
Odumodu made the call at a meeting with the Managing Director, Programme Development and Technical Cooperation Division, UNIDO, Philippe Scholtes, in Abuja.
He noted that developing expertise for packaging of the nation’s food produce would not only enhance their economic value, but also guarantee availability all-year-round.
According to him, “there is a lot UNIDO can do for the country in the area of agro-business and job creation. There is a lot you could do that is not currently being done, especially in the areas of food system and nutrition. One challenge we have in Nigeria is not in growing agricultural produce, but we need a lot of knowledge on how to package them so that they can last longer.
“Nigeria has a lot of tomatoes, mangos, but they are seasonal. Once the seasons are over, the prices go up. We need to learn the technology around how to keep them. We like to request UNIDO to bring this kind of expertise.”
Odumodu sressed that a new export policy would be scripted to ensure that no produce leaves the shore of the land without certification from the relevant agencies.
The SON boss however explained that the focus of government in the next two years would be how to improve the nation’s investment climate, to improve ease of doing business in the country.
He said for the Nigeria’s economy to come back to live and begin to flourish again, strategies must be geared towards reviving the manufacturing sector as well as checking the influx of inferior goods into the country.
“Nigeria has gone through a cynical system. There used to be flourishing industry. There were manufacturing activities in all aspects of our economy. But in the last 20 years, we saw a gradual decline in activities in the industry. Two major reasons are responsible for this. They are the business-unfriendly environment and the influx of inferior goods into the country.
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