President Muhammadu Buhari has appealed to the people of the Niger
Delta to embrace peace and focus on agriculture for sustainable economic
development and wealth creation.Buhari urged them to take advantage of
the huge potential in agriculture and stop the destruction of oil and
gas pipelines which only served to destroy the country’s ecosystem and
economy.
The President, represented by the Minister of State for Agriculture
and Rural Development, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, made the appeal on
Saturday at the 20th anniversary of the Nigerian Agip Oil Company’s
Green River Project Farmers’ Day in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State
capital.Buhari said, “I wish to acknowledge the unrelenting efforts of
the Nigerian Agip Oil Company, which, in its bid to prove that oil
production and agriculture can coexist, has for the past 29 years
supported its host communities to focus on agriculture through the GRP, a
corporate social responsibility initiative, which has resulted in
sustainable development in these communities.“I appeal to the people of
the Niger Delta region to embrace peace and focus on agriculture for
sustainable economic development and wealth creation.
“I
urge you to take advantage of the huge potential in agriculture and
stop the destruction of oil and gas pipelines, which only serve to
destroy our ecosystem and economy.“The present administration is
committed to doing everything possible to support the people of the
Niger Delta to achieve their potential in agriculture, which is far more
than its endowments in oil and gas.”The occasion, with the theme,
‘Sustainable Farming for Sustainability’, had in attendance
representatives of governors of Bayelsa, Rivers, Delta and Imo states;
Chairman, Agip, Mr. U. Carrara; and the Vice Chairman and Managing
Director, Agip, Massimo.
Buhari said the focus of his administration was to redirect attention
to agriculture and empower Nigerians in a productive and sustainable
manner.He said the process entailed treating agriculture as a business
to create wealth and provide employment and take the country from being
an import-dependent country to a self-sufficient nation with surplus for
export to earn foreign exchange.
The President noted that Nigeria spent an average of $22bn annually
on wheat, rice, sugar and fish importation.Buhari said Nigeria had an
estimated 84 million hectares of arable land with an estimated 10 per
cent only being optimally utilised.He said there was an abundance of
land available for cultivation to meet the demand of about 170 million
consumers in the domestic market and the entire West African sub-region.
The
President noted that Agip, as part of its GRP, was supporting some
farmers with processing facilities such as cassava, rice and oil palm
mills,noting that they were significant as post-harvest losses were
estimated to be about $9bn annually.He said the Ministry of Agriculture
and Rural Development was also procuring sundry processing equipment for
farmers across the country.The President encouraged the host states to
collaborate with the ministry to make agriculture a key business in
Nigeria.He stressed that the development would curb youths’ restiveness,
protect the ecosystem, promote peace and investments and increase
revenues in the states.
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