Nigeria is calling for partnerships and initiatives that will make it to actualize its potential of being the food basket of the world.
Nigeria’s Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said that the aim was in line with the country’s commitment to develop a thriving agro-industrial sector.
Osinbajo stated this on Tuesday when he received a delegation of Chinese investors and officials from the African Development Bank (AfDB) at the Presidential Villa.
“I think that Nigeria is a place where there is tremendous opportunity. We have the 9th largest arable land in the world and most of that is still largely untouched.
“We have a tremendous potential of being the food basket of the world, but a lot of that will depend on how we are able to get high quality inputs, seedling and others, and how we are able to use technology, especially the benefits of industrial agriculture to our advantage,’’ he said.
Referring to the interest of the Chinese investors in the agro-allied sector, he noted that Nigeria was very strong that the partnership would be one that would deliver the kind of growth, the kind of quantum leap the country wanted.
“We think that with your partnership with us, especially the agro-allied aspect of it, if it works very well, we can achieve a lot.
“This is the reason why we are engaging at this (presidential) level of government alongside the AfDB, to ensure that our investors have no trouble at all in being able to operate their businesses and do their businesses efficiently,” he said.
The Chinese investors are in the country at the instance of the African Development Bank to commence the processes of investing in Nigeria’s agricultural sector under an initiative known as the Agro-Industrial initiative with focus on crop production, forestry, fishery, and livestock production.
Speaking earlier, Prof. Zhao Zhihai, the leader of the Chinese delegation, said a consortium of Chinese investors were committed to the development of Nigeria’s agro-processing zones and especially the agro-allied sector.
In his own remarks, Prof. Oyebanji Oyelaran-Oyeyinka, the head of the AfDB team at the meeting, said the framework of the initiative is to develop a programme that leverages Nigeria’s comparative advantage in key areas of agricultural production.
“The overall investment, under the initiative, amounts to between $16 billion to $25 billion over a period of four years with a strong government support and private sector leadership,” he said.
MM/GIK/APA