Niger Delta
C’River Begins Cotton Cultivation
As part of the backward integration policy of Prof Ben Ayade’s administration, Cross River State Government is set to roll out 30 tonnes of cotton from its farm by November this year.
The cotton farm situated in Woda community, Yala Local Government Area of the state, is in partnership with Arewa Cottons.
Managing Director, Arewa Cotton, Anibe Achimugu, in a chat with newsmen at the farm disclosed that “we will start by allocating parcels of land to the community farmers, train them and hope that they can now pass the knowledge to others.
“Members of the community are already working with us in terms of the casual labour that we need. Also, we are collating the small holders farmers as out-growers,” Achimugu said, adding that “the entire cotton value chain has the capacity to generate 10,000 jobs and a lot of that vistas of opportunity will come from Cross River State.”
Achimugu further informed that about 30 thousand tones of cotton will be rolled out from the farm in November, a feat, he assured would be a gift to Governor Ayade.
According to him, “this is clearly in line with Governor Ayade’s backward integration policy and the only way to ensure the Calabar Garment Factory operates at optimum capacity.”
Stating that the farm is in line with the world best practices in agriculture as the team is led by an old staff of Institute of Agricultural Research, the MD affirmed that they were attracted by the automated garment factory in the state, the complete value chain and the quick cash flow generation as well as the receptive nature of the people to investors.
Nigeria project manager of a Chinese firm, Ruyi Science and Technology group, Wu Xingtao, assured that his group found in Cross River State government a serious partner to do business with, accommodating and determined to develop the state garment factory with required raw materials, hence the need for the partnership.
Xingtao said: “We have plans to build textile factory in Nigeria, that means we need plenty cotton. We want to get plenty cotton from Nigeria and not to import, so we are partnering with Cross River State government to make our textile factory easy.”
Affirming the Chinese firm’s doggedness to deliver, Facilitator/Director of the cotton farm project, High Chief Gabriel Umodem, disclosed that “we saw their projection in Australia and Pakistan and that is what we want to repeat here. All of them don’t have the market that we have as the Nigerian market is too much. If you add that to the AGOA initiative, it means they come from China, produce in Nigeria and ship to America, so, Woda is going to be on the world map in terms of expansion.
On the community’s support for Ayade’s backward integration initiative, community leader and former National Assembly member, Hon. Christopher Inyila Eriba said: “If we have land to offer, that will be our little contribution towards the agricultural revolution. At a time like this, in order to cope with economic recession with a lot of young graduates who need skill acquisition, it is expected that going into this kind of venture will give them that leverage and training.”
Friday Nwagbara, Calabar