Business
Sugar Production Falls Below Target – Rep
Annual sugar production in the country has fallen short of the expected target of 1.5 million tonnes, according to a lawmaker.
Rep Solomon Ajideke, the Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on National Sugar Development Council (NSDC), said this on Thursday when he led the members on a visit to the Savannah Sugar Company’s sugar cane plantation in Numan, Adamawa.
The company is owned by the Dangote Group of Companies.
He, however expressed satisfaction with developments in the company but called for more efforts by both the govermment and the private sector to reach the proposed target.
He noted that the council, established 15 years ago, had not achieved its mandate of encouraging mass production of the required quantity of sugar for the nation.
The chairman urged the council to embark on more aggressive measures through stakeholders’ meetings and other activities to ensure that the proposed production target was achieved.
He also urged sugar cane farmers, who had accessed funds meant for the programme without utilising them, to refund the money to enable the council to execute its programme.
In a remark, Alhaji Shaba Lafiagi, the Chairman of the NSDC Board of Directors, noted that the company’s production level was negligible compared to the required quantity.
Lafiagi said the council was working assiduously to bridge the production gap with a view to reducing sugar importation.
Reports have it that the Managing Director of the company, Mr Mahesh Gupta, conducted members of the committee round the 36,000-hectare sugar cane farmland, which included an outgrower farmers scheme.