Politics

The 109 Intergrated Farm Estates in National Food Security

President Muhammadu Buhari, the Chairman of the National Food Security Council,  has laudably approved the establishment of one  Integrated Farm Estate ( IFE) in each of the 109 Senatorial Districts in the country. 

There is no doubt that the directive by the President to the Nigerian Agricultural Land Development Authority (NALDA) to establish an Integrated Farm Estate  (IFE) in each of the 109 senatorial districts in the country is yet another bold move by the APC-led administation to enhance our national  food security and nutrition. 

The purposes of the Estates are boosting food production,  creation of jobs, enhancing national food security and the practical pursuit of economic diversification using  agriculture as  the strongest pillar to achieve and sustain that national desire.

The Nigerian Agricultural Land Development Authority (NALDA) which has the mandate of establishing the Estates nationwide has already established the first one in Katsina state. 

The Authority said in a post on its website, “in our quest to harness the vast potentials of the Nigerian Land, we are tasked with the responsibility of developing the land in rural areas through the establishment of Integrated Farm Estates, to increase our agricultural output as a nation.”

Although some commentators may rate  the farm estate in Sujudu village of Daura emirate, Katsina state,  as relatively small at 100 acres, nevertheless it is significant as a model of the concept in practice. It is  segmented into different portions for varied agricultural activities:  a corner  is devoted to  crop production while another part is for livestock with equipment for  processing and the  packaging of end products like beef and mutton,  milk , fish and poultry products. Thus the small 100-acre IFE in Sujudu has presented a picture of how the full-scale, 1,000 hectare or larger  version of the IFE should be.

I can see that by the time the full-scale IFEs of 1,000 hectares  or larger are established, each would have a capacity to engage a population which can be equivalent to that of a medium-sized town in all-season crop production if  it is located close to water bodies;  it will have a large poultry section with up to a million birds; fish ponds with over 2,000,000 fish at  different stages of growth; a section for both diary and beef cattle; a large goattery; and where appropriate, rabbit pens, with at least 30,000 animals. If it is adjacent to a woodland with a blooming forest cover, a bee apiary for honey harvesting will be part of the package.

However, it may be useful for NALDA to set some hectres aside in each of the 109 IFEs  to plant tree  or horticultural crops for fruits like citrus, guava, pineapple, banana, date palm, mangoes, pawpaw and vegetables that can improve fruits intakes among Nigerians.

The 109  IFEs can surely contribute in reducing the rate and extent of malnutrition in Nigeria which the Unicef said is caused by many underlying factors including, “poverty, inadequate food production, inadequate food intake, ignorance and uneven distribution of food, poor food preservation techniques, improper preparation of foods, food restrictions and taboos, and poor sanitation.”

When fully functional as envisioned by the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administation,  items from the IFEs, especially meat, fish, eggs and other poultry products can contribute in reducing child malnutrition. International agencies reported, and the Federal Ministry of Health did not repute the assertion that, “in Nigeria 37 per cent of children, or 6 million children, are stunted (chronically malnourished or low height for age), more than half of them severely. In addition, 18 per cent of children suffer from wasting (acutely malnourished or low weight for height), half of them severely.”

The model farm estate in Sujudu has a school, a clinic and  120 units of one-bedroom houses to accommodate farm households  that are permanently resident and working on  the farm estate. This implies that  larger IFEs will have more housing units, bigger clinics and schools with more classrooms to cater for the children of farm workers, extension services providers and marketers, among others.

The name of NALDA,  which  was revived by the APC-led administation of President Muhammadu Buhari, will be written boldly in gold when it  achieves its ambitions of implementing the 109  IFEs project and  its goal  “to attract, encourage and empower 1000 farmers from each of the 774 LGAs in Nigeria anually, cutting accross the entire Agricultural Value Chain.”

With strong will and  determination driven by patriotism, both goals and more,  are achievable

Tunde Alade

Tunde is a political Enthusiast who loves using technology to impact his immediate community by providing accurate data and news items for the good of the country.

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