News

Nigeria and Brazil sign $1bn agreement to boost agriculture

Tractor spraying soybean field at spring

Nigeria and Brazil signed a $1bn (R17.7bn) agreement on Tuesday to boost agriculture, food security, energy and defence in the West African nation, Nigeria’s Vice-President Kashim Shettima said.

The two countries aim to “deploy more than R1bn to deliver mechanised farming equipment, training and service centres across Nigeria,” Shettima said in a statement posted on X.

A lot of farming in Nigeria is subsistence and land is owned by families or individuals, which makes large-scale acquisition problematic. Nigeria also imports food for its 200-million plus population.

“We are moving from subsistence to scale in agriculture, and in energy we are taking long-overdue steps to attract serious investment into gas production, refining, and renewables,” Shettima said.

The agreements were signed in Abuja during a visit by Brazil’s Vice-President Geraldo Alckmin to Africa’s most populous nation.

Shettima told his Brazilian counterpart reforms embarked on by President Bola Tinubu have helped reshape Nigeria’s economy.

Nigeria is targeting a $1-trillion (R17.7-trillion) economy by 2030, with reforms to agriculture, energy, education and public finance. The country has also asked banks to recapitalise to attract foreign investments.

Related posts

FG inaugurates passport front office for senior public Officers

Braimah-Shaka

FG approves 65 years retirement age for doctors, healthcare workers

Braimah-Shaka

Minimum wage: Betray workers, face consequences, NLC warns state councils

Braimah-Shaka

Leave a Comment