Agriculture
Minister Audu Ogbeh performs the flag off of yam export to Europe/US at
Lillypond Container Terminal in Lagos
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Nigeria on Thursday began
to export yams to Europe and the United States, as part of moves to diversify
its oil-dependent economy and earn much-needed foreign exchange.
Agriculture
minister Audu Ogbeh flagged off the first consignment of the fibrous tuber from
the port in the country's economic capital, Lagos.
"Oil
and gas cannot employ millions of people just like agriculture so we must work
hard to move from oil to earning foreign exchange from agriculture," he
said on Wednesday.
Ogbeh
told a news conference inspection charges on export produce would be reduced to
encourage more overseas sales and greater competition.
"To
make yam competitive, we will work on the packages and the right types of
trucks to be used for transportation of the produce," he said.
According
to the UN Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), Nigeria accounts for 61% of
the world's total yam output. Ogbeh said not all of it was consumed, causing
waste.
But
with food shortages in conflict-hit parts of the country's northeast and food
inflation nudging 20%, there are fears the policy could hit consumers in the
pocket.
Yams,
a staple grown across Nigeria, have gone up in price since last August when the
country slipped into recession as a result of low global oil prices.
Nigeria
relies on crude oil sales for 90% of foreign exchange earnings and 70% of
government revenue.
But
the worldwide oil slump slashed revenues, weakened the naira, pushed up
inflation and stalled investment prompting the government to look to the
non-oil sector to stem the tide.
"The
(yam export) policy is going to compound our suffering," said Lagos
housewife Bolanle Akintomo.
"A
tuber of yam that used to sell for between ₦200 and ₦300 (63-95 US cents, 56-83
euro cents) is now ₦1,000 naira (US$3.2, €2.8).
"With
exports, the price will further go up."
The
National Association of Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Manufacturing and
Agriculture said incentives were needed to produce enough yams for local and
overseas consumption.
"There
may be an increase in prices at the short-term but the prices will fall as more
yams come to the market," a NACCIMA official said.
Denja
Yaqub of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), said the initiative could encourage
farmers to increase output, earning foreign exchange for the cash-strapped
economy.
"The
policy will also make our agricultural produce competitive in the international
market," he added.
Yaqub said the government needed to reduce fuel costs for farmers, upgrade roads and improve storage facilities to cut waste in the supply chain and ultimately lower prices.
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