AfDB to invest $24bn in agriculture in Africa - Adesina
Dr Akinwumi Adesina, President of the African Development Bank (AFDB), has said the bank will invest $24
billion in agriculture in Africa over the next 10 years.
Adesina made the disclosure at
the 50th-anniversary celebration of the International Institute of Tropical
Agriculture (IITA) in Ibadan recently.
The AFDB president said the bank
was committed to turning agriculture into a business across Africa and to
ensure that the continent fed itself within the next 10 years.
Adesina said AFDB had decided to
work with IITA to help drive Africa's agricultural sector transformation and
unlock its full potentials.
"At the core of this is
getting technologies to millions of farmers and the bank has developed the
Technologies for African Agricultural Transformation (TAAT) together with IITA
and other centres as a technology platform.
" This is to help take high
yielding technologies to farmers for an African green revolution. "AFDB
and the World Bank expect to invest up to $800 million in TAAT which will be
launched this year," he said.
Adesina said that the past 50
years of IITA had been full of successes, adding that the institution was run
with transparency, honesty and integrity.
The former agriculture minister
said that IITA had contributed so much to agriculture across Africa and in
Nigeria in particular. He said that the institute developed the maize varieties
that transformed the savanna and humid zones.
"It's cowpea varieties
supply the beans on our markets and the soybeans varieties led to the soya
beans revolution in Nigeria.
"While its work on cassava
and yam still form the core of Nigeria's cassava and yams value chain
transformation, IITA's work on alley-farming sparked global interest in
sustainable agriculture.
"It's landmark breakthrough
on biological control which saved Africa from the devastating cassava mealy bug
that had wiped out all its cassava was globally recognised," Adesina said.
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