ABP: 225,000 farmers to benefit from NIRSAL’S new field structure
As part of its focus on taking business-driven agriculture
to the grassroots, the Nigeria Incentive-Based Risk Sharing System for
Agriculture (NIRSAL) is deploying an innovative nation-wide field structure to
support 225,000 farmers under the CBN Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP).
The structure, known as the Project Monitoring Reporting and
Remediation Office, has units located in each state and the Federal Capital.
The PMROs are designed to support NIRSAL’s core mandate of
making agriculture more attractive for private sector investment by de-risking
the agricultural value chain. Among other functions, they will provide rigorous
monitoring and supervision of NIRSAL facilitated agriculture projects to
improve successful outcomes.
NIRSAL which the Central Bank appointed an implementation
partner in the Anchor Borrowers Programme, is deploying the PMROs to support an
initial number of about 225,000 farmers throughout the country under the
programme.
The 225,000 farmers being supported include a minimum of
5,000 farmers in 37 locations – 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory.
Speaking on the development, Managing Director/CEO of
NIRSAL, Mr. Aliyu Abbati Abdulhameed explained that the PMROs will play an
important supportive role because NIRSAL runs a lean operation at its corporate
HQs.
Mr. Godwin Emefiele CBN Governor |
In his words: “The PMRO structure is very critical to our
operations. Agriculture is a field business. They would act as our eyes to
ensure that agricultural projects that we facilitate finance for are executed
in line with agreed terms and also serve to extend the reach of our
interventions”.
He added that the PMROs will also have the responsibility of
capturing the impact of NIRSAL’s interventions on communities, individual
farmers and other players along the agricultural value chain.
“The positive impact made is the justification for our
existence so it’s critical to constantly measure and review the impact of our
interventions”.
The function of the PMRO office in each state is to generate
new projects where necessary, supervise existing ones and mobilize the
community to support and own as well as enjoy the positive impact of NIRSAL
projects.
In line with NIRSAL’s focus on business-driven agriculture,
the PMROs are led by highly experienced private sector professionals and will
deploy private-sector orientation and strategies to drive the projects along
agribusiness lines. They will also assist the banks to properly package those
projects so that they become bankable.
As a Business Development unit, the PMROs will also work to
make sure that there are sufficient projects in each state to be funded by
NIRSAL. This will be achieved by developing the capacity of those projects in
line with the targets of the project, best practice and the specifications of
the banks.
Dr. Steven Ogidan, the National Coordinating Consultant
overseeing the PMRO structure believes that “the closeness of the PMROs to
project sites and the embedding of project monitoring services within the
project sites of any project that is more than 500M ensures effective
monitoring and reduces the risk of loan diversion”
The PMRO structure is an innovative and practical measure
designed to build private sector confidence in agribusiness. Because of its
closeness to projects, it will help to stop diversion of agricultural loans by
farmers to other projects, ensure farmers are supported to use best farming
methods/techniques. This will increase productivity, success rate and
profitability of agricultural projects and in the process reduce the perception
of the sector as high risk by financial institutions.
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