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Opinion: Much Ado About Cassava Bread

A few months ago, the Federal Government had expressed its intention to begin the implementation of a national policy on cassava bread. Under the arrangement, bread manufacturers are expected to substitute 20 per cent of the wheat flour content of bread with cassava flour, a decision that is expected to drastically reduce the country’s total annual wheat import bill by N127 billion from the over N600 billion worth of wheat imports annually. This move by the Federal Government to give full backing to such an initiative of substituting wheat with cassava in the local production of bread in Nigeria is laudable in the sense that it is a good opportunity to make better use of the nation’s abundant cassava, which research has shown to be healthier and a better suitable flour for bread making.

It is for this reason that researchers, master bakers, consumers, safety regulators, academics and marketers of cassava flour products recently converged on Lagos, to brainstorm on the prospects and challenges facing the optimal utilisation of cassava. This was the centre-piece of the one-day stakeholders’ forum jointly organised by the Nigerian Institute of Food Science and Technology, NIFST, Cassava: Adding Value for Africa, C:AVA, a project of the Natural Resources Institute, University of Greenwich, United Kingdom and implemented in partnership with the Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, FUNAAB.

With the theme, Cassava Composite Flour and the 4Ps, the forum was held to encourage sustainable adoption of High Quality Cassava Flour, HQCF, in bread and confectionery products in a bid to shore-up the nation’s economy. Speaking at the occasion, the National President of NIFST and Country Manager of C:AVA, Professor Lateef Sanni, said members of the Institute work in the food processing areas of public and private sectors to harness the abundance of talents and knowledge of food professionals in achieving food security and safety.

The Country Manager observed the forum had brought together major stakeholders to share practical experiences, proffer solutions to problems and chart a way forward in realising the national objective of getting high quality cassava flour inclusion in composite flour production. He added that the many benefits of HQCF in bread and confectioneries’ production include job creation, saving of foreign exchange and increased earnings for farmers. “We need to strive to make cassava bread available all year round. We must convince all stakeholders to accept this genuine and committed quest to source some of our raw materials locally. Hence, we need your support. This will give jobs to food professionals. This will allow NIFST to regulate our members in the cassava industries and those that are producing cassava-based products,” Professor Sanni stated.

The Vice-Chancellor of FUNAAB and President, Association of African Universities, Professor Olusola Oyewole, represented by Dr. Kolawole Adebayo, the University’s Director of Grants Management and Project Director of C:AVA II, lauded the organisers of the forum for providing a rich platform for robust discourse on an important issue that affects everyone – which is food because of the need to consume only processed cassava products – to avoid the rampant cases of food poisoning. The Vice-Chancellor noted that FUNAAB had been greatly involved in carrying out of research and cultivation of cassava since its inception making it a leading University in the cassava project. He called on all stakeholders to monitor what happens in the food sector by preventing food poisoning and guarding against terrorists’ control of food resources.

Interestingly, the Senior Technical Assistant to the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Mrs Oluwatoyin Adetunji, stated that Nigeria spends about N635 billion annually on wheat importations, maintaining that the huge expenses incurred by the Federal Government could be used on other developmental projects, as she reiterated the government’s commitment to building robust fresh roots supply chains for cassava processing plants, supporting large and medium HQCF mills, Small and Medium Entrepreneurs producing HQCF and master bakers that use 20 per cent of HQCF in the production of bread.

It gladdened my heart when she noted that the government was facilitating the procurement of medium-scale high quality plants to meet the annual demand for high quality flour. According to her, HQCF can be used as an alternative for starch and wheat flour in a variety of industries. The Senior Technical Adviser further disclosed that the N10 billion Cassava Bread Fund would soon be disbursed to Small and Medium Scale Entrepreneurs, SMEs, through the Bank of Industries, BoI. While commending the enormous work of C:AVA and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, she expressed her optimism that the nation’s cassava value-chain and market would surpass that of Thailand and other producing countries.

It is worthy of mention that the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development and the BoI had signed a Memorandum of Understanding, MoU, for N4.3 billion in support of the Master Bakers Association of Nigeria, SMEs and large industrial cassava millers out of which about N1.05 billion of this amount will expended on the upgrading of the capacity of 35 existing small cassava mills.   While the BoI is to provide working capital of N425 billion as loan at a single digit interest rate, the master and industrial bakers would be encouraged to acquire new equipment, machines, loans and grants on a 50:50 arrangement. The Bank of Agriculture, BoA, is also to provide assistance to about 30,000 cassava farmers to meet the growing demand for cassava flour and subsidise supply of cassava planting material by 100 per cent, to bring more hectares of land into the production of cassava. I hope these measures will make a big difference.

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*Mr. Kupoluyi  wrote from the University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, Ogun State. Article read in Vanguard Newspapers.

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