IITA partners Osun to inaugurate agric research farm
As part of efforts to expand its
research agenda and create impact at farm level, the International Institute of
Tropical Agriculture (IITA) recently inaugurated a new research station in
Ago-Owu in Osun State.
The Ago-Owu research station, is
located in Ayedade Local Government Area of Osun State, will primarily serve as
a research and training facility that will back the state’s agricultural
programmes and offer training support to the youth.
Nteranya Sanginga, Director
General of IITA, said, “This research facility is part of our strategy to take
research closer to the people. Our plan is to make this station a one-stop shop
where farmers’ needs will be addressed,” he said.
Under the refreshed IITA
strategy, IITA plans to lift 11 million people out of poverty in sub-Saharan
Africa by 2020 and to reclaim 7.5 million hectares of degraded land and put the
land into sustainable use. Achieving this goal entails IITA expanding its
partnership scope and strengthening old partnerships.
Mr. Sanginga said the Ago-Owu
research facility would primarily conduct research on cassava, maize, yam,
soybean, banana/plantain and cowpea. We will also be using the facility to
train Nigerian youth in agribusiness,” he added.
In 2015, Governor Rauf Aregbesola
donated a piece of land measuring about 205.5 hectares to IITA as he sought to
bring research closer to the people of the state with a view to creating
transformational change in the agricultural sector of the state. The IITA accepted
the offer with the signing of a memorandum of understanding and began
investment on the land with the development of roads and other infrastructure.
Aregbesola said he was glad the
MoU with IITA moved beyond paper to implementation. He commended IITA for its
research efforts in the last 50 years, adding that the research facility will
advance research in Osun State with a spinoff effect on other parts of the
country.
“We believe that this research
facility will train and empower our youth in modern agriculture,” he said.
The inauguration of the research
facility also allowed researchers to make presentations on new findings from
cassava weed management, breeding, banana breeding and multiplication, cassava
processing, and aflasafe—a technology for controlling aflatoxins among others.
There was a presentation of
improved seeds of maize, cowpea, soybean, yam, plantain seedlings, and cassava
stems for onward distribution to farmers in Osun State. IITA also gave the
governor some quantities of Purdue Improved Crop Storage (PICS) bags which
provide simple, low-cost method of reducing post-harvest cowpea losses due to
insects’ infestations.
The inauguration of Ago-Owo
research station brings to six the number of such facilities in Nigeria. Others
are located in Onne (Rivers State), Abuja, Mokwa (Niger state), Minjibir
(Kano), and Ikene (Ogun State).
Alfred Dixon, Director for
Development and Delivery, IITA, said the inauguration of the research facility
was a step in the right direction with the potential of bringing many benefits
to the people of the state in particular, and the country in general.
He said the research facility
would assist the state in accelerating its agricultural reform agenda whose
particular focus is on increasing agricultural productivity and job creation.
Established in 1967, IITA is an
international agricultural research institution that generates agricultural
innovations to meet Africa’s most pressing challenges of hunger, malnutrition,
poverty, and natural resource degradation. Working with various partners across
sub-Saharan Africa, IITA improves livelihoods, enhance food and nutrition
security, increase employment, and preserve natural resource integrity. The
Institute operates in Nigeria and 13 research stations/hubs across sub-Saharan
Africa.
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