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Palm Oil Confab’ll Draw Investors’ Attention-Minister

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The First International Palm Produce Conference scheduled for August will send strong signals to investors and stakeholders on the existing opportunities in the palm oil industry in Nigeria.
The Minister of State for Industry, Trade and Investment Mr Samuel Ortom said this in Abuja at a meeting with commissioners for Commerce and Industry from 24 oil palm producing states in the country.
He said the conference, which is being organised by the National Palm Produce Association of Nigeria (NPPAN) in collaboration with the ministry, would be hosted by Akwa Ibom State.
Ortom said the conference would hold from Aug. 12 to August 14 in Uyo, the capital of Akwa Ibom State.
According to him, the event will “open up new investment opportunities and set a roadmap to tackle the challenges facing the development of the oil palm industry in Nigeria’’.
“It will serve as a platform for interaction with stakeholders in the oil palm industry globally to renew and widen contacts. This interaction will foster developmental strategies that would address the entire oil palm value chain in order to resuscitate the lost glory of the industry in Nigeria,’’ the minister said.
He lamented the “significant decline’’ in the fortunes of the palm oil sub-sector in the country, which is currently ranked 26th in the world in the production of the commodity.
In an address, NPPAN President, Mr Henry Olatujoye, said the conference “is designed to change our status from story tellers to achievers in oil palm production’’.
“This conference is premised on three questions: where we were in palm production, where we are now and where we should be.
“It is no longer news that Nigeria used to be the world’s largest palm produce supplier; today, we are still number one in Africa but close to nowhere in the world.
“Where we are currently is that the system has been abandoned, farmers are discouraged, no new inputs and investments in the industry are no longer forthcoming.
“This conference is therefore being organised to take us to where we should be, which, is the forefront of global palm production,’’ he said.
Olatujoye appealed for financial support from the affected state governments for the event, which he said, would cost N89 million.

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