Nigeria to formally export certified yams to UK, US on June 29, says Ogbeh
The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, announced on Monday that Nigeria would formally export its first consignment of certified yams to the United Kingdom and United States on June 29, 2017.
He
described the feat as a milestone that would bring Nigeria back into
reckoning in the agricultural export market which it had lost for
decades as a result of poor quality control and subsequent rejection of
agricultural exports.
Among
a number of initiatives to fast-track these interventions and solidify
its base, the federal government has empowered the Nigerian Agricultural
Quarantine Services (NAQS) to make it more responsive to issues of
safety and phytosanitary standards in food exports, so that its reports
would be acceptable globally.
According
to Ogbeh, it is meant to forestall the national embarrassments arising
from the rejections of food exports on account of quality deficiency.
The
federal government has also put in place a standing committee,
technically supported by the United Nations Industrial Development
Organisation (UNIDO) and consisting of membership from critical and
relevant agencies of the federal government.
The
agencies are the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Nigerian Customs
Service (NCS), Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), National
Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Standards
Organisation of Nigeria (SON), Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC),
Nigerian Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS), Central Bank of
Nigeria (CBN), National Agricultural Seed Council (NASC), among others.
These
agencies, working with the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development (FMARD), Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment
(FMITI) and the Federal Ministry of Finance, have commenced work on an
export control plan to target beans rejection and develop HS codes for other exportable commodities from Nigeria.
Complementing
this arrangement is the presidential committee on ‘Ease of Doing
Business,’ which has included the dedication of ports to agro export to
further reinforce the checks and balances
on export of quality produce from Nigeria, for foreign exchange
earnings and to strategically position Nigeria on the global business
community.
The minister said he is committed to the realisation of improved exports through expert handling of fresh produce, cold storage and post-harvest loss management geared towards considerable reduction of rejection.
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