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Sanwo-Olu. |
Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, on Monday, recommitted his administration to actions and interventions that would make quality food affordable and accessible within the State.
The Governor said the ongoing development of Food
Security Systems and Central Logistics Park in Ketu-Ereyun, Epe, was part of
the current interventions by his Government to ensure food affordability,
stressing that the facility would help bring the food market closer to the
consumers and scale down food prices.
Sanwo-Olu joined hundreds of farmers at Lagos Farm Fair -
an event held at the Police College in Ikeja for the commemoration of the 2023
World Food Day.
The event with the theme: “Water is Life, Water is Food;
Leave No One Behind”, was organised by the Ministry of Agriculture with the
objective to promote awareness and action against hunger, and to highlight the
need to ensure healthy diets for all.
Farmers from various Local Government Areas of Lagos, who
were supported by the State Government through Lagos APPEALS Project, exhibited
their produce at the Fair and offered reduced prices for bulk purchase of their
crops.
As the State population grows, Sanwo-Olu said there was
need for collaborative efforts and innovation to sustainably scale up
agricultural production to meet demand, while improving food supply chain and
security.
The completion of the Food Logistics Hub next year, the
Governor said, would centralise the State’s food supply from the farm to the
markets where consumers would buy at affordable prices. He said the facility
was being developed with capacity for long-term storage to reduce waste and
loss.
He said: “It is another year of commemoration of the
World Food Day. For us in Lagos, it is to celebrate and appreciate our
resilient farmers, while also bringing up a conversation on need to begin to
ensure that food is affordable and accessible. It is important to note that the
current economic situation has made the prices of food to go up, but I believe
with deliberate interventions that will bring the market closer to the
consumers, we can help to bring down the food prices.
“As part of our efforts, we are currently building the
largest Food Logistics Hub in West Africa in addition to middle level markets
we are opening across the State. By this time next year, we would have
completed the first phase of the project. The Logistics Food market will be the
central hub through which all farm produce will come into Lagos. The facility
has cold and dry storages from which food will be supplied to the middle-level
markets and where products go to the retail shops.”
Sanwo-Olu said the Logistics Hub was part of a “robust,
integrated” plan of his administration to ensure food adequacy and sufficiency.
Other initiatives, he said, focused on equipping farmers to raise productivity,
and supporting the market in order to make food affordable for the end
consumers.
The Governor said despite the deficiency of land in
Lagos, the State had been showing the way in urban farming in areas, such as
aquaculture, piggery, fishing, poultry, vegetable and fruits production. He
reiterated his commitment towards providing infrastructure and creating
incentives for farmers to meet residents’ nutritional needs.
In spite of the collaboration with some key agrarian
States for paddy rice supply, Sanwo-Olu said the Lagos-owned Imota Rice Mill
hardly received adequate paddy rice from its suppliers to meet production
capacity. He called on independent paddy rice farmers to collaborate with Lagos
in order to sustain the rice production.
“Farming is an important component of our Government’s
activities. We need to grow what we eat, and eat what we grow. While we have
collaborated with some major agricultural states within the country, we are
also looking for independent paddy rice farmers across the federation to raise
paddy supply to Lagos Rice Mill. We need a lot of paddies to meet up with
production capacity. It doesn’t matter the tonnage of paddy rice they have, we
are ready to take it up. This is calling on paddy growers across the country to
key into this opportunity,” he said.
Commissioner for Agriculture, Ms. Abisola Olusanya, noted
the event was held in the wake of critical food security issues facing the
country and which required “urgent” actions to scale up food production across
the various value chains.
She said the Farm Fair would encourage action on food
insecurity, promote production and consumption of safe food, which would have
an immediate and long-term benefit on the people, the planet and the economy.
“Not only is Lagos playing frontline role in the aqua
farming industry, we are also key players in production of other crops and
edible produce. This year’s commemoration of World Food Day is to come out and
encourage our farmers, and create a platform for them to be aware of all the
incentives and interventions we have created for them,” the Commissioner said.
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