A
small group of hardy farmers from Zimbabwe have made a go of it working in the
tough conditions in Nigeria
|
Farming in Nigeria is not
for the fainthearted.
AFP
report continues:
Nigeria
is investing in agriculture in a bid to wean itself off its dependence on crude
oil revenue, hit after the recent plunge in oil prices
|
Intermittent
electricity means generators are needed half the time. Chronically potholed
roads make transport slow and expensive. Fake fertilizer has previously
devastated crops, while toxic feed ruined one dairy farm.
But
for a group of 13 hardy farmers from Zimbabwe, the opportunity was too good to
pass up.
"When
it comes to agriculture, there's a lot that can be done here," said Piet
du Toit, a weather-beaten 64-year-old farmer from Zimbabwe, as he swung open
the gate to his lush garden in Kwara state, western Nigeria.
"But
it's got a long way to go and it's not going to happen overnight."
Fourteen
years ago, after Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe seized white-owned farms in
a controversial land reform programme, Du Toit took up an offer from the Kwara state
government to take his skills to Nigeria.
He
established a 1,000-hectare (nearly 2,500-acre) commercial farm in the virgin
bush, two hours by car north of the state capital Ilorin.
Since
then, the grueling conditions have slashed the size of the original group from
13 to five.
Du
Toit, who grows maize and soy, had to shift his focus to poultry farming this
year after the plunging naira currency caused the cost of crop production to
skyrocket.
Yet
for all the challenges, he says business is booming.
Farmers
in Nigeria need generators to cope with the intermittent power supply and
deliveries are complicated by the poor state of the roads
|
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'Import pizza from London' -
"It's
profitable," said Du Toit, showing off his 21 chicken sheds and beaming
with pride.
"There's
big investment coming into the country."
But
Nigeria is in the grip of its worst recession in 25 years after a plunge in oil
prices.
Now
the West African powerhouse is seeking to slash its dependency on crude
revenues and wean itself off costly imports.
President
Muhammadu Buhari's government backs farming as one driver of recovery -- but
the reality has proved far more complicated, with farmers struggling to access
credit.
Banks'
lending to the agriculture sector has risen from about one percent of their
total credit to just four percent in over three years, said FBN Quest, a
Lagos-based investment banking firm.
"This
will not bring about the rapid growth in the agro-industry underpinning the
federal government's strategies," it said in a recent note.
Most
farming is done by subsistence smallholders which complicates efforts to
standardise market prices and product quality, while depriving the government
of much needed revenue.
"So
much of the agricultural value chain is chaotic," said Edward George, an
analyst at Ecobank.
A
significant proportion of what Nigeria produces is wasted because it cannot
reach the marketplace, he added.
And
because Nigeria's food production has not kept up with a booming population,
imports have soared, funded by the lucrative oil and gas industry.
"There
are Nigerians who will use their cell phones to import pizza from London,"
agriculture minister Audu Ogbeh complained recently.
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'Give them the best' -
Like
his fellow countryman Du Toit, Peter Crouch, a former tobacco farmer, has also
thrown his lot in with poultry.
He
opened a hatchery along with his son David in January as part of an
egg-to-butcher chicken production operation.
"You
have to have the full chain" since Nigeria does not have a developed
system, said Crouch, as he took a drag from a Zimbabwean-made Madison
cigarette.
But
it is Nigeria's epidemic of smuggled chicken that really ruffles Crouch's
feathers.
The
issue illustrates one of the biggest problems facing modern Nigeria, where the
informal sector represents a significant chunk of the country's economy.
Though
chicken imports are illegal, the birds keep coming.
Farmers
blame Brazil, the world's number one producer, saying it sells breasts and
wings at a premium, then dumps the leftover carcasses at a cut-rate price in
Nigeria.
"It's
a sophisticated business. If you were to close importation of illegal chicken,
we wouldn't be able to keep up (with demand)," said Crouch.
As
the imported Zimbabwean farmers look forward to retirement, the next generation
is already eyeing the future.
Comfort
Babajide, 30, is a supervisor who works at the hatchery with her husband.
"Nigeria
is looking more into agriculture, beyond petroleum services," she said.
"Some
people still believe in foreign or imported products rather than the local
products. We can show them it
can happen right here in Nigeria, we can give them the best."
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