November 22, 2024 8:46 AM
November 22, 2024 8:46 AM

The Centre for Dryland Agriculture (CDA), Bayero University, Kano (BUK) in collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, has organised a three-day capacity building training for over 100 women and youth farmers on agricultural best practices. The Director of the Centre, Prof. Jibrin Mohammed Jibrin, said the training would help farmers to improve their farming techniques without causing harm to the environment and that the training was mainly on how to improve the farming system and maintain the ecosystem.

“Such training is very important considering the fact that this decade, 2021 to 2030, is the United Nation’s Decade of Ecosystem Restoration. We must all agree that in recent years, we have faced a lot of challenges with our ecosystem and, in particular, in the last few years, areas around Kano, Jigawa, and Bauchi states have experienced a huge loss of biodiversity because of many reasons. The charcoal business in recent times is a cause for concern. This training came as a result of a partnership between the Centre for Dryland Agriculture and the National Programme on Food Security towards improving our farming practices and preserving our environment”, he said. Jibrin urged participants to make use of the knowledge they would acquire during the training, saying “I promise you that you are going to have the best type of training on this issue. I welcome you to this training and look forward to interacting with you”.

The National Correspondent  of the Agroecology Programme in Nigeria, Yarima Sa’idu, said the primary objective of the training was to support farming families to boost their staple food production capacity on an environmentally-sustainable basis. He added that it was expected that the knowledge gained by the participants of the training would have a trickle-down effect on production practices across the northwest zone. Sa’idu further said the agroecology programme was aimed at contributing to increasing productivity and agro-sylvo-pastoral and fisheries production through diversified and sustainable production systems, and reducing post-harvest production losses. Meanwhile, an expert in agroecology, Joyce Brown, during a practical training session in Akwa Ibom State, had shown the diverse nature of agroecology, saying it involves mix cropping that invariably reduces pest attacks and promotes healthy environment.

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