Home » Nigeria Spends $10bn Annually On Food Imports – FG

Nigeria Spends $10bn Annually On Food Imports – FG

News Desk
8 views
A+A-
Reset

The Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, Sen. Abubakar Kyari, says Nigeria spends $10 billion annually on agro-imports, including wheat and fish.

Kyari disclosed this at the First Bank of Nigeria Ltd., 2025 Agric and Export Expo, on Tues­day in Lagos.

The minister, who decried the rising rate of agro-imports, stressed the need for more financ­ing of agro activities to boost lo­cal exports.

The minister was represented at the event by his Special Advis­er, Mr Ibrahim Alkali.

Kyari harped on the impor­tance of increasing financing for the nation’s agriculture sector to boost food export revenue gener­ation.

“Nigeria spends over $10 billion annually importing food such as wheat, rice, sugar, fish and even tomato paste.

“Agriculture already contrib­utes 35 percent of our Gross Do­mestic Product and employs 35 percent of our workforce.

“We sit on 85 million hectares of urban land with a youth pop­ulation of over 70 percent under the age of 30, yet Nigeria accounts for less than 0.5 percent of global exports.

“However, Nigeria earns less than $400 million from agro ex­ports, to build a non-oil export economy, we must rethink how we finance agriculture,” he said.

He reiterated Tinubu’s admin­istration’s stance on ensuring food sovereignty of the country, while insisting on increased fi­nancing of agriculture.

“President Tinubu’s adminis­tration has made it clear that food sovereignty is the goal. Nigeria must not only feed itself, but to do on its own terms, free from ex­cessive dependency on imports.

“Sovereignty means ensuring that no Nigerian goes hungry because of shocks in global food supply chain, allowing every com­munity to stand on the strength of our land, our people and our productivity.

“Boosting domestic produc­tion and building support for exports are not separate agendas. They are two sides of the same coin.

“We have the land, the labour, and the markets, but we lack the system of financing, value addition and infrastructure that converts potential into prosperity.

“The fundamentals compel that we pilot from dependence on oil rigs to resilience in food and export earnings from rural commodity exports to value add­ed agribusiness.

“From fragmented farmer credit to structured financial systems that attract significant capital and from stereotyped per­ceptions to improved participa­tion of youth in the agricultural sector,” Kyari said.

He also stressed the need for improved mechanisms and criti­cal thinking to boost food security.

“Nigeria can do better if we begin to think critically and im­prove mechanisms such as reve­nue sharing, finance, agricultural goals with performance triggers, factoring forward contracts, Pay-as-Harvest, and the rest.

“These are not abstract the­ories. They are working in real economies,” he said.

(Independent)

WhatsApp channel banner

You may also like

-
00:00
00:00
Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00

Adblock Detected

Please support us by disabling your AdBlocker extension from your browsers for our website.