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Tuesday, September 13, 2022

Stakeholders seek more silos amid Nigeria’s $3.5 million post-harvest losses

Concerned about annual post-harvest losses, the stakeholders said the situation, if not quickly reversed, could worsen Nigeria’s food insecurity.

• September 13, 2022
POST-HARVEST LOSS

Stakeholders, especially farmers in the South-South, have called on the federal government to urgently build more silos across the states to reduce annual post-harvest losses in the agriculture sector.

They made the call in separate interviews following the recent disclosure that the country’s economic cost of post-harvest losses was N3.5 trillion.

The Minister of State for Agriculture and Rural Development, Mustapha Shehuri, at the presentation of the International Standard Organisation (ISO) Certification for Nigerian Stored Products Research Institute, Abuja, noted that the losses in fruits and vegetables could be as high as 50 to 60 per cent.

Concerned about the huge annual post-harvest losses, the stakeholders said the situation, if not quickly reversed, could worsen Nigeria’s food insecurity.

The chairman of the All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN) in Delta, Richard Asenime, said with adequate food preservation facilities, farmers’ capacity to produce food would increase.

He added that with silos, farmers would make more money by regulating their produce’s supply and ensuring price stability.

In Calabar, Bassey Edet, programme manager, Cross River Agricultural Development Programme (ADP), regretted that successive governments consistently borrowed from the World Bank for different agricultural projects without sustainable plans, adding that such programmes died soon after the administration left office.

“The lack of reserve is one of the reasons why IDPs are suffering in their camps; we need to have these food banks to preserve food and also generate income,” he said.

Festus Ebozele, managing director, TA Commodity Producers Co. Nigeria Limited, Benin, noted that the federal government should invest more in food processing to reduce post-harvest losses in the country.

Mr Ebozele said such an investment could be through a partnership with local farmers and other private investors.

Ogbeiwi Odihi-Ogiamien, Edo coordinator of the youth wing of the Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), called for partnership among all levels of government in preserving farm produce.

Mr Odihi-Ogiamien said since the federal government seemed to have its hands full, state and local governments could partner farmers in preservation to reduce post-harvest losses.

A commercial farmer in Bayelsa, Fidelis Alaowei, said farmers faced the challenge of the absence of storage facilities in the state primarily for grains, hence the high post-harvest losses annually.

He said food losses and waste were either due to ineffective functioning or the absence of food storage systems.

Uyo-based agronomist, Nsikak Edidiong, explained that ”a fortified food reserve system will help to guarantee food supply all year round and ensure food security.”

A farmer, Nsima Jacobs, said establishing strategic food reserves would encourage farmers to grow more crops and earn more.

In Rivers, Bright Okere, director, Ministry of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Andoni local government area, said over 50 per cent of agriculture produce in the state was lost due to a lack of silos.

“Fishermen lose much of their catch due to lack of electricity, cold rooms and other storage facilities at fishing ports,” he said.

Mr Okere urged the government to establish strategic fish storage outlets in the state to curb post-harvest losses.

A cassava farmer, Clement Gosu, also urged the government and agriculture investors to establish more cassava flour mills and storage plants in the southern part of the country. He said the move would check the shortage of cassava flour in the country and encourage the export of the produce.

Similarly, Athens Owo, an agriculture extension officer in the Rivers Agriculture Development Programme (ADP), said establishing silos would support risk reduction in farm investment.

(NAN)

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