Nigeria’s cocoa production could top 1
million tonnes in 2020, Agricultural Minister Akinwumi Adesina said on
Tuesday, adding that the African Development Bank (AfDB) needs to help
countries tackle volatility and move up the commodities value chain.
Nigeria, Africa’s top oil exporter and
largest economy, is one of the world’s biggest cocoa producers but that
industry was among the first victims when the country’s oil discovery in
the 1950s led to other sectors being abandoned.
Adesina had previously said Nigeria was
aiming to increase production to 1 million tonnes by 2018 but the growth
target remains challenging given production has actually fallen this
year to “at most” 300,000 tonnes, according to the head of the country’s
private sector cocoa association.
Following the recent steep oil price
drop, pressure to diversify the economy has intensified and the
government is trying to draw farmers back to cocoa and boost production,
which has been hamstrung by old, lower-yielding plants.
Adesina – who is also one of eight
candidates shortlisted to become AfDB president later this year – said
efforts were well under way to renew and ramp up Nigerian cocoa
production.
“We have distributed more than 140
million seedlings of high-yielding cocoa varieties to recapitalise the
cocoa plantations, because they are so old,” he told Reuters in an
interview. “That will give us a yield of almost five times.”
Adesina, a member of President Goodluck
Jonathan’s outgoing government in Africa’s most populous nation, said
Nigeria produced around 370,000 tonnes last year but estimated that this
could rise to around 700,000 tonnes in 2016.
“By 2020, Nigeria should be certainly in the 1 million cocoa production club,” he said.
African economies and the AfDB now
needed to focus on starting to process more of its agricultural
production rather than just exporting it, argued the minister.
“Almost 78 percent of global cocoa
production comes from Africa, with top producers, but we don’t account
for more than 3 percent in terms of global share for chocolate,” he
said.
Nigeria is the world’s fourth largest
cocoa producer, after Ivory Coast, Ghana and Indonesia, according to
International Cocoa Organization data.
The key now was to boost lending by
banks into the agricultural sector, which could be achieved by
risk-sharing facilities, Adesina said.
“The AfDB should do a lot more to help
deal with volatility by helping countries to have fiscal buffers to deal
with the downturns,” he added. This could come in the form of domestic
cocoa boards set up with the private sector, and by launching more
sovereign wealth funds.
The cost of food imports had fallen to
643 billion naira ($3.23 billion) in 2014, Adesina said, hoping for
another reduction this year. Nigeria grows much of its own food, but imports a number of staples such as wheat and rice.
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