Agriculture
Agriculture Is A Catalyst For Industrial Growth – ITF D-G
The Industrial Training
Fund (ITF) said last Monday that agriculture is a catalyst for industrial growth and that the poultry sub-sector has the greatest potential.
The IFT Director-General, Prof. Longmas Wapmuk, said this at the inauguration of the capacity building programme for clusters of poultry farmers in Plateau.
According to him, the poultry industry alone contributes about 25 per cent of the agricultural GDP with an estimated N512 billion commercial production N320 family rural production as at 2011.
He said:“Perhaps more than any sub-sector, the poultry industry holds the greatest potential.
“With an estimated commercial production at N512 billion and family rural production of N320 billion as at 2011, poultry has become a gold mine.
“The poultry industry alone contributes about 25 per cent of the agricultural GDP.”
Wapmuk said that this include 553,000 tonnes of eggs and 708,000 tonnes of broiler meat as at the same period.
“Nigeria Agribusiness in 2011 predicted that due to rising living standards and population, there will be an increase of about 23 per cent growth in the industry between now and 2015.
“The mandate of the ITF is to encourage acquisition of skills in various sectors of the economy; that is why it is organising training with the Poultry Association of Nigeria.”
Wapmuk said that the ITF mandate was designed to create a pool of trained manpower to meet the needs of the Nigerian economy.
He said that a study conducted in conjunction with the UNIDO in 2013, revealed that there was an acute shortage of skills in the agriculture sector in Nigeria.
This, according to him, has been limiting the agriculture sector from the actualisation of the ample potential for employment generation, wealth creation and poverty alleviation.
Wapmuk said that the capacity building workshop for registered poultry farmers in Plateau was free of charge.
He said that the basic intention was to equip the farmers with technical and management capacity to deliver quality products to all Nigerians at affordable prices.
Also speaking, the Chairman of the Plateau Poultry Farmers Association, Mr Julius Gusan, said that members of the association, were grateful to the ITF for the one-week training programme.
He said that members of the association in Plateau had passed through years of anxiety, uncertainty and challenges to their economic survival due to the spate of insecurity.
Gusan noted that Plateau was the home of poultry production in the West Africa sub-region and had the highest number of small and medium scale poultry farms.
Meanwhile, the Plateau Commissioner for Agriculture, Mr Nanven Barko, said at the inauguration that the state government has sustained its disease surveillance and control programmes, which, he said had been “ highly beneficial” to farmers.
He said that the government, for the past three years, had funded the control of ‘Newcastle’ disease in rural poultry through a statewide vaccination programme.
Barko said that the government distributed N1.2 million worth of vaccines during its statewide campaign for prevention of the disease.
He said this had greatly reduced the incidence Newcastle disease in rural poultry, thereby breaking the cycle of transmission to commercial stock.
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FG, Ogun Distribute Inputs To 2,400 Farmers
Federal Government and the Ogun State Government, on Wednesday, distributed farm inputs to farmers as part of effort to address food security challenge.
The State Director, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, Dr. Toyin Ayo-Ajayi, during the flag-off ceremony of Inputs Redemption Under The National Agricultural Growth Scheme-Agro Pocket (NAGS-AP), in Ogun State, disclosed that beneficiaries of the gesture were primarily rice, maize and cassava farmers across the State.
Ayo-Ajayi commended the Ogun State Government for partnering with the government at the centre for the effort in supporting farmers with inputs that would bring about yieldings for local consumption and likely exportation.
She noted that government is supporting rice, cassava and maize farmers with inputs worth N212,000; N189,000 and N186,000 respectively.
The Permanent Secretary in the State Ministry of Agriculture, Mrs Kehinde Jokotoye, who represented the Commissioner in the Ministry, Bolu Owotomo, stated that traditional farmers are critical in food production, hence the need to encourage and support them with inputs that would bring about desired results during harvesting.
Owotomo said: “Let us make good use of this opportunity, so that the success of this phase will make farmers benefit more from the state and federal governments of Nigeria.”
Earlier, State Coordinator, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, Dr. Oluwatoyin Ayo-Ajayi, appreciated the present administration for partnering with the federal government for the initiative, adding that the programme is designed to support farmers at the grassroots level in cassava, rice and maize with inputs such as, seeds, pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers, to boost their production and enhance their livelihood.
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