The Federal Government on Monday inaugurated the country’s first sugarcane bio-factory in Zaria, Kaduna State, as part of efforts to achieve national self-sufficiency in sugar production.
The Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Mr. Olusegun Aganga, said the one-million-seedling per annum capacity plant was the first in the series of bio-factories to be established in the next five years, with combined capacity estimated at 12.5 million cane seedlings per annum.
Aganga spoke while declaring the factory open for operations at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Kaduna State.
He said, “The provision of high grade and quality seedlings of sugarcane is essential for the attainment of the set goals of the National Sugar Master Plan. A bio-factory is a facility where disease-free crop seedlings are rapidly micro-propagated under controlled laboratory environment for planting in the fields.
“This facility is designed to address a critical constraint facing Nigeria’s sugar industry – timely provision of high quality and clean seeds to sugar estates and farmers across Nigeria. We expect that, in four years, five of this kind of facility would have been established across Nigeria with capacities of between two million and 2.5 million seedlings per annum each.”
The minister explained that the projection in the NSMP was that at least 250,000 hectares of sugarcane fields would be required for processing in about 28 mills of varying capacities to produce 1.79 metric tonnes of sugar in the first phase of the master plan.
He said, “The event today marks another milestone in the implementation of the Nigeria Sugar Master Plan, which was approved by the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan in September 2012. The NSMP is one of the major sector policies under the Nigeria Industrial Revolution Plan enunciated by the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment and launched by the President in February 2014. The ultimate goal is to make Nigeria’s manufacturing sector highly competitive and dynamic.
“The production of sugar is an integrated process with field and factory processes that are inter-dependent and mutually inclusive. Thus, efficiency in the cultivation and supply of sugarcane is essential for efficient milling and production of sugar and associated by-products such as ethanol and electricity.”
The minister noted that the vibrancy and efficiency of the Brazilian sugar industry had been attributed to the investment and innovative services, which institutions like the Cane Technology Centre, were providing to the sugar industry.
Aganga said, “This is what the National Sugar Development Council seeks to replicate for the Nigerian sugar industry through the establishment of this bio-factory. Today, I feel fulfilled by the achievements that we have recorded under the programmes and policies that were executed under my charge as the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment.
“One of the major aims of the NIRP is the deliberate linkage of research, technology and innovation to industry. Bio-technology, in particular, has opened to mankind a vast array of opportunities to significantly improve both the quality and quantity of biological deliverables.”
Speaking during the event, the Executive Secretary, National Sugar Development Council, Dr. Abdul-Latif Busari, said the new bio-sugarcane factory would fast-track the development of the nation’s sugar industry, boost industrialisation and generate employment.
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