Agribusiness
GB Foods tasks FG on continued support for tomato policy
Credit: NAN
The Managing Director of GB Foods, Vincent Egbe, at a three-day industrial tour by the Minister of State for Industry, Sen. John Enoh, on Wednesday in Lagos, called on the Federal Government to ensure effective implementation of the National Tomato Policy to enhance development of the tomato ecosystem and support its competitiveness.
The National Tomato Policy (2022 – 2026) is designed to cut down on post-harvest losses.
It will also curb import of tomato concentrates through increased import tariff from five per cent to 50 per cent and an additional $1,500 levy per metric tonne.
The GB Foods Managing Director said that Nigeria had a shortfall in tomatoes supply in spite of being the 13th largest producer of tomatoes in the world.
He said that, to be fully self-sufficient, Nigeria should be producing a total 10 to 12 million metric tonnes of tomato annually.
Egbe said the company would continue to embrace innovations targeted at celebrating local tomato flavours.
He, however, noted some shortfalls that had plagued the tomatoes industry, such as low production levels, poor infrastructure, weak market linkage and poor access to finance.
He emphasised the need to address the sector’s key challenges and secure essential support for its progress.
This, he said, could be achieved by stopping disruptions from regulatory authorities, providing incentives and fiscal support for local manufacturers and infrastructure support.
“One hundred per cent of everything done in Nigeria is manufactured in Nigeria with 55 per cent local sourcing of Nigerian ingredients.
“We would continue to invest to feed the consuming population, seeing that government is looking to grow the production base of manufacturing.
“We would continue to key into the agenda of government to accelerate contributions to the country’s economy,” he said.
Egbe also revealed the company’s plan to establish Nigeria as an industrial hub for West African markets with ongoing tomatoes distribution and logistics investments, and tomato processing expansion.
He reiterated the company’s commitment to sustainability by fostering right nutrition, preserving environmental balance and investing in local communities’ prosperity.
“We see Nigeria as the future driver of a prosperous Africa, and so we are investing here on a rate of 7:3 i.e. seven here in Nigeria and 3 in other parts of Africa.
“What we are doing in Nigeria is consistent with who we are and we would continue investing in tomatoes backward integration to develop the tomatoes ecosystem in Nigeria,” he said.
Responding, the minister said that the company occupied a critical space in the food industry.
He said that while Nigeria might be passing through a phase, it still had opportunities.
Enoh assured that the Federal Government would continue to support local manufacturers and made in Nigeria goods.
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