HomeBusiness and TechNigerian Government Validates 10-Year Agrifood Strategy 

Nigerian Government Validates 10-Year Agrifood Strategy

Florence Adidi, Abuja

The Nigerian Government has commenced the validation of Nigeria’s National Agrifood System Strategy and Action Plan to align national and state agricultural investments with the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) Kampala Declaration (2026–2035).

The Kampala Declaration commits African countries to accelerating agrifood transformation through increased investment, enhanced food security and climate-resilient agriculture, providing a continental framework for sustainable agricultural development across the continent.

Speaking at a National Validation Meeting in Abuja, the Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, Abubakar Kyari, called on Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), as well as State Governments, to align their annual budgets with the new blueprint to ensure effective domestication of the CAADP Kampala Declaration and eliminate fragmentation in agricultural spending.

Kyari said the Strategy was developed to build on the gains of the Maputo Declaration of 2003 and the Malabo Declaration of 2014, while adopting a more holistic agrifood systems-based approach.

“This validation meeting is essential, it is where the zero draft becomes stronger, more representative, and more actionable. We must ensure that every budget line, every program, and every intervention across government is aligned with the priorities of this Strategy,” he said.

READ ALSO: Agriculture Ministry Says Kampala Declaration Will Boost Sector

The Minister noted that the document reflected inputs gathered through extensive consultations across the six geopolitical zones and a national workshop, making it responsive to Nigeria’s diverse agricultural realities.

“We wanted a plan that reflects the diversity of Nigeria’s agricultural landscape, from the livestock corridors of the North to the aquaculture belts of the South, from the cassava and yam zones of the East to the cocoa and oil palm plantations of the West,” the Minister explained.

According to him, the Strategy provides a harmonised implementation framework with clearly defined roles, responsibilities, timelines and accountability mechanisms.

He explained that it also integrates CAADP Biennial Review indicators into national planning, budgeting and reporting systems.

Kyari highlighted that the Strategy directly addresses key challenges confronting Nigeria’s agrifood system, including climate adaptation, disaster risk reduction, post-harvest loss reduction and market volatility.

The Minister further stated that the blueprint prioritises blended financing from public, private and donor sources, alongside risk-management instruments such as agricultural insurance and affordable credit to support farmers.

He emphasised that the plan specifically targets smallholder farmers, women, youth and marginalised groups.

“The Kampala Declaration is not just a continental commitment. It is a roadmap for transforming Nigeria’s agrifood system into one that is resilient, inclusive, productive, and industrialised,” Kyari stated.

He urged all stakeholders to champion the harmonisation and operationalisation of the Strategy within their annual budget preparation processes, stressing that it must not become “another document on the shelf.”

In his welcome remarks, the Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, Dr. Marcus Olaniyi Ogunbiyi, commended the Agricultural Sector Working Group and Technical Committee for driving the nationwide consultations that produced the zero draft.

According to him, the Strategy aligns Nigeria’s priorities with Agenda 2063, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the CAADP Kampala Declaration, while building on ongoing government efforts in mechanisation, irrigation, value chain development, digitalisation of agricultural services and private-sector investment.

Ogunbiyi said the validation exercise was aimed at critically examining proposed interventions, identifying gaps and strengthening implementation frameworks.

He further explained that the success of the Strategy would depend on effective implementation, adequate financing, robust monitoring and evaluation, strong institutional coordination and sustained political commitment.

“Our vision is to build an agrifood system that is productive, competitive, climate-smart, nutrition-sensitive, digitally enabled, market-oriented and attractive to our young people. Our objective is to ensure that no Nigerian goes hungry and that agriculture remains profitable for our farmers and agribusinesses,” Ogunbiyi said.

Also speaking, the Commissioner for Agriculture in Osun State, Mr. Tola Faseru, said state governments would work assiduously towards implementing the Kampala Declaration, which aligns with the agricultural transformation agenda of the current administration.

He stressed the need to involve women and youth in agrifood systems to boost food production and generate greater economic value.

The validation meeting was attended by representatives of state governments, development partners, the private sector, civil society organisations and farmer groups.

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