Minister
of Agriculture, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, has said Nigeria spends over
N1.6tn ($10bn) yearly on importation of wheat, rice, sugar and fish.
He spoke on Tuesday in Abuja at the 2013 Korea International Cooperation Agency Alumni Seminar Session in Nigeria.
Adesina said research had shown that 43
percent of under-five children in Nigeria suffered stunted growth,
compared to 39 percent for all developing countries, 26 percent in
Ghana, 25 percent in Benin, 29 percent in Botswana, Burkina Faso and
Cameroon and 33 percent in Kenya.
According to him, Nigeria ranks 158th
out of 182 countries in the Human Development Index, with life
expectancy of 52 years; risk of maternal death of one in 18; and
under-five mortality rate of 186 per 1,000 live births.
“Nigeria’s stunting prevalence puts it
as the 32nd highest out of 136 countries. Nigeria has the third absolute
number of stunted children, with 41 percent of children under the age
of five stunted, 23 percent underweight and 14 percent wasted,” he said.
Although he acknowledged that overall
prevalence of stunting and underweight had been decreasing over the past
20 years, Adesina pointed out that the progress in Nigeria might not be
sufficient to meet the Millennium Development Goals of halving the
problem by 2015.
But the minister, who was represented by
an Assistant Director in the ministry, Mr. Femi Olaleye, maintained
that the policy to replace some of the wheat flour used in bread and
confectionaries with cassava would earn Nigerian farmers about N128bn
($800m).
Besides, he said, Nigeria had secured
about 3.2 million metric tonne of cassava chips for export to China,
which would earn farmers and processors over $800m (N128bn).
He explained that government’s efforts in agriculture had reduced food importation by $5.3bn.
Adesina said, “We must grow our own food. We must feed ourselves. We must create markets locally for our own farmers.
“Our vision is to move Nigeria to become
an agriculturally industrialized economy, to create wealth, jobs and
markets for farmers, and revive the rural economy. We plan to grow the
size of the agricultural sector from the present level of $99bn per year
today to about $300 billion per year by 2030.”
The Korean Ambassador to Nigeria, Hyung
Choi, said at the event that KOICA was willing to partner with private
sectors and NGO’s “by making the best use of its limited financial
resources in areas where Korea had a comparative advantage.”
He put the KOICA’s total aid volume in 2012 at $445.2m.
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