Business
IFAD Plans $70m Project For Nigeria
The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) is developing a 70-million-dollar value chain project for 16 states in Nigeria, its president, Dr Kanayo Nwanze, has said.
Nwanze told newsmen on Sunday in Rome that the project aimed to revolutionalise agriculture among peasants and other agriculturists and help to boost rural economy and reduce poverty.
He said that the value chain project was the logical sequence to all that had been done in the past as it would create opportunities for farmers to increase their income.
He stressed that it would also benefit those who added value to farm produce from production, processing, marketing and to consumption.
He said that IFAD had prepared comprehensively for the project which would serve as a litmus test of how successful the Fund had been.
He added that Nigeria had the capacity to feed its people because of the diversity of its ecology, resources, good climatic conditions and endowment in agriculture input.
He said that Nigeria needed to maximise its agriculture potential by installing the right policies and building on its human capital.
“IFAD supported FADAMA I and it was so successful that the World Bank came in and supported FADAMA II and it received recognition by the World Bank as one of the best country projects they had supported.
“FADAMA III, which is a much larger project was supported wholly by the World Bank and that is a success story.
“The other success story is the root and tuber development project; the cassava programme in Nigeria and other West African countries has been the most successful projects to the extent that Nigeria became the largest producer of cassava.
“There are the opportunities for us to make good use of cassava, not only for food, but for fuel, energy and bi-products of cassava.
“These opportunities already exist and with the new emphasis on agriculture as the foundation for economic growth and food security, there would be a transformation.
Investigations by reporters showed that IFAD had financed eight projects and programmes in Nigeria since 1985 with a total commitment of 153.3 million dollars.
Some of the ongoing projects are Rural Finance Institution Building Programme (RUFIN), Community Based National Resources Management Programme in the Niger Delta and Community Based Agriculture and Rural Development Programme.
Nwanze said that Nigeria was the largest recipient of IFAD support both in terms of loans and grants in West and Central Africa.
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