Foodstuff

Despite Low Farm Yields, 40% Of Food In Nigeria is wasted – Expert

by Echezona obinna
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According to Sulaimon Arigbabu, executive secretary of the HEDA Resource Centre, Nigeria has one of the lowest per-hectare agricultural input yields.

At the ANAEDOONLINE Media Foundation webinar series with the theme of “Food Security, Nutrition, and Food Safety,” Arigbabu made this statement on Tuesday.

Arigbabu claimed during the webinar that over 40% of the food produced in Nigeria is lost between the farm and the customer.

He said, “About 40 per cent of the food we produce in Nigeria gets wasted between the farm and the final consumer but nobody talks about the opportunity that we miss, the food that we did not grow, the one that dies before it became a harvest.

“In Nigeria, we have one of the lowest per hectare yield for major agricultural inputs. For instance, in terms of wheat production, our per hectare yield is just 1.4 tonnes per hectare while in Egypt, the per hectare yield is 6.4 tonnes. Take soya bean for instance, our per hectare yield is 1.2 tonnes while in Egypt, you have about 10 tonnes per hectare.

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“Nigeria does 1.2 tonnes per hectare and in Asia, it’s 4-7 tonnes; in Egypt, it’s 10 tonnes per hectare. In terms of maize, Egypt does 6 tonnes, South Africa does 5.1 tonnes, Nigeria does 1.6 tonnes.”

He attributed the low hectare yield to the lack of knowledge among farmers on agronomics.

“It’s because of the lack in the knowledge of the farmers in terms of good agronomical practice. It’s because we do not provide our farmers with access to accurate, reliable, and timely climate information.

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“Many farmers go to farmers when they should not, so the opportunity that is lost is the major reason we are having food insecurity, if we deal with that, we can deal with post-harvest loss.

“Despite the global pressure on us, Nigeria is supposed to be a food power house for the Sahel for West Africa but we are missing out on this opportunity because the quantum of food that we even fail to grow is far much more than the one we are losing and if we stop the post-harvest loss for instance, we would have, by 80 per cent taken care of those who are not able to have access to good and nutritious food,” he said.

 

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