ABUJA— The Presidency, yesterday,
raised alarm that Nigerians would starve to death by 2050 if nothing was
done to ensure an all year round farming.
It also said with the rate the country was going, the population would by 2050 rise to 509 million.
According to the Federal Government, the present mode of farming will not sustain the increasing population in the country.
It noted that there was the urgent need for all major stakeholders to
work towards improving mechanized farming and irrigation, to ensure an
all year farming to avert the problem.
Minister of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh |
Speaking, yesterday, during the budget defence of 2016, Minister of
Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh, said the country had the capacity to grow
the grass required by the cattle to consume.
He said: “We have written to state governments to encourage them to
develop dams and canals so that agriculture becomes an all year round
activity and it is not confined to the rainy season alone.
“Besides, by 2050, Nigeria population will be very close to 500
million at the current rate of growth. This is just 34 years from now.
If we carry on at the current rate of one crop per year, with very low
mechanization, Nigerians run the risk of starving to death.
He said: “We intend to intensify and consolidate on the local
staples, the yams, the cassava, the beans, especially rice and wheat.
Both of which consume $11 million per day in import. The figure is going
down a bit. We can’t afford that in the long run because we don’t even
have the resources.
“The ministry has put necessary machinery in motion to stop the
constant bloody clashes between herdsmen and farmers. We have decided we
are going to develop massive paddocks across the country.
“What the cows are looking for is grass and water. We have the
capacity to grow the grass we want not just any kind of grass but highly
nutritive grass for the cows to eat. If it can be done in Kenya, Saudi
Arabia, there is no reason why we can’t do it here.
‘’There is sizable provision for grassing at hinterland, by
developing water, drilling of boreholes and small dams to irrigate those
areas already mapped out. In the process we hope that the cattle
herdsmen would have a more stable life.”
By Henry Umoru & Joseph Erunke
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