NIRSAL, German firm sign MoU on minimizing huge post-harvest losses

Nigeria Incentive-Based Risk Sharing System for Agricultural Lending (NIRSAL) has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with RIELA, a German agricultural technology firm, to establish ways of minimising estimated N2.7 trillion annual post-harvest losses in the country.

In his speech at the signing ceremony in Abuja recently, Aliyu Abdulhameed, Managing Director of NIRSAL, said the agreement tallies with the organisation’s mandate to ensure sustainable value chain-driven solution in agriculture.

Abdulhameed said the partnership would provide increased access to harvest and post-harvest technology equipment, to help farmers at the production level with technology, training, machinery and technical assistance.

Quoting the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), he said Nigeria loses over 51.3 million tonnes of food annually to post-harvest losses across agricultural products, describing the development as unacceptable.

He said the partnership is a business-driven service provision and support framework that would provide farmers at the primary level of production, cost-effective access to modern farming technologies and machinery.


He listed some agricultural equipment that would be available through the partnership to include threshers, aspirators, stationery and mobile dryers, steel silos. Others are storage equipment, cooling devices, milling and mixing plants for feed production as well as packaging solutions, adding that all the equipment would be designed for the Nigerian environment.

‘‘As a country, we are blessed with the production of various agricultural commodities, but the post-harvest loss rate is quite alarming. The majority of our farm produce is lost to pest and deterioration. This is fundamentally caused by poor post-harvest processing and storage practices. These losses are much higher in the rural communities where most of our primary production activities take place.

‘‘Our approach in NIRSAL is to look at the agricultural value chain from inputs, mechanisation, primary production, harvest, post-harvest processing and storage all the way to market. RIELA will also provide the equipment and a 12-hour back-to-work repair system and after-sales service networks in proximity to customers,’’ he said.

Prof. Karl-Heinz Knoop, Managing Director of RIELA, said the company is in Nigeria to make agribusiness viable to ensure that harvested agriculture produce were properly packaged and stored.


‘‘I can imagine the pains of farmers in Nigeria and this is the reason why we want to help; we want to address this agricultural problem with Nigerian solution. The partnership is not to sell machines and disappear; there will be services and guarantee on what is sold. We will train farmers on how to handle these machines,’’ he added.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Agric forum to encourage greater technology use by women

7 FEPSAN members to produce 1m tonnes under Presidential Fertiliser Initiative

Over 100 exhibitors from 18 countries register for agrofood Nigeria 2017