Nigeria’s food security in jeopardy without proper seed system – Minister

The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr Mohammad Abubakar, has said achieving food security would be truncated without a proper structured seed system to support the sector.

The Minister disclosed this at the 4th Edition of SeedConnect Africa Conference and Exhibition with the theme ‘Partnership for a Resilient and Robust Seed Industry in Nigeria’ organised by the National Agricultural Seed Council (NASC).

According to him, the country may not achieve its quest to attain food security if it does not have quality seeds.

“The importance of seed in achieving a sustainable Agricultural revolution is sacrosanct. The growth of this sector would be hampered without a proper structured seed system to support the industry.

“Over time, we have agreed that seed is the starting point of any Agricultural revolution and a panacea for food and nutritional security.

”You will agree with me that Food Security is hinged on seed security, and seed security is hinged on rock-solid seed systems.

The Minister said that government was building on past policies that rode on seed systems to achieve incredible impact on agricultural development in Nigeria.

“To fast-track development of Agricultural value chains, improve the efficiency of delivery of seeds and other agri inputs, and enhance productivity, we have launched the National Agricultural Growth Scheme and Agro Pocket (NAGS&AP) Implementation and Technical working committee.

“Their mandate is to see to the smooth implementation of input delivery and growth enhancement initiative, for the benefit of farmers across Nigeria. The seed component is one that will be closely monitored,” he said.

He called on stakeholders to join forces with the government  to build strong and sustainable seed delivery system.

“Working in isolation will only make the value chain break, causing unprecedented systemic disruptions. In more advanced economies, actors in the seed value chain specialize and partner.

“That is one reason why they remain resilient over generations. I am encouraging investors not only to go into seed production. The seed value chain is wide and very profitable,” the Minister noted.

In his remarks, the Director-General of of NASC, Dr Philip Ojo, said over the years, Nigeria’s seed system had benefited immensely from SeedConnect Conferences.

He said the Introduction of a Plant Variety Protection (PVP) law in Nigeria (PVP Act 2021) started in 2018 shortly after the first edition of SEEDCONNECT Africa 2018.

“Today, I am happy to announce that Nigeria now has a Plant Variety Protection (PVP) Law, and we are making efforts to complete Nigeria’s membership of the international union for the protection of new plant varieties (UPOV),” he added.

He said the amendment of the NASC Act with the introduction of stiffer penalties and solid foundation for the introduction of technology to police the Seed Industry was also part of the achievements of the Council.

Ojo further noted that with Council’s collaboration with the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), it has been able to scale up Seed Market Surveillance and enforcement of Standards.

Still highlighting some of the achievements of the Council to   development of the NASC Electronic Survey Tool (NEST); a data capturing, and analytical tool hosted on Google play store and accessed by any android device for data generation, analysis, and knowledge sharing.

“Membership of the ISTA – Nigeria is now a member of the International Seed testing association (ISTA) – and our Central Lab undergoing is currently undergoing ISTA Audit for it to become an ISTA accredited laboratory”, Dr Ojo added.

(NAN)

agriculturefood securityNigeria
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