CBN, rice association inaugurate dry season farming inputs
As part of the efforts to rev up rice production locally and save the country of forex leakage, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) with the Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria (RIFAN) has inaugurated rice input distribution to farmers, starting in Gombe State.
The ceremony, under the CBN’s Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP), was inaugurated at Dadin-Kowa in Yamaltu/Deba Local Government Area of Gombe on Saturday.
Head, CBN Development and Finance Office, Abdullahi Baba-Isa, said the programme was to officially launch the ABP for women in the state.
Baba-Isa added that women had been part of the programme and had done well so far, cultivating over 100 hectares in the state in the last rainy season.
The support, he added, was to encourage women to do more in the efforts to ensure food security, poverty alleviation and employment creation.
Also, Special Project Coordinator, CBN/RIFAN Partnership, Gombe State chapter, Alhaji Abubakar Bello, explained that the inauguration marked the commencement of inputs distribution to over 25, 000 rice farmers.
He added that the Federal Government’s intervention in dry seasoning farming would boost youth employment, food security and the income of rice farmers.
He said the impact of all-year-round farming was helping to take youths off the street and contributing to the economic diversification agenda of the government, and commended the government, CBN and RIFAN for their support.
Bello added that Gombe would consolidate on the 140,144 metric tonnes it contributed to the rice pyramid showcased in Abuja.
Also, the Project Manager, Irrigation, Upper Benue River Basin, Dadin-Kowa, Ahmed Bikaji, said more farmers were enrolling into dry seasoning farming in the state.
He said the impact of all-year-round farming was helping to take youths off the street and contributing to the economic diversification agenda of the government, and commended the government, CBN and RIFAN for their support.
Bello added that Gombe would consolidate on the 140,144 metric tonnes it contributed to the rice pyramid showcased in Abuja.
Also, the Project Manager, Irrigation, Upper Benue River Basin, Dadin-Kowa, Ahmed Bikaji, said more farmers were enrolling into dry seasoning farming in the state.
Bikaji said rain-fed agriculture was grossly inadequate for the food security efforts considering the growing population of the country, hence, the need to harness the irrigation potential to boost food availability.
He explained that with the direction, the Federal Government had taken through irrigation farming, the plan to feed the country and export rice and other food grains would become a reality.
According to him, the fringes of Dadin-Kowa Dam were being used for irrigation and the downstream farmers up to Adamawa were actively involved in irrigation farming.
The Guardian