The Minister of Transportation, Mr Rotimi Amaechi, has said
the the country spends a total of $2 billion annually to import agricultural
products into the country.
Amaechi disclosed this to journalists during an inspection
tour from Rigasa rail station in Kaduna to Idu Station in Abuja last Friday.
Rotimi Amaechi Even as the world’s 7th largest population in
the world at a base line of 170million, the Minister said agriculture is an
exceptionally important element of Nigeria’s economy.
Amaechi went to say that
the large import of food products include wheat, rice, flour, fish, tomato
paste, eggs, textile and sugar.
The Minister however, stressed the need to
diversify the mono-cultural tendencies of the Nigerian economy by developing
other sectors of the economy especially agriculture.
Major agricultural imports
are wheat, rice and sugar. Most agricultural imports come from the US and the
EU.
The country’s main agricultural exports are cocoa beans, rubber, sesame
seeds and cocoa butter. Key agricultural export destinations are the UK, the
US, Canada, France and Germany.
We were known to be exporters of cocoa beans,
gum Arabic, groundnuts, cotton, palm oil and many other agricultural
commodities, but now, we import most of the agricultural commodities that we
can produce because of the neglect of the sector.
About 30 percent of live
animals slaughtered in Nigeria are imported from neighbouring countries.
Like
other subsectors, livestock industry development is constrained by low
productive breeds, inadequate access to feeds and grazing lands, frequent
farmer – pastoralist conflicts, lack of processing facilities and low value
addition and low technical inputs in the management of the animals, including
diseases.
However, industry watchers said the country could increase its
agricultural sector output to $227 billion by 2030, thus, raising the annual
growth rate to 4.2 per cent.
But achieving the feat would require a
four-pronged approach which boosting yields, shifting more production into high
value crops, reducing post-harvest and distribution losses, and increasing
scale production.
The biggest opportunity in agriculture is improving crop
yields, which accounts for 39 per cent of the upside potential.
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