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FG reports decline in food prices, says crop production up
By Lucy Emenike
Published on 08/10/2025 15:25
News

The Federal Government has announced a decline in food prices and an improvement in crop production across the country, as stated in the 2025 Agricultural Performance Survey report.

The Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, Senator Abubakar Kyari, in a press release on Wednesday, states that “the report confirms steady growth in the production of major staples such as rice, maize, sorghum, millet, cowpea, yam and cassava, all of which show increases over 2024 levels.”

He attributed the progress and “significant drop in food prices across all zones” to improved supply conditions and the cumulative effect of government interventions in input support, extension service delivery, and mechanisation.

The Minister, who commended the National Agricultural Extension and Research Liaison Services, Ahmadu Bello University, and the Ministry’s technical departments for their input, described the development as a new standard of excellence and transparency in national agricultural performance reporting.

He said, “This survey remains one of the most essential instruments for evidence-based planning, monitoring, and policy direction in Nigeria’s agricultural sector. It provides us with a realistic picture of production outcomes, farmer experiences, and sectoral constraints, upon which informed decisions and targeted interventions can be built.

“The rigour of data collection, covering all 36 states and the FCT, the integration of new datasets such as the Farm Family Census and the Tractor Census, and the complementary studies on commodity prices demonstrate a new standard of excellence and transparency in national agricultural performance reporting.”

Kyari added that it was, “particularly heartening to see that farmers across regions have demonstrated remarkable resilience despite irregular rainfall, localised flooding, and pest pressures.”

However cautioned that rising input costs and weak postharvest infrastructure remained key obstacles, stressing that rising input costs, particularly for fertiliser and fuel, continue to limit productivity among smallholders. Mechanisation coverage, though improving, remains uneven, and postharvest losses, especially in the South-West and North-Central zones—pose serious threats to food availability and farmers’ income.

He also pointed to challenges in the livestock and fisheries sectors, noting that “the survey’s documentation of livestock disease outbreaks and fisheries decline in certain regions underscores the need for stronger animal health systems, aquaculture development, and adaptive measures in response to climate variability.”

Reaffirming the government’s commitment to data-driven agricultural planning, the Minister announced plans to institutionalise a Dry Season Agricultural Performance Survey to complement the Wet Season exercise.

 “We shall institutionalise the Dry Season Agricultural Performance Survey as a complement to the Wet Season APS, ensuring that national agricultural planning becomes a year-round, data-driven exercise,” he said.

He further outlined the Ministry’s next steps to be intensifying support for local fertiliser production, enhancing climate-smart agricultural initiatives, and strengthening extension systems by recruiting and equipping more agents, as well as leveraging digital tools to reach a greater number of farmers.

On mechanisation and inclusion, Kyari emphasised the need to empower young people and women through technology and postharvest infrastructure, stating, “Equally, we recognise the urgency of modernising mechanisation services, promoting the inclusion of youth and women through affordable, labour-saving technologies, and investing in postharvest handling, storage and processing facilities to minimise losses and boost value addition.”

He pledged deeper collaboration with private sector players, research institutions, and subnational governments to sustain progress in the sector.

 

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