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Oxfam, VSO Celebrate Small-Scale Farmers

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Six small-scale farmers received Awards of Excellence at the “Making Food Markets GROW” awards ceremony jointly organised by Oxfam and Volunteer Service Organisation (VSO), two international NGOs, on Tuesday in Abuja.

Our correspondent reports that the farmers were selected from a list of 65 nominees.

Mrs Susanna Godwin, emerged the winner in the “Female Food Hero Award” category while Mrs Briskila Jerome and Mrs Talatu Rohana, were placed second and third respectively.

In addition plaques, three women are to receive support services worth N150,000, N100,000 and N50,000 respectively, to ensure the sustainability and growth of businesses.

In the `Individual’ category of the award, Malam Baba Kaita, a fish farmer from Kaduna, emerged the winner with Shettima Sani and Seth Dakyen as runners up. They also received the same prizes as the women.

Hajia Zainab Maina, the Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, in her speech, commended Oxfam and VSO for celebrating the farmers, stressing that such gesture would inspire the winners and encourage other farmers to work harder.

She specifically appeciated the initiative to encourage women in agriculture, describing it as “laudable”.

Maina, who was represented by Mrs Elizabeth Emuren, the Permanent Secretary in the ministry, stressed the need for more infrastructural investment in the rural areas to encourage and create opportunities for young people to engage in agriculture.

She said that the decision of the government to boost investment in agriculture was predicated on the fact that the sector remained the mainstay of the nation’s economy.

Maina also commended the various interventions by the CBN to ensure farmers’ access to agricultural financing and encourage farming in a sustainable manner.

Responding after receiving the award, Kaita said it was the outcome of an intensive training on fish farming and marketing he received from Oxfam, which had enabled him to achieve increased production and diversification.

“Mine is a success story because through the returns I make on my fish farm, I have invested in another business that is yielding high income and my family is progressing, Kaita said.

He expressed delight that the award came through food production.

“Without food can we have a market; a house without food is not a house; a local government without food is not a local government,” Kaita said.

He challenged all stakeholders in the agricultural sector to emulate the two organisations by working together to achieve a common goal on food and national security and for Nigeria to be food secure.

Also speaking, Godwin expressed gratitude Oxfam and VSO for the honour and recognition accorded them.

She described the award as a “challenge to work hard, harder and hardest”, noting that it was gratifying that their efforts were being observed and appreciated.

She also said that the ceremony should be a challenge to all Nigerians, adding: “if NGOs can do this what are the rest of Nigerians doing?”

Earlier, in an address of welcome, Mrs Kenna Owoh, the VSO Country Director, said the recognition became imperative because the awardees had shown exemplary and entrepreneurial skills and had contributed to food security programme of the government.

Owoh said that VSO believed that for women to contribute to and benefit from rural development, their economic empowerment must be considered alongside their political empowerment.

Mrs Kenna Owoh, the country director of an international NGO Volunteer Services Organisation (VSO) has stressed the need for rural women in developing countries to be economically empowered to attain political power.

She said that increased voice and influence for rural women would ensure that their needs and interests were reflected in policy formulation, service delivery and resource allocation.

“VSO believes that for women to contribute and benefit from rural development, their economic empowerment must be considered hand-in-hand with their political empowerment.

“In turn, increased income, earnings and access control over resources strengthens women’s means and authority to engage in decision making process.”

Owoh described gender inequality as a key driver of poverty in rural areas, adding that the inequalities were exacerbated by the current economic downturn, climate change and associated challenges of food and fuel insecurity, among others.

The director stressed the need for the authorities to reverse the trend by taking immediate action to ensure that rural women were given stronger voice in the design and delivery of rural policy and services.

In his remarks, Mr Tunde Ojei, the Oxfam Country Director, noted that small-scale farmers produced more than 75 per cent of food consumed in Nigeria and that women farmers constituted 60 per cent of the farmers.

Ojei observed that despite the importance of women in food production, rural women were “systematically” denied the resources and freedom of action to meet their basic needs.

He expressed confidence that hunger and poverty would end when women were fully empowered to build their capacity as the key change agent in the development of agriculture.

“Supporting women is fundamental to ending poverty and achieving peace in a sustainable manner,” Ojei said.

The winners will compete with other West African counterparts at the regional competition scheduled to hold in Abuja in June with a handsome 2,500-dollar prize at stake.

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AFAN Unveils Plans To Boost Food Production In 2026

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The leadership of the All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN) has set the tone for the new year with a renewed focus on food security, unity and long-term growth of the agricultural sector.
The association announced that its General Assembly of Farmers Congress will take place from January 15 to 17, 2026 at the Abuja Chamber of Commerce and Industries, along Lugbe Airport Road, in the Federal Capital Territory.
The gathering is expected to bring together farmers, policymakers, investors and development partners to shape a fresh direction for Nigerian agriculture.
In a New Year address to members and stakeholders, AFAN president, Dr Farouk Rabiu Mudi, said the congress would provide a strategic forum for reviewing past challenges and outlining practical solutions for the future.
He explained that the event would serve as a rallying point for innovation, collaboration and economic renewal within the sector.
Mudi commended farmers across the country for their determination and hard work, despite years of insecurity, climate-related pressures and economic uncertainty.
According to him, their resilience has kept food production alive and positioned agriculture as a stabilising force in the national economy.
He noted that AFAN intends to build on this strength by resetting agribusiness operations to improve productivity and sustainability.
The AFAN leader appealed to government institutions, private investors and development organisations to deepen their engagement with the association.
He stressed the need for collective action to confront persistent issues such as insecurity in farming communities, climate impacts and market instability.
He also urged members to put aside internal disputes and personal interests, encouraging cooperation and shared responsibility in pursuit of national development.
Mudi outlined key priorities that include increasing food output, expanding support for farmers at the grassroots and strengthening local manufacturing through partnerships with both domestic and international investors adding that reducing dependence on imports remains critical to protecting the economy and creating jobs.
He stated that the upcoming congress will feature the launch of AFAN’s twenty-five-year agricultural mechanisation roadmap, alongside the announcement of new partnerships designed to accelerate growth across the value chain.
Participants, he said wi also have opportunities for networking and knowledge exchange aimed at transforming agriculture into a more competitive and technology-driven sector.
As part of its modernisation drive, AFAN is further encouraging members nationwide to enrol for the newly introduced Digital ID Card.
Mudi said the initiative will improve transparency, ensure proper farmer identification and make it easier to access support programmes and services.
Reaffirming the association’s long-term goal, he said the vision of national food sufficiency by 2030 remains achievable if unity and collaboration are sustained.
He expressed optimism that with collective effort, Nigeria’s agricultural sector can overcome its challenges and deliver a more secure and prosperous future.
Lady Usendi
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Industrialism, Agriculture To End Food Imports, ex-AfDB Adviser Tells FG

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Former Senior Special Adviser on Industrialisation to the President of the African Development Bank (AfDB), Professor Banji Oyelaran-Oyeyinka, has urged the Nigerian government to urgently industrialise the agricultural sector as a pathway to food security, economic diversification, and sustainable job creation.
Professor Oyelaran-Oyeyinka made the call while speaking at the Oyo State Economic Summit held at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Ibadan, during a lecture titled “Industrialising Agriculture for Economic Development and Food Security: Enhancing National Economies and Sub-National Entities.”
He cautioned that despite Nigeria’s vast arable land and its position as a leading global producer of crops such as cassava and yams, the country remains food-deficient and heavily dependent on costly food imports.
He highlighted that Nigeria spends over one trillion naira annually importing wheat, rice, sugar, and fish, a persistent trend that drains foreign exchange, undermines local farmers, weakens industrial competitiveness, and fuels unemployment.
The development economist argued that the solution lay in transforming agriculture from a subsistence activity into a modern, industrial enterprise capable of producing surplus, supporting manufacturing, and driving broad-based economic growth.
He explained that industrialising agriculture does not mean replacing rural communities with factories, but rather empowering farmers with technology, skills, infrastructure, and market access to raise productivity and incomes.
According to Professor Oyelaran-Oyeyinka, Nigeria’s low agricultural productivity reflected deeper structural challenges, including weak education systems, limited skills, and inadequate investment in technology and infrastructure.
He noted that countries that successfully transitioned from low-income to middle-income status did so by modernising agriculture alongside industrial development, creating strong linkages between farms, processing industries, and markets.
Oyelaran-Oyeyinka highlighted stark yield disparities between Africa and Asia, noting that cereal yields across African countries remain less than a third of those achieved in East Asia.
This gap, he said, explains why African economies struggle to compete globally and why industrialisation efforts have stalled.
Professor Oyelaran-Oyeyinka outlined key pillars of agricultural industrialisation, including mechanisation, value addition, integrated supply chains, access to finance, improved seed systems, and targeted investment in human and technological capabilities.
He stressed that farms must be treated as “factories without roofs,” capable of feeding into agro-processing, manufacturing, and export industries.
The visiting professor at The Open University in Milton Keynes said the economic benefits of such a transformation would be far-reaching, including reduced dependence on oil, large-scale job creation, significant foreign exchange savings, and stronger national food security.
Drawing lessons from Vietnam, he described how deliberate agricultural modernisation helped transform the Southeast Asian country from a food importer into one of the world’s leading exporters of rice, coffee, cashew, and seafood.
Vietnam’s agribusiness exports, he said, now generate tens of billions of dollars annually and underpin the country’s wider industrial success.
He attributed Vietnam’s success to consistent policies, heavy investment in agro-processing, strong farmer–industry linkages, and the use of special economic zones to drive value addition and export competitiveness.
Oyelaran-Oyeyinka noted that similar models are emerging in Nigeria, including in Oyo State, but warned that they require reliable infrastructure, policy stability, and empowered governance to succeed.
The professor called on state governments to prioritise power, roads, and logistics, strengthen agricultural extension services, and create efficient special agro-industrial processing zones that attract major domestic and international investors.
He also urged the private sector to view agriculture as a profitable business frontier rather than a social obligation, noting that Nigeria’s future prosperity depended less on oil and more on harnessing the productive potential of its land and people.
“We are a nation that can feed itself and others, yet we remain food-insecure and overly dependent on imports. This paradox is holding back our economy.”
“Industrialising agriculture does not erase our rural roots; it transforms them into engines of productivity, wealth creation and national development.”
“Subsistence agriculture is both a cause and a consequence of technological backwardness, and no country has reached middle-income status without first modernising its agriculture.”
“A farm must be treated as a factory without a roof, connected to processing, logistics, finance and markets. Vietnam shows that agricultural transformation is not accidental; it is the result of deliberate policies that link farmers to industry and global markets.”
“The seeds of Nigeria’s prosperity are not buried in oil wells; they are sown in the fertile soils of our ecological zones,” he said.
Lady Usendi
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Cashew Industry Can Generate $10bn Annually- Association

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The President of the National Cashew Association of Nigeria (NCAN), Dr Ojo Ajanaku, has said Nigeria could earn $10 billion annually from cashew production, with $3 billion coming from cashew sales alone.
Ajanaku made this known during a press conference organised ahead of the 4th National Cashew Day, scheduled to hold from Jan. 22 to Jan. 24 in Abuja, with the the theme: “Unlocking the Full Potential of Nigeria’s Cashew Industry”.
He said that poor export documentation and weak repatriation of proceeds were causing major losses to the Nigerian economy.
“A substantial volume of cashew exported from Nigeria leaves the country without proper export proceeds forms, as exporters allegedly avoid bringing earnings back into the country,” he said.
He said during the last export season alone, Nigeria reportedly exported over 400,000 tonnes of cashew valued at about $700 million.
Ajanaku noted that deliberate investments in production and processing could unlock far greater potentials.
“If Nigeria produces just two million tonnes of cashew annually, which is achievable in less than five years, and sells at an average of $1,500 per tonne, the country would earn about $3 billion yearly,” he said.
He added that beyond raw cashew exports, enormous value lies in processing and by-products such as Cashew Nut Shell Fluid (CNSF) and cashew cake, which are largely wasted locally.
“In Vietnam, cashew cake alone sells for about 95 cents per kilogram, while in Nigeria processors pay to dispose of it as waste,” he noted.
Ajanaku explained that full local processing of cashew and its by-products could generate not less than $10 billion annually for Nigeria while creating thousands of jobs across the value chain.
He stressed that Nigeria has the production capacity, while countries like Vietnam possess advanced processing technology.
The NCAN President further disclosed that the association is strengthening partnerships with key government institutions, including the Ministry of Finance, the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, NEXIM Bank, and other agencies to reposition the sector.
He added that a landmark Memorandum of Understanding has been signed between Nigeria and Vietnam to facilitate technology transfer and deepen cooperation in cashew processing.
He expressed optimism that with sustained government support and effective regulation, the cashew industry could become a major driver of economic growth, foreign exchange earnings, and industrial development in Nigeria.
“Producing states should be given priority. For example, Kogi State, which has the highest cashew production in the country, has no factory. A lot of potentials can come from Kogi State for the country,” he said.
Also speaking, NCAN National Secretary, Augustine Edieme, said strategic plans are being made to showcase Nigeria’s potentials during the 4th National Cashew Day, which he described as a key opportunity to attract bigger investments and investors into the industry.
“We are not just talking about the cashew seeds. We need to crack the fruit shell and discover the value in cashew shells. Industrialisation of the cashew industry is key to driving the Nigerian economy,” he said.
The representative of the Federation of Agricultural Commodity Associations of Nigeria (FACAN), Sunday Ojonugwa, pledged that FACAN would optimally support the cashew association to ensure the sector reaches its full potential.
Lady Usendi
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