians'arms and now farmers are texted subsidy vouchers right with their cell phones so they can recoup from fertilizer sellers, a plan used in Kenya's farming reforms.

Seventy % of farmers now obtain subsidized fertilizer and vegetables, weighed against 11 % beneath the damaged plan previously run by state governments, Adesina said.

LONG ROAD AHEAD



Production of grain, cassava, grain, sorghum, and corn are climbing and chocolate, Nigeria's most important move crop, appears collection to move up by greater than a next that season.



In 2012, agriculture exports rose by 128 thousand naira ($788 million) and food imports dropped by 850 thousand, Adesina says.

Foreign investors such as food giant Cargill, seed organization Syngenta, brewer SABMiller and Africa's wealthiest person Aliko Dangote are planning to construct everything from fertilizer plants to food handling factories.

However grain imports still absorb $7 million a day, while bad infrastructure and plan flip-flopping have previously seen farming potential wasted. Farmers needs infrastructure to get things to market -- and rural Nigeria's can be as woeful since it gets.



Nigerian billionaire Dangote has pledged to pay $35 million on a tomato substance plant in the northern city of Kano and $45 million in Corner Lake state to process pineapple juice.

Adesina claims he's received $8 billion in commitments but such claims tend to be not held in Nigeria. Cargill and SABMiller told Reuters they are just "considering" investing.

"I'd estimate that no several buck of expense actually occurs for each $100 of released commitments," said Fola Fagbule, an Africa-focused expense bank in Lagos.

A central bank effort has given assures on about 25 billion naira of agriculture loans as it began in July a year ago, lifting lending to the field to about 4 % of complete loans, from 1.5 % at end-2009, the lender says.

The Earth Bank is setting up $100 million into agriculture, while British and U.S. help jobs push in hundreds of millions.

This barely scrapes the $10 billion Adesina claims the field needs by 2015. Smallholders say banks however do not lend for them, while the system doles out inexpensive money to major firms.

"We have heard everything before and I have never observed it get better," claims Alhaji, a character wrestling with two scrawny long-horned cows pulling a rusty plough through a field.

"I've 15 kids and ... we barely get enough food to feed ourselves," he said.

BEARING FRUIT?

A few success reports nonetheless give cause for optimism.

Farmer Mustapha claims he created $1,350 per hectare from his crop following paying back private company Doreo Partners, which goes the Babban Gona challenge, compared to previous decades wherever he might generate $200 per hectare.

"Today I do want to grow my farm, I've so much place I never used. Today I will send my kids to school," he explained, while behind him mainly unused farmland expanded to the horizon.

Doreo is working together with 600 farmers. It's ambitious ideas to improve that to 500,000 by 2020, and 5 million by 2030.

"I understand it looks ambitious but this has been performed elsewhere and Nigeria has so much easy-to-reach potential," said Kola Masha, the business's head.

Masha is trying to emulate big food cooperatives like CHS in the U.S. or India's milk franchise Amul, who make enormous profits while helping an incredible number of smallholder farmers.

He offers farmers high-quality fertilizer, vegetables, gear and experience on credit to hugely improve their yields, while negotiating with firms like Nestle to buy the make at higher rates compared to farmers could get themselves.

Farmers working together with Masha, he explained, are utilizing 40 situations more fertilizer than neighbors who could never afford that amount.

"It's early days but I'm more hopeful than I've ever been," he said.

($1 = 161.45 naira)

 

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