Nigerian agripreneurs in maize, livestock, cashew and cocoa value chains can win €2,000 in funding, a laptop or free mentorship through the ABF Agri Canvas Competition 2026. Applications close May 31. Here is the full step-by-step guide.
NABG President Mr. Kabir Ibrahim told the Vanguard Economic Discourse 2026 that Nigeria’s food problem is not production but affordability, and that value addition is the fastest route to food security and economic stability.
Nigeria and Germany have launched a $2.2 million audit of farmland soil health, targeting 774 soil testing laboratories and 10 million farmers by 2027. Here is what the NFSHS readiness assessment means for Nigerian crop yields and food security.
Niger State has flagged off its 2026 farming season with 250 tractors, 50 combine harvesters and 150,000 bags of fertiliser distributed across all 25 LGAs. Governor Bago targets 500,000 metric tons of food and 120,000 hectares of cultivated land this season.
Nigeria’s Minister of Livestock Development, Mr. Idi Mukhtar Maiha, has unveiled a 10-point strategy to grow the sector into a $74 billion economy by 2035. With protein deficiency and food inflation still acute, here is what the plan targets and what it will take to deliver.
The World Bank has approved a $500 million credit for Nigeria’s AGROW Project, targeting one million smallholder farmers across rice, maize, cassava and soybean value chains from 2026 to 2032. Here is what it means for Nigerian agriculture.
The promoters of the Iseyin Agric Value Hub met OYSADA in Ibadan on April 28, 2026, seeking government backing for a private agribusiness cluster in Oyo State. The real story is what the meeting’s agenda reveals about where private agricultural investment in Nigeria actually stalls.
A USDA report highlights Nigeria’s livestock and animal feed trade potential under the NASIP 2026-2027, noting $283m in cattle exports and $50m in feed imports in recent years.
Katsina State government procures fertiliser for farmers at N25,000 per bag ahead of the 2026 wet season planting, offering relief from high commercial input costs.
ActionAid Nigeria, SWOFON, and COANSA fault the proposed N1.45 trillion agriculture budget, raising concerns over transparency and inclusion of smallholder farmers.
