FG/IFAD Strategic Programme Targets 450,000 Rural Households by 2029

Abuja: The Federal Government, in partnership with the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), has unveiled a strategic programme designed to transform the livelihoods of 450,000 rural households by 2029.

They planned to achieve this through the Country Strategic Opportunities Programme (COSOP) 2024 to 2029.

They made the call on the sidelines of the second Annual Results Review Workshop of COSOP 2024 to 2029 on Saturday in Abuja.

The Federal Government/IFAD COSOP, adopted in 2024, aims to promote inclusive and resilient growth of the rural economy through market-driven transformation of the agrifood system for food and nutrition security.

Its strategic objective is to sustainably increase rural people’s productive capacities, strengthening organizational and policy frameworks for inclusive, nutrition-sensitive, and resilient agricultural value chains.

Mrs Dede Ekoue, IFAD Country Director, identified the review as a strategic moment for Nigeria and its partners to take stock of two years of COSOP implementation and realign strategies toward achieving the programme’s 2029 targets.

Ekoue emphasized that the review would yield actionable recommendations to strengthen implementation through 2026 and ensure the programme reaches at least 450,000 rural households by 2029.

“The 2025 review provides an opportunity to assess relevance, measure progress, and introduce strategic adjustments where necessary.

“Early implementation results have been encouraging, with overachievement recorded in areas such as the development of processing and storage facilities, strengthened rural producers’ organizations, and improved access to finance, among others,”she said.

Ekoue emphasized that the complexity of challenges in the agrifood sector required coordinated action by government institutions, the private sector, development partners, and farmer organizations.

She further noted that the diversity of participants at the review reflected the inclusive design of the COSOP and aligned with Nigeria’s renewed push for digitalization and youth engagement in agriculture.

Ekoue identified progress on the National Digital Farmer Registry and ongoing policy dialogues on youth inclusion as key milestones.

The country director called for increased funding to fully unlock Nigeria’s vast agrifood potential.

Mrs Munet Sadiku, Assistant Director, International Economic Relations (IER) Department of the Federal Ministry of Finance, emphasized that COSOP had continued to serve as a vital framework for driving rural transformation and strengthening food security.

Munet said it had also ensured improvement in the livelihoods of smallholder farmers nationwide.

According to her, the ministry is keen to see greater integration of digital tools in financial reporting, monitoring, and project administration to enhance efficiency and support data-driven decision-making.

Mrs Adebola Iruromi, Director, Federal Department of Development Partners Projects (DPP) in the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, identified the review as a critical moment to reflect collective progress.

 A cross-section of stakeholders at FG/IFAD- COSOP review meeting

Iruromi further said that it was also to identify gaps and strengthen pathways that would shape Nigeria’s agrifood transformation agenda.

“The long-standing Federal Government/IFAD partnership has remained central to efforts to promote rural prosperity, resilience, and food and nutrition security.

“As we review the COSOP, it is important to identify and scale the proven models that have delivered impact across projects and states.

“Scaling successful interventions is essential to achieving national targets under the National Food Systems Transformation Pathways,”she said

Iruromi listed the sector’s challenges as rising inflation, insecurity, climate shocks, limited extension services, and uneven implementation across states.

According to her, stronger coordination, enhanced monitoring and evaluation, wider deployment of digital tools and deeper sub-national accountability are required to address the sector challenges.

Mr Raymond Enoch, National Coordinator of the National Committee for Family Farming in Nigeria, expressed the committee’s support for the COSOP framework.

He described the programme as critical to strengthening the capacity of smallholder and family farmers, enabling them to increase productivity while contributing meaningfully to national food systems.

Enoch commended the recent launch of the National Digital Farmers Registry by IFAD and the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security.

He identified the gesture as a major step towards modernizing agriculture through improved data accuracy, technology integration and access to information such as weather forecasts and early warning systems.

Emphasizing that Nigerian farmers must not be left behind in the global shift toward digital solutions, he expressed confidence that the evolving technological and policy landscape would help farmers respond more effectively to emerging challenges. 

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