Agriculture
Grass Growing: Ministry To Collaborate With Surveyor-General’s Office
The Minister of Agri
culture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh has said that the ministry would collaborate with the Surveyor General’s Office in its grass growing programme.
In a release obtained by The Tide in Port Harcourt, recently, the minister was quoted to have said that this collaboration was geared towards efforts in curbing the incessant crises between farmers and cattle rearers in some parts of the country.
The minister in a meeting he held with the Surveyor-General of the Federation, Surv. Ebisintei Awudu, in Abuja stated that time had come for Nigeria to start thinking and planning on how to feed her population that is projected to reach 500 million by the year 2050.
He explained that with the problem associated with the old grazing reserves it had become imperative for lands to be mapped out for the growing of grass for wandering cattle.
Ogbe said grasses would be grown all over the country, while abattoirs would be built so that Nigerians would have enough grass to feed the cattle as well as produce enough milk and meat to feed the growing population.
“If Israel can grow grass in the desert, Nigeria can do it,” he said.
Ogbe said research had shown that Nigeria’s grass is very rich, basing his judgement on the grasses taken from Nigeria to Brazil 16 years ago.
He solicited the support of state governments in making the programme achievable by providing 5000 hectares of land each for the programme.
While thanking the Kano State government for providing five sites for grass growing, he also called on the office of the Surveyor-General in identifying areas where the programme could be located with zero conflicts.
Responding to the request of the minister the Surveyor-General said his office had the mandate to carry out mapping of the entire Nigerian landscape and promised to get all the data concerning the existing razing sites and routes to enable them know where the programme could be sited.

L-R: Chairman, Board of Trustees, National Agricultural Foundation of Nigeria (nafn), Dr Abdullahi Adamu, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh and the representative of the chairman of the occasion, Alhaji Adamu Bello, at the national workshop on a New Agricultural Policy for Nigeria in Abuja, yesterday.
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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.
