NADF, NRCRI unveil programme to revive Nigeria’s ginger industry

June 20, 2026 8:14 am

NADF, NRCRI unveil programme to revive Nigeria’s ginger industry

By  Sunday Nwakanma

The National Agricultural Development Fund (NADF) and the National Root Crops Research Institute, Umudike, have launched the Ginger Value Chain Recovery and Sustainability Programme, a major intervention aimed at restoring Nigeria’s ginger industry following the devastating ginger blight epidemic that crippled production across key growing areas.

The programme was unveiled at the headquarters of NRCRI in Umudike, Abia State on Friday, where government officials, researchers, development partners, commodity associations and private sector stakeholders gathered to chart a sustainable path for the recovery and transformation of the country’s ginger value chain.

The Ginger Value Chain Recovery and Sustainability Program is an integral part of the NADF Ginger roadmap, developed after the Ginger blight epidemic.

Speaking on behalf of the Executive Secretary and Chief Executive Officer of NADF, Mohammed Ibrahim, on Friday, the General Manager, Technical Services, Ernest Ihedigbo, described the initiative as a landmark demonstration of the Federal Government’s commitment to repositioning agriculture as a driver of economic diversification, food security, industrial development and export competitiveness under President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.

He said the unveiling of the programme and the formalisation of the partnership with NRCRI reaffirmed NADF’s mandate as the Federal Government’s catalytic financing institution dedicated to translating agricultural policies into sustainable investments that strengthen research, innovation and national food sovereignty.

According to him, agricultural transformation cannot be achieved without strong research institutions, modern technologies and strategic investments that connect scientific discoveries with production and markets.

Ihedigbo disclosed that NADF is implementing two flagship interventions to support the sector. The first focuses on strengthening selected agricultural research institutes as Centres of Excellence through investments in modern laboratories, biotechnology facilities, renewable energy systems, irrigation infrastructure, digital platforms and innovation hubs.

He announced that NRCRI had been selected as the South-East beneficiary in the first phase of the programme and would receive support for energy and digital infrastructure as well as laboratory equipment installation and maintenance.

The intervention, he explained, is expected to strengthen research infrastructure, improve the capacity of scientists and researchers, promote demand-driven research, deepen linkages between research institutions and farmers, facilitate the commercialisation of agricultural technologies and foster partnerships with leading international research organisations.

The second intervention, the Ginger Value Chain Recovery and Sustainability Programme, is specifically designed to rebuild the ginger industry after the 2023 ginger blight epidemic, which severely disrupted production, affected thousands of farmers, reduced export earnings and exposed structural weaknesses within the value chain.

Under the programme, NADF will provide six metric tonnes of ginger rhizomes alongside infrastructure for germplasm conservation, disease-free seed multiplication, tissue culture propagation, adaptive field preservation and sustainable seed system development.

Ihedigbo also revealed that NADF had previously played a key role in the Federal Government’s Ginger Blight Epidemic Control Taskforce through the implementation of the Ginger Recovery Advancement and Transformation for Economic Empowerment (GRATE) Programme.

Through the intervention, about 6,000 farmers in Kaduna, Plateau and the Federal Capital Territory received improved seeds, production inputs for alternative crops and support for integrated pest management strategies aimed at containing the disease outbreak and restoring livelihoods.

“Moving beyond social impact interventions, the Ginger Value Chain Recovery and Sustainability Programme is designed to drive recovery, resilience and long-term transformation of the ginger sub-sector,” he said.

Representing the Abia State Commissioner for Agriculture and Natural Resources, Dr. Cliff Agbeze, the Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Mrs. Ijeoma Adamma Agoha, described the partnership between NADF and NRCRI as evidence of the power of strategic collaboration in addressing challenges within Nigeria’s agricultural value chains.

She commended NADF for selecting NRCRI as a beneficiary of the intervention, noting that the decision recognised the institute’s research capacity and Abia State’s growing role as a centre for agricultural innovation in the South-East.

Welcoming participants on behalf of the Executive Director of NRCRI, Professor Chiedozie Ngozi Egesi, the Director of Root Crops Research, Dr. Adeyemi Olojede, described the programme as a timely intervention capable of addressing critical challenges confronting Nigeria’s ginger industry.

He said stakeholders must work together to develop practical solutions that will restore production and strengthen resilience within the value chain, regardless of the uncertainties surrounding the causes of the disease outbreak.

Also speaking, the representative of the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC), Morrison Udo, described ginger as one of Nigeria’s priority non-oil export commodities and expressed confidence that the initiative would help tackle challenges related to funding, infrastructure, disease management and policy support.

Similarly, Professor Ikechukwu Dallas Chima, representing the National President of the National Ginger Association of Nigeria (NGAN), hailed the programme as a significant national assignment with far-reaching economic implications.

He noted that the global ginger market is projected to surpass three billion dollars in the coming years and warned that Nigeria could not afford to lose its competitive position in the international market.

Chima commended NADF for supporting NRCRI’s scientific and research efforts and urged stakeholders to work collectively towards building a sustainable foundation for the industry’s growth.

Sunday Nwakanma

Sunday Nwakanma is a journalist at Punch Newspapers with over 25 years of professional experience in reporting. He is based in Abia State and has worked across local, regional, and national newspapers, covering a wide range of public affairs issues. Sunday’s work reflects extensive newsroom experience, multiple professional recognitions, and a strong commitment to press freedom and responsible journalism.

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