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FrieslandCampina launches documentary magazine on Nigeria’s dairy industry

FrieslandCampina launches documentary magazine on Nigeria’s dairy industry

Dairy Development Director, Royal FrieslandCampina, Mrs. Yvonne vanderVorst; General Counsel and Global Director Legal and Business Conduct, Royal FrieslandCampina, Mrs. Marieke Spenkelink; Director, Veterinary Services, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. Peter Umanah; Executive Director Corporate Affairs, FrieslandCampina WAMCO, Mrs. Ore Famurewa and Dairy Development Director, FrieslandCampina WAMCO, Mr. Joel Ariori; at the FrieslandCampina FDOV Technical Conference themed 'Dairy4Growth Nigeria' held in Ibadan, Oyo State, Thursday, December 2, 2021

FrieslandCampina WAMCO has announced the launch of a documentary magazine titled, “Dairy4Growth Nigeria: Pathways for Change,” while lauding achievements of the project and its impact on the country’s dairy sector.

The magazine was unveiled at the FrieslandCampina FDOV technical conference, which showcased knowledge gained during five years of work on Dairy4Growth Nigeria – a project aimed at proffering solutions to challenges in the dairy industry, providing home-grown scalable solutions and transitioning Nigeria’s dairy for commercial success.

“The Dairy4Growth Nigeria Project is an example of international public-private partnership to build sustainable socio-economic structures,” said Ore Famurewa, executive director corporate affairs, FrieslandCampina WAMCO.

“It is funded by the Dutch Government with partnership from Royal FrieslandCampina, FrieslandCampina WAMCO Nigeria, International Fertilizer Development Center, Wageningen University and Research, and Bles Dairies Consultancy.

“In the course of its implementation and in addition to tangible changes in the dairy sector, the Dairy4Growth Nigeria project produced relevant technical knowledge that is very useful for the Nigerian dairy sector and the pathways of change mobilised by the project provides valuable lessons for establishing practical solutions and implementation for a sustainable dairy chain.”

Read also: Commercialized animal feed: Lessons from advancing local dairy development in Nigeria

To fully scale the benefit of the project, she said the organisation has launched a documentary magazine to share with the broader dairy development community.

Also, Ben Langat, managing director, FrieslandCampina Sub-Sahara Africa Cluster noted that as the initiative rounds up, the organisation is proud to see that the innovations from the project will not only continue in use but also grow and be scaled up.

“As the first multinational dairy company to champion backward integration in Nigeria, we hope to inspire others to contribute to the sustainable development of the dairy sector,” he said.

“The project has successfully introduced the Dairy Zone model, which is based on resource sharing, collaboration and exchanges. Farms naturally need time to develop and grow, but collaborative working and bulk purchasing helps to foster collective action.

“These simple but meaningful arrangements combined with enhanced infrastructure, training and extension support, as well as the introduction of feed and fodder production, have significantly contributed to increasing the production volume of quality milk,” Langat said.

In his keynote address, Mohammed Abubakar, Minister of Agriculture, called on dairy experts to offer solutions on how to accelerate growth across the dairy value chain and transition it to a profitable economic sector.

“The Federal Ministry of Agriculture is determined to increase food security in Nigeria and employment along commodity value chains; it is our goal to strengthen Nigeria’s self-sufficiency and we shall not relent in creating enabling environment and partnerships to achieve this.

“I congratulate FrieslandCampina WAMCO on yet another milestone recorded in developing sustainable local sourcing of milk. Your company has continued to make steady progress in strengthening the dairy value chain in Nigeria with the key investment that targets local dairy communities. I am looking forward to seeing your organisation scale up the learnings from the Dairy4Growth Nigeria” Abubakar said.

The technical conference attracted key dairy experts in Nigeria as well as smallholder and commercial dairy farmers, who discussed critical topics including pasture development, crossbreeding, animal health and capacity building.

Dairy4Growth Nigeria project was funded by the Facility for Sustainable Entrepreneurship and Food Security (FDOV) a programme for public-private partnerships by the Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO).

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