Group trains students on
mechanized cassava plantation
An international
agriculture organization, Harvestplus Nigeria, on Monday, said it has trained
Students of Federal College of Agriculture (FECA), Akure, on vitamin A cassava
production, using cassava planting machine.
Dr Paul Ilona, the
Country Manager of the organisation, said this during an interview in Ibadan.
Harvestplus is an
international organization which leads a global effort to improve nutrition by
developing and disseminating staple food crops rich in vitamins and minerals.
He said it was also
introduced to reduce the drudgery associated with cassava production and
mechanize agriculture with technologies to attract youths.
Ilona said, “Cassava planting is traditionally managed in a rudimentary way; if we want youths to come into agriculture, key drudgeries that make agric labour intensive must be removed.
Ilona said, “Cassava planting is traditionally managed in a rudimentary way; if we want youths to come into agriculture, key drudgeries that make agric labour intensive must be removed.
“If we don’t find alternative to manual labour, agriculture will
be so terribly affected that in the next 10 to 15 years we will be suffering.
“For Nigeria to meet its food requirement, there is a strong need
to commercialise and introduce technologies that will reduce drudgery in
production.
“The only way we can stem food importation is to truly promote
agriculture to a large extent and make it easier,” the manager said.
He also said that depending on the efficiency of use, a planter
can plant 10 hectares in a day.
“To plant one hectare comfortably in a day, it will take 10 people
planting at the same time. So, if it gives 10 a day, it means saving 100
persons planting on the farm; it saves labour.
“The planter is more beneficiary to farmers who have large farm of
between 10 and 20 hectares. To make it easy, farmers can come together to plant
in a large land so that the planter can function within the same environment.
“In rural areas, the planter can be made available to farmers on
request, the planter came from Brazil; we are discussing with fabricators on
how to produce them locally,” he said.
He also stressed the
need for the government to add value to the curriculum of agriculture
institutions, adding that there is the need to shift from theory to practical
studies.
“We train students of FECA to teach them how to manage commercial
farming so that we will not have problems when investors come; it’s in line
with our dream to train farm managers in Nigeria.
“Very soon, we shall extend the training to students of other
agriculture institutions,”he added.
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