Nigeria and Brazil sign $1 billion agreement to boost agriculture

Nigeria and Brazil sign $1 billion agreement to boost agriculture

ABUJA, (Reuters) 鈥 Nigeria and Brazil signed a $1 billion agreement yesterday to boost agriculture, food security, energy and defence in the West African nation, Nigeria鈥檚 vice president Kasim Shettima said.

Both countries aim to 鈥渄eploy over $1 billion to deliver mechanised farming equipment, training, and service centres across Nigeria,鈥 Shettima said in a statement posted on X.

Much farming in Nigeria is subsistence and land is owned by families or individuals which makes large-scale acquisition problematic. Nigeria also imports food for its 200 million plus population.

鈥淲e are moving from subsistence to scale in agriculture, and in energy, we are taking long-overdue steps to attract serious investment into gas production, refining, and renewables,鈥 Shettima added.

The agreements were signed in Abuja during a visit by Brazil鈥檚 vice president Geraldo Alckmin to Africa鈥檚 most populous nation.

Shettima told his Brazilian counterpart that reforms embarked upon by President Bola Tinubu have helped reshaped Nigeria鈥檚 economy.

Nigeria is targeting a $1 trillion economy by 2030, with reforms to agriculture, energy, education, and public finance. The country has also asked banks to recapitalise to attract foreign investments.

Read More…