Agribusiness
Can fertiliser intervention cool food inflation, as Nigeria expands farm support scheme
Nigeria has launched a large-scale agricultural intervention aimed at easing persistent food inflation through forward procurement of fertiliser inputs and expanded distribution support to smallholder farmers.
The federal government, through the Ministry of Finance Incorporated (MOFI) and PFI NPK Limited, has secured a bulk fertiliser supply programme totalling 1.1 million metric tonnes, equivalent to about 22 million bags. Officials say the strategy relies on forward buying arrangements designed to shield the country from global price volatility and shipping disruptions, resulting in estimated savings of $43.99 million (₦61.58 billion).
Government records indicate that the procurement drive has helped stabilise supply chains at a time when international fertiliser and freight markets remain volatile, with the aim of ensuring uninterrupted input availability ahead of the planting season.
To complement the upstream procurement, the National Agricultural Development Fund (NADF) has begun coordinating last-mile distribution under the Renewed Hope Farm Input Support Programme. Vice President Kashim Shettima flagged off the release of 515,720 bags of Urea and NPK fertilisers, targeted primarily at smallholder farmers cultivating less than half a hectare across 25 states and the Federal Capital Territory.
Officials say the intervention is structured to support food security by focusing on staple crops such as rice, maize, cassava, and soybeans, which form the backbone of household consumption nationwide.
Agricultural authorities describe the initiative as a two-tier supply strategy, combining upstream bulk procurement with downstream delivery to registered farmer clusters, supported by digital tracking systems and warehouse controls intended to reduce diversion of subsidised inputs into parallel markets.
ALSO READ: Food prices remain under pressure as inflation rises for third consecutive month
However, economic analysts caution that while improved fertiliser access could boost yields in the medium term, structural constraints may delay immediate relief in food prices. High transportation costs linked to fuel prices, alongside ongoing insecurity in key farming regions, continue to affect the movement of produce from rural areas to urban markets.
Officials also acknowledge that fertiliser distribution alone may not immediately translate into lower consumer prices, as harvest cycles, logistics bottlenecks, and storage limitations often delay market adjustments.
The federal government maintains that if implementation remains consistent and remaining supply batches are fully deployed through the year, the programme could strengthen domestic food production and gradually stabilise inflation pressures driven by food shortages.
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