Babban Gona, a Nigerian agritech firm leveraging artificial intelligence, has obtained $7.5 million in debt financing from British International Investment (BII) to expand financial support and technological services to smallholder farmers in Northern Nigeria. The capital will enable Babban Gona to scale its offerings, which include affordable loans, technical training, harvest assistance, and market access, all fortified by cutting-edge AI technology. This approach not only helps farmers mitigate challenges related to climate variability but also enhances productivity and income potential. The company empowers its best farmers to run small-scale enterprises, by operating through a unique franchise system. These micro-businesses provide their peers with farming inputs and working capital, creating a sustainable ecosystem. Babban Gona aim to facilitate their access to credit facilities from local financial institutions, fostering grassroots economic development. The organization, with BII’s backing, aims to uplift the livelihoods of approximately 140,000 small-scale producers across northern Nigeria by 2029. Benson Adenuga, head of BII’s West Africa operations and Nigeria office, said; Our engagement with Babban Gona exemplifies how catalytic funding can bolster innovative, impactful business models that transform communities and economies. Supporting this pioneering franchise system addresses key financing gaps, strengthens agricultural resilience, and ensures smallholders receive the investment they deserve in a traditionally underserved region The partnership emphasizes climate adaptation, beyond improving food security and farmer earnings. Babban Gona supplies drought-resistant seeds, climate-smart farming inputs, and insurance policies that protect yields against multiple risks, enabling farmers to withstand adverse environmental impacts. Babban Gona’s AI capabilities are particularly noteworthy. Drawn from over two million images, its machine learning models assist farmers in diagnosing crop issues using simple photographs. According to Kola Masha, the managing director, the company’s AI journey began in 2018 and now extends to supporting rural women who run after-school programs in English literacy and provide prenatal health screenings. We have nurtured robust relationships in the AI space through early adoption. Babban Gona was honored to be one of just a dozen global organizations invited to a think tank alongside tech leaders like Nvidia, OpenAI, and Google in Lake Como, focusing on AI’s role in development – Masha The firm is also innovating green transportation solutions akin to Tesla’s model by promoting electric two-wheelers for farmers and building the necessary charging infrastructure in northern Nigeria.
Chinese investors to inject $720 million into agriculture, renewable energy projects in Katsina State
A group of 25 Chinese investors, headed by China Overseas Engineering Group (COVEC), recently completed a site inspection tour across Katsina State as they explore opportunities to invest approximately $720 million in agricultural and renewable energy sectors. According to Ms. A’isha Rimi, Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Investment Promotion Commission (NIPC), who shared the update in Katsina on Monday, the visiting delegation’s interests encompass a comprehensive agricultural value chain. Their prospective undertakings include cultivation of rice, maize, cassava, fisheries development, and a large-scale cattle ranch housing 10,000 heads. Additionally, plans extend to agricultural engineering with machinery assembly plants and a solar energy facility. Ms. Rimi stated that the investors have previously allocated $200 million to projects in Niger State, which has since expanded to a $720 million commitment, alongside sizable investments announced recently in Jigawa and Oyo states. If suitable prospects are found within Katsina, a similar scale of investment is anticipated. The delegation’s project proposals include development on 4,000 hectares of land covering several strategic locations such as Sabke Dam for maize farming to support livestock feed production, Dabiram Dam aimed at fostering a complete fisheries ecosystem, a leather processing factory, and livestock breeding research centres focusing on goats and cattle. Other endeavors under consideration are a solar product assembly plant, a commercial centre for agricultural commodities, and a collaborative public-private partnership with the state government to establish a Special Agricultural Processing Zone and Green Economic Zone. The investors conducted thorough site visits covering multiple local government areas, including Jibia, Mashi, Daura, Mai’adua, and Kaita. They praised the Katsina State Investment Promotion Agency for its meticulous preparations and presentations, which evidently enhanced investor confidence. COVEC, a subsidiary firm of China Railway Group Limited, is well-regarded for its extensive international infrastructure projects, including highways, railways, and power plants across nearly 100 countries, with a particular focus on development in Africa. Governor Dikko Umaru Radda has expressed strong support for these engagements, assuring the visiting delegation of his administration’s readiness to facilitate the successful implementation of these transformative programmes. The hope is that such large-scale investments will stimulate job creation, enhance food security, and elevate the standard of living for Katsina’s population.
Yabatech earns €117,000 EU grant to pioneer solar-powered aquaponics for food security
The Yaba College of Technology (Yabatech) has been awarded a €117,000 grant from the European Union to advance a solar-powered integrated aquaponics system designed to boost sustainable food production in Lagos and beyond. This project combines catfish farming with the cultivation of vegetables and maize, aiming to enhance food resilience. This European Union funding supports the development of an innovative system known as AQUACLEC, focused on sustainable catfish production alongside dual-crop cultivation of leafy vegetables and corn. Coordinated by Dr. Funmilayo Doherty, Director of the Centre for Research Support and Grants Management at Yabatech, the endeavor involves collaboration with technical experts from the Universities of Lagos, Turku, and Lapland. According to Yabatech’s spokesperson, Mr. Adekunle Adams, the project seeks to integrate solar energy with aquaponics technology to create a replicable and scalable model for food security in Nigeria and West Africa. The subsidy will enable the establishment of a local innovation hub in Lagos, facilitating testing, replication, and promotion of sustainable agricultural practices within communities. Dr. Doherty attributes this achievement to Yabatech’s commitment to aligning academic research with pressing national and global issues under the leadership of Dr. Ibraheem Abdul. The college’s administration has prioritized research proposals and international partnerships that extend practical benefits beyond the classroom. Mr. Adams emphasized that this project leverages Yabatech’s strong pool of over 200 PhD-qualified lecturers to support research, training, and policy engagement. This recent success builds on a prior accomplishment through the National Youth Employment Skills Acquisition Framework (NYESAF), which trained 200 Nigerian youths in digital and creative media skills. These achievements show Yabatech’s dual role as both an academic powerhouse and a catalyst for national development, fulfilling its mission to bridge technical education with tangible community needs. The college’s forward-thinking approach promises to help secure food systems and empower communities throughout Nigeria and the West African region in the years ahead.
Nigerian scientists defend GMO safety, challenge critics to prove health risks
Scientists in Nigeria’s biotechnology sector have firmly defended the safety of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), dismissing claims that they cause health problems like cancer or infertility. Speaking in Abuja, experts said these fears are not supported by scientific evidence.Prof. Abdullahi Mustapha, Director-General of the National Biotechnology Research and Development Agency, urged critics to provide facts rather than rumors. He explained that the National Biosafety Management Agency closely regulates every stage of GMO production in Nigeria, ensuring products are safe before reaching consumers. Mustapha also revealed that many Nigerians have already consumed GMO foods unknowingly, pointing out that popular imports like cornflakes contain crops that are 98% genetically modified in countries like the US and Brazil. He highlighted new local GMO developments, such as drought-tolerant maize and genetically modified beans, which could reduce Nigeria’s dependence on imports and boost food security. Prof. Mohammed Ishiyaku from Ahmadu Bello University reassured the public that genetically modified cowpeas developed locally meet international safety standards. Dr. Rose Gidado of NBRDA criticized misinformation and fear-mongering around GMOs, noting that scientists themselves eat these foods without harm. As debates persist online and within civil society about food safety and biotechnology regulation, Nigerian scientists stand by their research and call for informed discussions based on facts.
Nigeria faces fierce GMO battle over food safety and sovereignty
Nigeria is at the center of a fierce debate over genetically modified organisms (GMOs), with fresh questions about food safety, big-money influence, and the future of the country’s farming. What are GMOs? GMOs, or genetically modified organisms, are plants, animals, or microorganisms whose genetic materials has been deliberately altered using biotechnology. This process allows scientists to change and organism’s DNA in ways that do not occur naturally, often to introduce beneficial traits such as pest resistance, higher nutritional value, or faster growth. Genetically modified organisms first appeared in the early 1970s when scientists learned to transfer genes from one organism to another inside a laboratory, creating the very first GMO. The world’s first GMO, which was a bacteria resistant to antibiotics, was created by Herbert Boyer and Stanley Cohen in 1973. Soon after, in 1974, a genetically modified mouse was created and then their research on a tobacco plant that will be resistant to antibiotics followed, which became successful in 1983. In 1994, the Flavr Savr tomato became the first GMO food available for purchase, giving birth to an industry now estimated in the billions. Since then, debate has grown over whether GMOs are fit for human consumption. According to Healthline, a leading health information website and media company based in San Francisco, major global health authorities like the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, World Health Organization, and National Academies of Science say GMOs on the market are safe to eat, no more risky than traditional crops. Supporters say that in a country facing population growth and malnutrition, GMOs are critical for raising food production and farmers’ incomes. This pro-GMO stance has plenty of high-profile backers in Nigeria, including government and regulatory agencies, especially the National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA), which insist all approved GMOs meet international safety standards. They say biotechnology is part of a sustainable fix for food insecurity. Public debate and influencer advocacy: Aproko Doctor and GMO promotion in Nigeria But a storm is brewing online and in the media. A recent video by Aproko Doctor, a popular Nigerian medical influencer, has intensified the argument. Aproko Doctor has publicly defended GMOs, insisting they do not cause cancer and telling his large following that fears about health risks are over exaggerated. However, Aproko Doctor with Bill Gate in a picture circulating on social media platforms on campaigns promoting GMOs, has brought both praise and criticism nationwide. Aproko Doctor’s link to Bill Gates, whose charitable foundation is a global GMO proponent, has led to suspicions among critics who accuse him of pushing a one-sided message influenced by powerful foreign interests. Critics warn of potential threats to biodiversity and soil quality, as well as possible health risks like allergies and cancer, even if those links are disputed. Controversy deepened after a report led by Premium Times, with lighthouse reports and other media partners surfaced that, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) paid a PR firm over $400,000 to help promote pro-GMO messages in Nigeria. Funds also flowed to Nigeria’s biosafety agency and campaigns that enlisted doctors and journalists to tout GMO benefits, leading to fast-tracked approval of new crops like Bt cotton, insect-resistant maize, and genetically modified cowpea. Meanwhile, Nigeria’s National Biotechnology Development Agency partnered with pro-GMO groups tied to the Gates Foundation to train influential Nigerians to defend GMOs, causing fears that risky commercial interests were outweighing open public debate. Critics demand national policies on food sovereignty and environmental protection On the other side, many Nigerian experts, NGOs, and civil society groups have called for strict bans on GMOs and urged the repeal of biosafety laws permitting them. The opposition are not giving up in their request. They claimed that the sluggish response by lawmakers are worrisome and could wreak havoc in the agriculture sector if nothing is done swiftly. Their main worries are about unknown long-term health risks, irreversible environmental damage, and loss of food sovereignty. Nigerian opponents fear that patented GMO seeds put local farmers at the mercy of big corporations, undermining seed saving and exchange. Segun Adebayo, the director of Center for African Policy, Research and Advocacy during a media sensitization program at the national assembly complex said; “Why don’t we focus on reducing our post-harvest losses and have food sufficiency? Why are we going to GMO that is patented technology that we don’t know what is inside? Other countries are banning it. We have documents to show all the countries in the world that have banned it and why they banned it and everything is cool and calm in a normal country, something is wrong.” They urge Nigeria to embrace organic agriculture and agroecological farming instead. Prof. Qrissturberg Amua, the executive director of the Center for Food Safety and Agriculture research, during the media sensitization workshop said; “We are calling on the nation, especially the legislature to strengthen support for organic standards and seed sovereignty and agroecological research. We are calling on all of us to ban harmful agrochemicals proven to damage human and environmental health. We so mandate a national roadmap for generative agriculture, aligning with local food culture and climate resilience, and our final is that sovereignty begins with our soil” These critics also argue that GMOs do little to actually solve hunger. Instead, they warn, Nigeria’s food system could become more reliant on foreign multinationals, a trend some describe as a kind of “food colonialism.” There have been calls in Nigeria’s National Assembly for stricter review or outright bans on GMOs, with some opponents describing them as “bio-weapons” that could cause future health crises. Nigeria’s path forward on GMOs remains deeply split While powerful voices and agencies argue GMOs are crucial for the nation’s food security, an equally vocal opposition says the risks – to health, the environment, and food independence – cannot be ignored. For ordinary Nigerians, the debate is about more than technology – it’s about who controls the nation’s food and the legacy future generations will inherit.
“AI and satellites key to Nigeria’s food future” – Vice president Shettima:
Nigeria is rolling out artificial intelligence and advanced climate tools to strengthen the country’s food production and fight hunger. Vice President Kashim Shettima revealed this major shift on Monday at the United Nations Food Systems Summit in Addis Ababa. He said AI, geospatial analytics, and satellite-driven climate intelligence are now at the heart of Nigeria’s new strategy for agriculture. “We are deploying these tools to monitor production, enhance transparency, connect producers to markets, and reduce waste across the value chain,” Shettima said. The government is also investing in Special Agro-Industrial Processing Zones, in partnership with the African Development Bank and IFAD. These hubs are expected to create jobs, attract private investment, and link rural farmers to local and global markets. Shettima stressed that using technology is not just about producing more food, but about ensuring that Nigeria’s food system is healthy and sustainable. Beyond tech, Nigeria is feeding more school children and making sure nutrition reaches communities in every local government through the Nutrition 774 initiative. The government’s new National Multi-Sectoral Plan of Action for Food and Nutrition is set to improve coordination and delivery, with new Nutrition Departments popping up across ministries. The push for transformation comes as climate change, conflicts, and market shocks threaten food supplies globally. Other African leaders at the summit called for urgent investment in agriculture to tackle hunger and climate risks. UN Secretary-General António Guterres elaborated on how food systems are tied to climate, justice, and people’s futures. The challenge is urgent. Recent slowdowns, conflicts, and less development funding mean more people go hungry. But officials say Nigeria’s big bet on AI and climate tech shows determination to build a food system that meets the needs of today and secures tomorrow.