… as FG rolls out 80,640 bags
By Onwa Ekor
Cross River governor, Prince Bassey Otu, Weekend, assured that every bag of fertilizer allocated to farmers would reach its intended beneficiaries.
Otu gave the assurance while flagging off the South-South Zonal Renewed Hope Farm Input Support Programme (FISP). .
Represented by the Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Elvert Ayambem, at the ceremony in Calabar on Saturday, the governor welcomed participants from across the South-South, describing smallholder farmers as the backbone of Nigeria’s agricultural economy and deserving of sustained government support.
He commended President Bola Tinubu, the federal government and the National Agricultural Development Fund (NADF) for the intervention, noting that the programme would improve productivity, strengthen food security and build economic resilience across the region.
“Our farmers remain central to our People’s First Agenda because when agriculture thrives, families prosper, young people find opportunities and our economy grows stronger.
“Every bag of fertilizer must reach the right farmer. This is how we preserve trust and achieve food price stabilisation, improved productivity and rural economic stimulation,” the governor said.
He assured the federal government that Cross River would implement the programme strictly in line with approved guidelines while maintaining transparency, accountability and close monitoring to prevent diversion, adding that, the state would continue investing in mechanisation, commodity development, extension services and strategic value chains, including cocoa, oil palm, maize, rice and sorghum.
Coordinator of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security in the state, Mrs. Maddy George Sampson, who represented the Minister of Agriculture and food security, Senator Abubakar Kyari, lauded Otu’s agricultural reforms, describing Cross River as a model for agricultural development in Nigeria.
She said the governor had positioned the state on a seven-year trajectory to become a national leader in cocoa, coffee and oil palm production through investments in improved seedlings, mechanisation, cassava seed multiplication and farmer cooperatives.
“The fertilizer being distributed under this programme is a grant and not for sale. It is designed to close the productivity gap, increase yields, support indigenous fertilizer production and strengthen Nigeria’s food security,” Sampson said, affirming that the intervention demonstrates the federal government’s resolve to empowering smallholder farmers.
Executive Secretary of the National Agricultural Development Fund (NADF), Mohammed Ibrahim, represented by the Fund’s Head of Investment Department, Mr. Olalekan Alabi, described FISP as a targeted intervention designed to deliver fertilizer to verified farmers at the right time to achieve measurable increases in agricultural productivity.
According to him, the programme will benefit 128,930 smallholder farmers nationwide through the distribution of 515,720 bags of fertilizer, while the South-South zone will receive 80,640 bags for 25,200 farmers across Cross River, Akwa Ibom, Delta and Edo with each beneficiary receiving four bags of fertilizer.
Alabi disclosed that every bag of fertilizer distributed under the scheme is fully subsidised, locally produced, branded, traceable and boldly marked “NOT FOR SALE,” pointing out that beneficiary validation, documentation and monitoring mechanisms have been put in place to ensure the inputs reach genuine farmers.
He further commended Otu for positioning Cross River as a leading agricultural destination, remarking that the state was the first in Nigeria to establish its own Agricultural Development Fund and had recorded significant progress through strategic partnerships, Project Grow and other farmer-focused initiatives.




