Tag: Nigeria agriculture

  • Health Experts Warn Against Growing Roadside Food Drying Culture

    Health Experts Warn Against Growing Roadside Food Drying Culture

    Daily Post reports that health professionals are warning against the practice of drying staple foods such as cassava, maize, and beans along major highways in Nigeria.

    Experts say roadside drying exposes food to contaminants including heavy metals from vehicle exhaust and dust-borne pathogens, with toxins settling directly on food as passing traffic raises dust clouds.

    Vanguard and The Guardian also echoed concerns, including links to gastrointestinal infections and broader food-safety risks tied to limited access to modern processing facilities.

    Echotitbits take: This is an infrastructure-and-public-health gap showing up in everyday food handling. Without affordable community dryers, solar kilns, and hygienic aggregation points, the practice will persist. A practical fix is local processing hubs near farming clusters, backed by microcredit and enforceable food-safety standards.

    Source: Daily Post – https://dailypost.ng/2026/01/30/dust-on-meal-tables-experts-reveal-hidden-dangers-of-nigerias-roadside-drying-culture/ 2026-01-30

    Photo Credit: Daily Post

  • NIRSAL highlights wider 2013–2025 impact: ₦290bn+ finance facilitated and jobs claims

    NIRSAL highlights wider 2013–2025 impact: ₦290bn+ finance facilitated and jobs claims

    2025-12-28 09:00:00
    Figures cited by The Nation show NIRSAL says it facilitated over ₦290bn in finance between 2013 and 2025 across production, processing, logistics, market development and exports, alongside job and beneficiary impact claims.

    NIRSAL positions its role as facilitation rather than direct lending—using risk-sharing, guarantees and technical assistance to help banks and partners extend credit to agribusiness segments seen as too risky.

    The narrative is reinforced in NIRSAL’s communications, where it frames credit guarantees as a mechanism that expands partner financial institutions’ appetite for agriculture lending.

    Set against Nigeria’s food-security pressures, the big question is whether the cumulative numbers translate to measurable productivity gains or mainly reflect credit intermediation and programme counting.

    The Nation reported NIRSAL “has facilitated more than N290 billion” in finance, while NIRSAL communications said it was “closing 2025… with… credit guarantees for over N100 billion” in agriculture and agribusiness.

    Echotitbits take: Impact claims need independent verification. Watch for audited portfolio outcomes, borrower performance data and state-by-state breakdowns—especially default rates and whether credit reached smallholders or stayed concentrated in large firms.

    Source: The Nation — https://thenationonlineng.net/nirsal-facilitates-over-n100bn-in-2025-drives-159-jobs/ — December 28, 2025
    The Nation 2025-12-28

    Photo Credit: The Nation

  • FG begins phased rollout of grazing reserves amid herders–farmers tensions

    FG begins phased rollout of grazing reserves amid herders–farmers tensions

    2025-12-15 02:19:00

    According to The Punch, the Federal Government says it has commenced phased development of grazing reserves, revisiting a long-running livestock policy debate.

    The report highlights the plan as a structured rollout, often discussed in the context of reducing pressure on farmlands and improving livestock productivity.

    Grazing reserve initiatives are politically sensitive, with stakeholders typically demanding clarity on land acquisition, community consent, and security governance.

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: The key issue is implementation legitimacy: land rights, funding, and how the programme interacts with ranching and anti-open-grazing laws. Watch for pilot locations, stakeholder consultations, and conflict-resolution frameworks.

    Source: The Punch — December 15, 2025 — https://punchng.com/fg-begins-phased-development-of-grazing-reserves/

    Photo credit: The Punch

    The Punch https://punchng.com/fg-begins-phased-development-of-grazing-reserves/ December 15, 2025

  • Onion producers warn of festive-season price jump as demand rises

    Onion producers warn of festive-season price jump as demand rises

    2025-12-14 14:03:00

    According to The Punch, onion producers in Kaduna under NOPPMAN expect yuletide demand to push prices higher, with some bags already quoted well above mid-year levels.

    The report cites the association saying supply timing and harvest cycles across producing states could keep prices elevated into early 2026.

    Onion prices are a major kitchen-staple indicator, feeding into broader food inflation and household spending pressures.

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: Food inflation hits hardest at Christmas when demand spikes. Watch market arrival volumes from Kebbi and other producing states in January–March, and whether logistics and storage improvements can smooth seasonal price swings.

    Source: The Punch — December 14, 2025 — https://punchng.com/onion-farmers-forecast-higher-prices-during-yuletide/

    Photo credit: The Punch

    The Punch https://punchng.com/onion-farmers-forecast-higher-prices-during-yuletide/ December 14, 2025