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Home Africa

Most of Nigeria’s “food baskets” are security-challenged, Shettima tells WEF delegates

Mr Shettima said the federal government no longer treats food security as a narrow agricultural concern.

by Diplomatic Info
January 22, 2026
in Africa
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Most of Nigeria’s “food baskets” are security-challenged, Shettima tells WEF delegates
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Vice President Kashim Shettima has said Nigeria, renowned as the African giant, has woken up from its slumber under the dynamic and purposeful leadership of President Bola Tinubu.

Mr Shettima spoke at a high-level panel titled, “When Food Becomes Security,” at the Congress Centre during the 56th World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting in Davos, Switzerland.

He expressed optimism that with the ongoing Renewed Hope Agenda reforms, the coming months would witness greater climate adaptation moving from pilot to reality, as well as a boom in intra-African trade far beyond 10.7 per cent.

The vice president said that the Tinubu-led federal government was on course to make it possible for smallholders and fishers to become investable at scale within 12 months.

Mr Shettima announced that Nigeria no longer views food security through a narrow agricultural lens but as a fundamental macroeconomic, security, and governance issue.

He said the federal government had begun a multi-dimensional agricultural drive designed to insulate the nation from global shocks while restoring the productivity of its food basket regions.

Mr Shettima said the federal government no longer treats food security as a narrow agricultural concern but as a strategic pillar for governance, economic stability, and regional cohesion.

“In Nigeria, we don’t look at food security purely as an agricultural issue. It is a macroeconomic, security and governance issue. Our focus is to use food security as a pillar for national security, regional cohesion and stability.

“Nigeria’s food security strategy is anchored on three pillars: increased food production, environmental sustainability, and deeper regional integration within the West African sub-region,” Mr Shettima said.

He explained that changing global trends and supply chain disruptions had compelled Nigeria to look inward and rebuild its agricultural base by developing resilient food systems tailored to its diverse ecological zones.

“Nigeria is a very large country, and there is an incestuous relationship between economy and ecology. In the Sahelian North, we are dealing with desertification, deforestation and drought. In the riverine South and parts of the North Central, flooding is our major challenge,” he said.

The vice president said that the government was promoting drought-resistant, flood-tolerant, and early-maturing varieties of staple crops such as rice, sorghum, and millet, while redesigning food systems in flood-prone southern regions to withstand climate shocks.

He noted that security remains a major constraint, particularly because many conflict-affected areas are also Nigeria’s primary food-producing zones.

“Most of the food baskets of our nation are security-challenged. That is why we are creating food security corridors and strengthening community-based security engagements so farmers can return safely to their land,” he said.

He disclosed that the federal government had launched the Back to the Farm Initiative, a programme designed to resettle displaced farmers by providing them with agricultural inputs, insurance, and access to capital to restart food production.

The vice oresident identified import dependence and foreign exchange volatility as major drivers of food inflation.

“We largely import wheat, sugar and dairy products, and this has a direct impact on inflation. Our strategy is to accelerate local production and promote substitutes such as sorghum, millet and cassava flour to correct these structural imbalances,” Mr Shettima said.

The vice president said Nigeria’s approach aligns food security with national stability, inflation control, and regional cooperation, positioning agriculture as a frontline response to both economic and security threats.

He urged his African counterparts to intensify efforts under the canopy of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to ensure that African nations get things right internally.

(NAN)

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