Dangote
Farms have started a pilot hybrid tomatoes production in Kano to meet the
demand of it’s tomatoes processing plants in the state, its Managing Director,
Alhaji Abdulhamid Kaita, disclosed on Friday.
Kaita
told newsmen at the end of a two-day stakeholders’ forum on tomatoes value
chain in Kano that the company had also introduced the hybrid seedlings to
farmers.
He
said the farmers, however, insisted that the seedlings be tried by the
company’s farm before they could patronise it.
He
noted that
the company had begun a pilot project at Kadawa area of the state
during this year’s rainy season and was about to begin the second phase of the
project in the dry farming season.
“The
yield produced before is about 10 tones per hectare, while the hybrid seedling
varieties introduced will produce 80 to 100 tones per hectare using the best
practices,” Kaita said.
He
said the meeting was aimed at mobilising the farmers to rub minds to save the
company from shortage of raw materials.
He
added that the company had engaged farmers in the past two years and provided
them with best practices in tomatoes production and processing.
Kaita
said the company had orgnised the farmers into groups to enable them benefit
from the company.
Contributing,
one of the stakeholders, Mr Richard Ogundele, commended Dangote Farms for the
initiative.
He
expressed optimism that Dangote Farms would reap the benefit of the forum as
many problems were brought for discussion.
The
Dangote Farms collaborated with the World Bank to conduct the meeting on
tomatoes.
The
meeting, held between Nov. 20 and Nov. 21, had several stakeholders such as
Federal and State Ministries of Agriculture, development partners and insurance
companies in attendance.
(NAN)
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