Seed Management Systems in Nigeria: The Gap and the Bridge
Authors:
Oyekale Kehinde
Publication Type: Journal article
Journal:
ISSN Number:
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Abstract
The use of improved quality crop seed cultivars by farmers has been recognized as the most
important effort in boosting agricultural production and ensuring food security. Improved
quality seed is not only the cheapest and basic potential of increasing yield but also
fundamental in raising the efficiency of other inputs like fertilizers, agro-chemicals and agro
machinery. Greater percentage of improvement in agricultural production has come from the
use of improved seed. In essence, no agricultural practices, i.e. fertilization, irrigation etc can
improve crop production beyond the limit set by seed. We now have crop varieties that are
higher yielding, early maturing, more resistant to diseases and pests, and better adapted to
different ecologies. The means of transferring these benefits to farmers is the seed. Seeds are
therefore a means of technology transfer to farmers, who have certain expectations from new
crop varieties as promised by the breeders. To realize these expectations, seeds of new
varieties must be made available to the farmers in adequate quantity and quality and at
affordable prices. Unfortunately, the Nigerian seed industry has not fully developed the
capacity to perform this role very well. For example, the current national seed uptake is less
than 10%, while the regulatory and enforcement capacity in the industry has been weak. The
Nigerian agricultural seed sector has evolved over the last 30 years in terms of seed science
and commercial seed production capabilities. However, the sector is still under-performing in
terms of meeting the agricultural seed needs of the country. Consequently, the government of
Nigeria imported rice seeds in 2012, while vegetable seeds are still mostly imported through
informal channels. The development and performance of the seed sector is constrained by
many factors which include weak technical capacity, poor market mechanisms, in-efficient
enforcement of seed law, information asymmetry, insufficient capital investment and low
utilization of innovations. This study thus reviewed and analysed Nigeria's seed production
development and management initiatives by identifying the weak links, areas of failure, the
effectiveness or otherwise of the various bodies in the performance of their responsibilities,
the effectiveness of prevailing regulatory mechanism as well as suggesting ways of
improving the entire seed industry of the country.