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Shettima Woos Foreign Investors at UN Food Summit
.Says Nigeria is ready for business
Deji Elumoye in Abuja
Vice-President Kashim Shettima has urged foreign investors to take advantage of the opportunities in Nigeria, declaring that the country is now ready for business.
He also noted that the combination of Nigeria’s young, energetic population and the agenda of the new administration placed the country far ahead of others in the region.
Shettima made the call in Rome, Italy in his remarks at a side event of the ongoing UN Food Systems Summit, themed ‘Scaling up of multi-stakeholder collaboration and investments in the implementation of the food systems pathways in Nigeria.”
According to the vice-president, “We have the capacity of transforming the demograhic bulge into demographic dividends or it will be the demographic disaster that will consume all of us.
“Nigeria will surpass the United States as the third most populous nation on earth and the population is young. The median age is 19.
“With determined leadership and the support of the global community, we believe, as eternal optimists do, that there is hope in the horizon.”
He also expressed hope that the expected transformation can take place on the back of what he described as “building blocks that already exists in Nigeria”.
“They include government’s recent declaration of a state of emergency on food security, moving food and water to the purview of National Security Council; the country’s renewed commitment to food and nutrition since the Nutrition Conference of 2022; the National Food and Micro-Nutrient Intake Survey and the National State Level Food Systems,” the vice-president explained.
Speaking on improving collaboration between government and the private sector, Shettima said: “Focusing on agribusiness and the understanding that investment that will transform food system will come from the private sector with the government providing the enabling environment, will scale up investment in the country.”
He further explained that the Nigerian government, together with domestic and international finance institutions scaled up the Value Chain Development Programme approach for the Special Agro Processing Zones Programme with an impressive investment of $521 million from the IFAD, from the IsDB, and from the AfDB.
“The success story of the value chain development programme speaks for itself,” he said.
According to him, the programme “has empowered 100,000 small scale farmers to enter into engagement with some of the food marketing companies in the world, enabling them to lift their families out of the poverty trap.
“The VCDP/SAPZ programme really represents unique and concrete model for mobilizing funds for investment in support of our national food systems transformation programme, the transition to more yielding, healthier, more equitable and more sustainable food system”.
Stressing that the next frontier of global development faces Africa, Shettima said Nigeria remains critical to the success or failure of the transition and assured the audience that the new leadership in Nigeria is working hard to position the country on the path of growth.
He said: “We have a president who has a private sector background and a vice-president who is also from the private sector. We have a president who has the knack for selecting the best to drive the process.
“Be rest assured that the next frontiers for global development is facing Africa and Nigeria will make or mar that transition.”