Type | Report |
Title | Environmental Considerations in Nigerian Agricultural Policies, Strategies and Programs |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2009 |
Publisher | International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) |
URL | http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.225.1346&rep=rep1&type=pdf |
Abstract | Agriculture is the major sector upon which the majority of Nigeria’s rural poor depend on for their livelihood. Over 70 percent of the active labor force is employed in agriculture (World Bank 2007). The federal government of Nigeria (FGN) has identified agriculture as the key development priority in its efforts to halve poverty by 2015 and diversify the economy away from the oil sector. The FGN is designing strategies to increase agricultural production, processing, and marketing. Some of these are tied to the National Economic Empowerment and Development Strategy (NEEDS), which the government designed in 2004 to reduce poverty and empower the poor. Given the importance of agriculture in poverty reduction, NEEDS sets out a number of qualitative performance targets that were to be achieved by 2007. These include 6 percent annual growth in agricultural export and a drastic reduction in food import from 14.5 percent of total imports to 5 percent. The “Seven Point Agenda” of the present administration specifies “food security “as one of the priorities in the country’s “Medium Term Development Plan and Vision 20: 2020.” It is important to look at the evolution of Nigerian environmental policy before establishing its links to agricultural policies. The illegal dumping of toxic waste at the Koko Port in the thenBendel State (now Delta State) culminated in the creation of the Federal Environmental Protection Agency (FEPA) through Decree 58 of 1988, as amended by Decree 59 of 1992. The states then followed by creating agencies dealing with environmental protection. In 1999, all units and departments in the different federal agencies that deal with the environment, including FEPA, were pooled to form the Federal Ministry of Environment, Housing, and Urban Development (FMEH&UD;) in order to eliminate duplication. The Ministry is therefore made up of following technical departments ? Environmental Assessment Department ? Erosion Flood Control and Coastal Zone Management Department ? Pollution Control and Environmental Health Department ? Forestry Department ? Drought and Desertification Amelioration Department. It is important to note that the forestry and the erosion, flood control and coastal zone management departments came out of the then ministry of agriculture and water resources. The Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources (FMAWR) formulates policy aimed at developing the agricultural sector. Its stated goals are to foster an agricultural sector “with reduced drudgery,” and a “small effective workforce ensuring national food security and meeting the industrial raw material and export needs of the nation“ (Servicom Policy). |
» | Nigeria - Population and Housing Census 2006 |