About two million
Nigerian farmers have adequately insured their agricultural operations and
outputs.
The Managing Director,
Nigerian Agricultural Insurance Corporation, Mr. Bode Opadokun, disclosed this
to our correspondent in an exclusive interview.
He also said the
corporation was introducing measures to increase the number of farmers with
insurance cover to five million by the end of the current financial period.
“We plan to increase
the number of insured farmers from the current two million to as high as five
million at the end of the 2015 financial period,” he said.
Some losses are
peculiar to farmers and hinder their production, prompting the Federal
Government to establish the Nigerian Agriculture Insurance Scheme in 1987.
The scheme was later
incorporated in 1988 and it became the Nigerian Agricultural Insurance
Corporation by the enabling Act 37 of 1993, with the main aim of providing
insurance cover for farmers.
Some of the objectives
of NAIC include making investment in agriculture more attractive through
efficient risk management and prompt claims payment, and enhancing the adoption
of improved farming practices to boost total agricultural production.
With insurance, it is
expected that farmers will be able to enjoy credit from lending institutions
and eliminate the need for emergency assistance usually provided by the
government during the occurrence of disasters.
NAIC is the only
insurance company that is licensed to underwrite agricultural insurance. It
also enjoys the support of the Federal Government, which has been subsidising
some of the policies in order to encourage farmers to get cover.
Opadokun told our
correspondent that for crop production, farmers were more prone to drought and
flood, among other losses.
He explained that NAIC
was a means by which the government planned to support the farmers to increase
food production and manage the risk elements of the agricultural sector.
Opadokun said the
corporation conceptualised, designed and implemented a new distribution model
for agricultural insurance for small-scale crop farmers participating in the
Growth Enhancement Support Scheme of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Development.
This insurance
package, he explained, was known as the Plant with Peace Programme.
According to him, the
insurance distribution model, which has been officially adopted as the risk
management component, deploys crop insurance cover to registered farmers
through an electronic system and mobile phones.
“The operating model
for this new business, which is electronically driven by a software designed
for the GES programme, ensures that crop farmers entitled to subsidised inputs
under the GES programme get a crop insurance cover worth at least N20,000 on
their farms for a premium charge of N500,” Opadokun said.
During the last dry
season farming, where about 500,000 farmers participated from 12 states, he
said 51,300 farmers purchased the cover.
As part of its
commitment to the research and development of new insurance products that would
meet the needs of Nigerian farmers and mitigate the effect of climatic change,
he said the corporation had opened up series of discussions with overseas
technical partners to establish the underwriting of weather index insurance in
the country.
“The intention is to
leverage on their experience in the development of this product, build enduring
relationships that will boost our human capital and ensure that our farmers are
happy,” Opadokun said.
Source: http://www.punchng.com/business/business-economy/only-two-million-farmers-have-insurance-cover-naic/

 
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