Council Repositions Nigeria Sugar Institute for Improved Productivity

Jennifer Inah

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The National Sugar Development Council says it has started the revitalisation of the Nigerian sugar Institute in Kwara state in order to achieve production of 2 million seedlings.

The Executive Secretary of the Council, Mr Kamar Barkin during a media parley with the Commerce and Industry Correspondents Association of Nigeria, said the seedling would be supplied to operators to help them fast track the development of sugar in their state.

“We have a target of training about 1500 sugar industry operators over over time.”

Mr Barkin disclosed that the council also identified three strategies that would help grow the Sugar sector through its Nigeria Sugar Master Plan, NSMP.

He said the master plan which was launched in 2012 with a number of targets aims to aid Nigeria attain self sufficiency in sugar production.

“There are four key pillars to the
NSMP the key part of it is to promote backward integration that is as much as possible the development of sugar production in Nigeria, it also provides for fiscal incentives, part of which includes things like a 0% tariff, NSMP also calls for assistance to investors in provision of things like feasiblity studies,” the Executive Secretary said.

Mr Barkin said increasing the output of sugar locally to match domestic demand is one of the strategies the council would use in accelerating the goals of the NSMP.

“The second one is to become a globally competitive player. Compared to nations like Brazil, that have huge natural advantages. We also want to ensure that we become a globally competitive producer of sugar as a country so that it will make imports a lot less attractive,” he said.

“And the third leg of it is going beyond sugar. How do we maximise the output of the sector because this sector also by the way, produces ethanol, produces sorbitol produces energy power, produces animal feeds, so we are saying how do we maximise the scope of the industry’s output? So these are, in a sense our strategic goals or strategic objectives,” he explained.

The Executive Secretary added that the council has been able to onboard two new sugar investors who showed up with about 20,000 hectares of land.

“We have redesigned the backward integration performances as a framework to ensure that there is proper alignment between the objectives of the NSMP and what the actors are doing, so if you’re doing well, you get rewarded. If you’re not doing well, it will show in the kind of incentives you get.”

 

 

 

Hauwa Abu

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