A new study conducted by ActionAid Nigeria, to review farmers’ access to
agricultural insurance services has revealed that smallholder women
farmers have
This is against the backdrop of warnings by agricultural experts that
Nigeria will be the highest hit by climate change if it doesn’t support
agriculture, coupled with increasing flood episodes washing away farm
land across the country.
The report conducted between the periods of 2014 and 2018, also observed
the low budgetary allocation and release to the Nigerian Agricultural
Insurance Commission (NAIC). For instance, the report noted that of
the N250million allocated to the Commission in 2014, only
N100million was released; in 2015, N148million was budgeted
but N16billion was released.
“In 2016, N108million was budgeted, N71million was released, in 2017, N917million was budgeted but N454million was released, while in 2018, of the N148million budget for Agriculture insurance N16million was released to NAIC.
On the distribution of the Government Agriculture Insurance Scheme to smallholder women farmers between 2014-2018, the report revealed that of the N1.1billion expended for agricultural insurance only N37. 1million was accessed by them representing 3.24 percent.
The ActionAid Programme Officer for Agriculture, Azubuike Nwokoye,
during the presentation of the scorecard in Abuja, decried that access
to agricultural insurance services over the years has remained low
especially for smallholder women farmers, adding that budget allocations
and releases still remain very low.
He also bemoaned that state governments do not pay counterpart fund
contributions for premium subsidies for agricultural insurance services,
while the federal government does not provide timely funding, and the
funds are very low.
Nwokoye said: “Many states are yet to integrate extension services to
agricultural insurance services, meaning that a relationship between
extension agents, Ministry of Agriculture and NAIC is not there, because
ordinarily extension agents must be able to provide information on
insurance services to smallholder farmers to support them access
services but it is not so.”
He stressed the need for NAIC to work on increasing insurance
coverage such that it would be able to provide compensation for farmers
affected by cattle rustling, which would assist in reducing farmers’
herders’ crisis in Nigeria.
He added that the government can assist NAIC by increasing budgetary
allocation and timely releases, seeing as it is a government’s
institution that should provide agricultural insurance services to
farmers.
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