Over the last few weeks, CNN Money released a string of featured stories as part of its documentary series on Nigeria, titled: ‘Nigeria: An Economy Divided’
Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, is in the spotlight for ‘good’ reason. My country’s economy is on the brink of a recession, largely due to the slump in global crude oil prices. However, the irony is Nigeria — like many countries in Africa — is endowed with everything it takes to be a fully diversified economy that is able to feed itself. Yet, due to what I love to call ‘oil drunkenness’, we have neglected everything else in the pursuit of petrodollars.
In “4 Years A Farmer: My Insights and Experience as an Urban Farmer in Lagos, Nigeria”, I shared my work with my small farm in the outskirts of the city where I live, and it got a lot of attention from readers on Smallstarter and on social media.
About a month ago, the CNN team in Lagos reached out to me about the documentary series on Nigeria’s economy and asked if I would like to share my story. I obliged, and a few days after, the entire crew joined me on the long ride to the rural community in Epe.
We had a great time on the farm, and I’m grateful to the CNN Money team for their interest, patience and hard work. I was away on a trip the day I was featured on live TV and didn’t even know it until I saw all the missed calls, emails and messages on social media.
Below you will find the video of the short documentary and the article published on the CNN Money website.
If you’d like to read more about my work in farming (agribusiness), here’s the link to the full article: “4 Years A Farmer: My Insights and Experience as an Urban Farmer in Lagos, Nigeria.”
So, here’s the short documentary and the article.
For years, John-Paul Iwuoha enjoyed the fruits of Nigeria’s oil boom: The executive had a cushy job in Lagos, making plenty of what he describes as “easy money.”
But even as the riches flowed, the former consultant commenced work on an unlikely escape plan: a small farm on the outskirts of town.
Iwuoha describes the farm, started four years ago, as an “experiment.” But when oil prices crashed in 2015, he quickly traded in his business suit for a chance to help remake Nigeria’s agricultural sector.
“When I saw this crisis coming, I knew this was my exit,” Iwuoha told CNNMoney.
“We have a vibrant agricultural sector that has been abandoned,” he continued. “[Nigeria has] a population of a hundred and seventy million plus people … they can’t feed on oil, somebody has to produce the food.”
The former oil executive is right: Shortages of rice and wheat force Nigeria to import food worth $12 billion each year, or one-third of the continent’s total food import bill, according to the African Development Bank.
Nigeria — where agriculture is 20% of gross domestic product — simply isn’t growing enough crops. The sector employs tens of millions of people, but malnutrition, low yields and volatile pricing remain rampant.
The country’s agricultural products were once its pride. In the 1960s, Nigeria was the global leader in palm oil production, and second in cocoa. Export crops were its main foreign exchange earner.
But the industry faded into the background as oil became the new commodity of choice.
“I call it oil drunkenness,” said Iwuoha. “I am happy with the current situation, where things are going bad, because it’s causing us to reflect, look inwards.”
Plunging crude prices have now pushed Africa’s largest economy to the brink of recession. The government is racing through its foreign currency reserves, and is facing a shortfall of $11 billion in its 2016 budget.
The crisis has also spurred the government to take a serious look at diversifying Nigeria’s economy. Already, it has created incentives to lure workers into agriculture.
Iwuoha, meanwhile, has found farming to be difficult. His land was successfully cultivated during the 1980s, but years of inactivity allowed the forest to reclaim the fields. The farm also lacks an irrigation system and efficient storage rooms.
Iwuoha now wants to turn his start-up farm into a successful business. To do so, he says he just needs to secure funding.
“We built this country on agriculture, on the pride of the planted seed,” he said. “We need to go back to the business.”
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Written by Eleni Giokos and Logan Whiteside
First published June 8, 2016 on CNN Money
The post Last week, I was featured on CNN! Here’s the full story, and the Video too… appeared first on Smallstarter Africa.