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Nigeria Government to Develops Fertiliser Recommendations for Different Crops, Soil

by Victor eke mba | 18-12-2018 12:19 recommendations 0

The Nigeria Institute of Soil Science says the Federal Government, through the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, has developed recommendations on fertiliser use for different crops and soils.
Prof. Victor Chude, the Registrar of the institute, said this at the maiden Agriculture Summit of the Agriculture Correspondents Association of Nigeria (ACAN) in Abuja on Tuesday.
Chude, however, expressed regret over the continuous neglect of advice on fertiliser usage by farmers, adding that the development would continue to engender low yield of crops across the country.
¡°If we continue what we are doing now, using one type of fertiliser for all parts of this country, our farmers will not come out of poverty and we will continue to record low yields.
¡°Fertiliser recommendations for different soils and crops have been developed by the Federal Ministry of Agriculture.
¡°The nutrient requirement for cassava is not the same as the one for cowpea; if you apply the same type of fertiliser in cassava and cowpea farms, you only produce a lot of foliage.
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¡°There is a need for fertilisers to be produced based on soil mappings,¡¯¡¯ he said.
In his remark, Chief Audu Ogbeh, the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, represented by Dr Matthew Owolabi, the Director of Irrigation at the ministry, commended agriculture correspondents for organising the summit.
Ogbeh called on farmers to see agriculture as a business where designed policies could spur growth, particularly among the youth.
¡°Africa is the solution for feeding the world because of our arable land and we now care about biotechnology, procurement of seeds.
¡°However, we have a lot of work to do to re-orientate ourselves, so that we consume what we produce. Only about 10 per cent of the land we have is being used optimally for agriculture.
¡°The Green Alternative Policy has been inculcated in the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan. ACAN should strive to promote the development of value chains across the agricultural sector.
¡°I see us achieving food security, producing food for exports; and I see a Nigeria with zero tolerance for imported food.
¡°This is because every importation of food equals to exportation of employment; we are very conscious of the need to engage in increased food processing,¡¯¡¯ Ogbeh said.
Also speaking, Dr Onallo Akpa, the National President of the Poultry Association of Nigeria (PAN), said that poultry sub-sector was very important in the agriculture sphere.
While analysing achievements in the poultry sub-sector, Akpa said that the Federal Government had paid over N2 billion to poultry farmers affected by the 2015 avian influenza outbreak.
¡°In 2015, we experienced an outbreak of avian influenza and the last administration paid N500 million to some of the affected farmers; leaving a carryover of 80 per cent of farmers uncompensated.
¡°Early this year, N1.825 billion was paid to farmers affected by avian influenza. Over N2 billion has been paid to farmers,¡¯¡¯ he said.
In a lecture, Mr Ken Ukoha, the National President of the National Association of Nigerian Traders (NANTs), expressed regret over the increasingly moribund nature of agricultural extension services in the country.
He stressed that efforts to boost food production in the country would somewhat be futile without the input of agricultural extension services.
¡°Besides, economic diversification cannot happen without access to market for the farmers to sell their produce.
¡°It is headway to reducing post-harvest losses and developing all the value chains in agriculture sector,¡¯¡¯ he added.
In a lecture, Dr Rose Gidado, the Country Coordinator of the Open Forum on Agricultural Biotechnology (OFAB), said that the country¡¯s economic diversification efforts would be meaningless without the development of agricultural technologies, especially biotechnology.
She underscored the role of biotechnology in efforts to achieve food security in Nigeria, saying that pragmatic efforts should be made to promote the adoption of good technologies that would boost food security.
¡°Malnutrition has resulted in death of many children in Nigeria and this is as a result of food insecurity.
¡°We have many threats to food security; these include weeds, extreme weather conditions, flood, insects and pests, socio-economic dynamics, farmers-herders clashes and soil degradation. We also need good technologies to preserve our crops.
¡°Our population is growing geometrically and we need to feed everyone, while the demand is driven by population growth.
¡° Biotechnology is the only viable approach for increasing food production. It is safe and can be used to improve crop and animal production,¡¯¡¯ Gidado said.
The Chairman of ACAN, Mr John Oba, said that the summit, which would be an annual event, would promote sound ethics in the reportage of agricultural themes.
He said that the summit would also make agricultural news in the country more acceptable, accessible and reliable for policy making.

 
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5 Comments

  • Victor eke mba says :
    Thanks so much everyone
    Posted 21-12-2018 07:03

  • Joon Ho Mentor says :
    Hello Victor, heavy dependency on imported crops might trigger some serious cases that really existed throughout the whole world history : Jamaican case in 1990s and other. Re-orient agriculture system comparing to the existent agriculture methods might be a bit like gambling since we do not know such trials will succeed or not, but we have to come up with new and better system methods to make use of fallow land to improve food capacity and securing it for emergent cases triggered by global economic crisis or natural disasters.
    Thanks for introducing Nigerian case well again! Please share more stories about the upcoming strategies or policies of Nigeria like this one!
    Posted 20-12-2018 21:37

  • Gyeongrin mentor says :
    Hello Victor
    I just finished reading the previous report and the last one gives me more insight as reading this piece of work!
    It is nice to know that the Nigerian government is putting effort to find optimizing alternatives for soil management.
    Your reports enlighten me a lot on soil science.
    Thanks for the report :)
    Posted 19-12-2018 23:25

Kushal Naharki

  • Kushal Naharki says :
    Glad to know the efforts of Nigerian government about the researches conducted for fertility of the soil.
    We have NARC (National Agriculture Research Council) we conducts the research related to agriculture and soil. Different researches are conducted in the various parts of the country.
    During the last semester in our university too, researches are conducted in the field conduction selecting the subject where there is a subject called Social Science too to conduct the research and related towards the fertility of the soil and different soil activities.
    Posted 18-12-2018 23:54

  • Rosa Domingos says :
    Good moring Victor!

    I am not too familiar with soil science, but thing that I do know from my geology background is that certain plants feed on certain elements from soil that originated from underlying rock formation to thrive. And it is a good call to stress the importance of soil fetiliser for specific geographic areas.

    It is most unfortunate that many livestock were lost due to the influenza incident, but I do hope that the remaining farmers will be compensated as well.

    biotechnology in its efforts has advanced greatly over the years in Africa and I do believe that the will be a day when our imports will be considerably less.

    Thank you for your report, I really enjoyed your report!
    Posted 18-12-2018 17:36

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