Thursday, June 18, 2026

The Sun Nigeria

No more briefcase farmers as FG launches farmers’ data audit

Sen-Aliyu

• Plans livestock breeding centres in 6 geopolitical zones

 

The Federal Government has launched a nationwide farmers’ data audit and registry to eliminate “briefcase farmers” and ensure that only genuine farmers benefit directly from agricultural interventions.

Minister of State of Agriculture and Food Security, Senator Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi, disclosed this at a technical session of the Government-citizens’ Engagement Forum, organised by the Sir Ahmadu Bello Memorial Foundation in Kaduna.

He said the data-driven initiative was part of efforts to address the food crisis inherited by the current administration and to lay the foundation for rural prosperity.

“Our priority is simple: ramp up production, reduce food prices, and ensure equitable access to support,” Abdullahi said.

The minister reaffirmed that the declaration of a state of emergency on food security by President Bola Tinubu remained in effect, as the government continued to implement targeted actions.

Abdullahi said the Agro Pocket initiative had cultivated over 133,000 hectares of wheat across 15 Northern states, surpassing the 130,000-hectare target, with Jigawa alone accounting for more than 50,000 hectares.

He added that a plan targeting 44,500 rice producers was underway, supported by extension services to address the farmer-extension ratio of 1 to 25,000.

On mechanisation, the minister said the government had launched 2,000 Belarusian tractors and 9,000 implements to enhance productivity.

He said the Special Agro-Processing Zones (SAPZs) were being developed to improve market access and support value addition, enabling farmers to earn higher incomes.

Abdullahi disclosed that research institutes had released improved crop varieties, including tomato strains resistant to the destructive “tomato Ebola.”

In the livestock sector, he highlighted ongoing efforts to establish grazing reserves, livestock villages, transit shelters, and formulate a national dairy policy.

The minister also said three major dams : Nwabi Yashin, Nwape, and Amla, had been completed, unlocking 2,700 hectares for irrigation, while mini-hydro projects would provide off-grid power to farming communities.

“We are not only responding to today’s needs, we are laying the foundation for future resilience reclaiming university farmlands, training youth and women, and reforming agricultural systems.” Abdullahi urged northern leaders to stand against impostors manipulating government support systems.

“We must discredit such people. The time to act is now,” he said.

The Federal Government has also disclosed plan to set up a livestock breeding centre in each of the six geopolitical zones to enhance productivity and sustainability.

Dr. Abdullahi disclosed this in Kaduna at a two-day interactive session on Government-Citizens Engagement, organised by the Sir Ahmadu Bello Memorial Foundation.

The event is themed, “Assessing electoral promises: Fostering government-citizens engagement for national unity.”

Speaking at a plenary on agriculture and food security, Abdullahi said the President Bola Tinubu-led administration is intentional about investing in Nigeria’s livestock sector.

He reaffirmed the Federal Government’s commitment to fostering synergy among key sectors to achieve the broad objectives of the Renewed Hope Agenda.

Abdullahi said his ministry is collaborating with the Ministry of Education to redesign curriculum for young farmers to adopt modernisation and boost the sector.

According to him, the initiative aims to equip the next generation with modern agricultural skills, technology-driven knowledge, and innovative farming practices to strengthen national food security.

Abdullahi said the synergy among the Ministries of Agriculture, Environment, Water Resources, Livestock Development, and the Marine and Blue Economy are imperative for delivering on the Renewed Hope Agenda.