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Home> Nigeria > Agriculture |
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| Before oil, Nigeria had oil. With oil were the crops
groundnut (peanut), cocoa and rubber. These crops were
cultivated in large quantities and exported to Europe
and America in the pre-1960s and early ¡®60s.
With military incursions into Nigerian government
and the dependence of petroleum products as the foremost
foreign exchange earner, attention to the agricultural
sector dwindled. Nigeria¡¯s groundnut pyramids disappeared,
the oil palm plantations vanished and farming went
back to a subsistent level. With a burgeoning population,
it became increasingly difficult to feed the teeming
masses and the country resorted to importing food
to supplement the one grown at home.
With the military gone and a new democratic structure
in place, the country is poised to regain her position
in agriculture. The administration of President Olusegun
Obasanjo has watered the ground in empowering Nigerian
farmers and agro-allied investors to harness the
country¡¯s rich resources in producing food and raw
materials for industries and export. Funding for
agro allied investments have been made easier to
get, with extension services provided to farmers
at highly subsidized rates to ensure heavy yields
at harvest time. Agric banks make loans available
to farmers while fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides
and planting technologies are made available at subsidized
rates by the government.
Working in hand with the farmers is the Nigerian
Export Promotion Council which helps to find buyers
for the food and cash crops from Nigeria.
Land is being provided at reasonable terms for use
for large scale farming. Government has encouraged
foreign agric investors with remarkable results.
For instance farmers from Southern African countries
have found home in Nigeria where they have started
operations to produce.
The agricultural initiative of the Obasanjo Administration
has seen to the restriction of the importation of
some types of food and cash crops to encourage local
farmers to compete. |
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The
highly fertile Nigerian soil makes it easy to cultivate
the following: |
| Cassava, Yams, Melon, Maize, Millet, Sorghum, Cowpeas,
Bananas (plantains included) Palm oil, Groundnuts. |
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Nigeria¡¯s
cash crops include: |
| Tobacco, Groundnuts, Cocoa beans, Rubber, Gum Arabic,
Kola nuts, Beniseed, Cotton, Soyabean, Palm kernel,
Cashew nuts
Nigerian manufacturers find it convenient to grow
their raw materials here. Hence there are cotton
farms, orange plantations, tea plantations (on Mambilla
Plateau) and coconut groves all sources of raw materials
for Nigerian industries.
Opportunities also abound in the cultivation of
various species of fish. Fish farming is on the rise
in Nigeria with several hundred thousands of tons
of fish harvested annually in the country.
The grasslands of the Northern part of the country
are ideal for ranching and the rearing of cattle and
other livestock. |
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