President Muhammadu
Buhari on Tuesday pledged that his administration would develop the nation’s
assets on a permanent basis in order to check the culture of waste foisted on
the country.
The president made the pledge when he received Mr Roelf Joosten,
the Global Chief Executive Officer of Friesland Campina, The Netherlands, at
State House, Abuja.
President Buhari frowned at the level of waste being
recorded annually in the nation’s agricultural sector due to lack of means of
preservation of agricultural products.
He, particularly, decried the situation
in which cattle farmers throw away milk from their animals, because there was
no means of preserving and processing the product. “We have failed to develop
our assets on a permanent basis.
This, we are determined to work on,’’ he
added. The president urged Friesland Campina, in collaboration with Nigeria, to
educate cattle farmers that “quality matters more than quantity,” and help them
organise into cooperatives for better business.
The Minister of Agriculture and
Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbe, who was also at the event, promised that
herdsmen would soon be organised into ranches.
He revealed that special grasses
and water, which would give better yield and make the animals healthier, would
be provided at the ranches. According to Ogbe, special flasks, which can
preserve raw milk for up to six hours, will soon be made available, to enable
cattle farmers to get the product to dairies in good quality.
In his remarks,
Joosten disclosed that the 145-year-old Friesland Campina, is a cooperative
owned by 19,000 farmers. He said that the company began business in Nigeria in
1973 as Friesland Campina WAMCO Nigeria.
“The company wants to partner with the
Federal Government to build a healthier populace through better nutrition,
collaborate in the school feeding programme, and promote dairy development in
the country.’’
According to him, WAMCO Nigeria has also been providing
nutrition support for internally displaced persons in the North-East.
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