Nigeria: Govt Mapping 8,809 Wards to Determine Their Economic Potentials, Says Bagudu

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Abuja — The Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Atiku Bagudu, has revealed that the Federal Government has resolved to design a word-based system to map the 8,809 wards in country to ascertain their economic potential.

Bagudu disclosed this on Tuesday in Abuja at the 4th Local Government Economic Summit with the theme ’25 Years of Uninterrupted Democracy in Nigeria: The Place of Local Government in Rural Development and Food Security’, organised by The Summit Group.

He explained that most of the rural local governments are blessed with one thing or the other, adding that there is opportunity for farming, fishing, livestock or a combination of all.

Bagudu noted: “If you are blessed with good oil and I am blessed with groundnut oil, that is the same thing. But we have to appreciate these blessings, and we have to work hard so that we can generate value from those blessings.

“Every local government in Nigeria can do better tomorrow by focusing on what is it that our agriculture has remained largely limited, whether farming or fishing or livestock. Meaning with investment, we can do more in a very short period of time.

“In Kebbi State, while I was a governor, we found out that in one cropping season, most of our farmers moved from less than one ton per hectare to as much as five tonnes per hectare in the first project.

“This is the opportunity that is before us. How do we unlock it? How do local governments become the centre of economic activity as they ought to be, especially in this area?”

The minister stressed that there was a need for local government councils to do self assessment to determine the areas where they have comparative advantage.

According to him, “What has God blessed us with? How can we ensure that we generate more from what God has blessed us with? How can we encourage the state government? How can we encourage the Federal Government to partner with us, to support us so that we can do better in those areas.

“As we speak, as a Minister of National Planning, because part of our mandate is the coordination of national, federal, state and local government.

“We are designing a world-based system where we are mapping the 8,809 wards of this country to see what programmes are running them, what economic potential are there, so that we can support them.

“We need to move towards sustainable agriculture. Primitive agriculture, where you just clear forest or tree in a non sustainable manner is not worth it. Science has taught us that with little space. Applying science, we can all move, but those things require resources beyond what we currently have.